July-August 2009

Stabilizing Soil

Techniques to prevent erosion and to stop sediment once the soil starts to move

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Photo: Quik Turf

By Mary Ellen Hare

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Little by little the sky was darkened by the mixing dust, and the wind felt over the earth, loosened the dust, and carried it away.”

By 1939, when John Steinbeck published those words in The Grapes of Wrath, the Soil Conservation Act was four years old, and the Dust Bowl was an ugly blotch on the nation’s history. Yet, decades later, we still struggle with the effects of wind on soil and the ability of rain to carry dirt and all of the pollutants within it to the sea.

And while economic concerns have been held responsible for destroying the environment, likewise they have burgeoned in response to our fears for it. Controlling erosion has become big business, as vendors compete to stabilize and contain the earth’s treasures.

Seeing a Problem From All Sides
Tom Williams, owner of SiltPros in Woodstock, IL, spends a good deal of his time supervising teams in the field of soil stabilization and runoff management. His background in building and developing has given him a unique understanding of the intricacies of erosion and sediment control. “When I started this business four years ago, I didn’t know enough about erosion control,” he says. “I educated myself and created the company to educate others who were having the same difficulty. I tell the engineers and municipal officers to get out of the office and be creative.”

Williams says his past experience on the buying end has given him an appreciation of the costs involved in controlling runoff. “Especially in this downturn, every penny and dollar counts, and I treat my customers as if we were paying the bill ourselves.”

In the summer of 2008, a mixed-use, 30-acre commercial development in Algonquin, IL, was shut down by the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency. “The dirt contractor was having trouble dewatering the retention pond,” Williams says. “The site was surrounded by wetlands and creeks. We were able to treat the dewatering with a polymer, along with a buffer. We got clean water and were able to discharge into the wetland. With limited space and the cost of land, it is important to use every inch.”

In the same project, Williams used a silt fence, installed with a Silt Fence Installer from Burchland Manufacturing, to stabilize the perimeter of the site. He also uses blankets, hydromulch, granular polymers, run-through broadcasters, and floc logs for short-term stabilization, from 30 to 60 days. “Every project is challenging,” he says.” They all require different techniques and products.”

Photo: Quik Turf
A dirt stockpile awaits hydroseeding in central Florida.
Williams owns two Burchland silt fence plows. “When I first started this company four years ago, I called Burchland and purchased my first plow. The slicing method with the Burchland plow proved itself the first day we used it. My crew and I probably looked like a bunch of kids with a new toy. Not only has it decreased our installation time, but the fence is more secure than a traditional trench method with minimal ground disturbance. Another feature that a lot of people miss is the flexibility of post spacing. These days we encounter specs with post spacing anywhere from 3-foot to 10-foot centers. With the slicing method versus trenching a preassembled product, we do not have to wait for the supplier to deliver a fence with a specific post spacing; we set it ourselves.”

Pennsylvania’s Clay Soil Poses Problems
Jonathan Hunt is business development manager for River Valley Organics, serving the Greater Harrisburg Region of Pennsylvania. His challenges in that area include steep slopes and what he calls “yellow, shaley clay soil.”

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“Closing up” a project and getting the soil stabilized in order to satisfy permit regulations becomes an issue on any construction site. “On one site, there was a major contractor in the area and we needed to get off the permit. The conservation district said, ‘You need to get these channel areas stabilized.’ Nothing grows on that yellow-type soil, and you need 70% minimum vegetation for a permit. These were excavated basins, so you were getting down into the subsoil. The same job site had collector channels, and they asked us to do the same thing with those.”

Using Growing Media supplied by Filtrexx, the developer was able to inject seed into the soil and provide approximately the same stabilization with temporary or permanent cover as would be provided by an erosion blanket, according to Hunt. “It’s a two-for-one deal,” he says. “You get erosion control and permit stabilization. One of the reasons it works in poor soil is that poor soil is delinquent in organic matter. When you get down into the C layer, you don’t have much. With our composted growth media, we add organic material into the soil.” Next Page >

What Do You Think?

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rachelj

July 24th, 2009 10:08 PM PT

This article has a lot of great information. I would like to discuss the clay soil in different areas such as Texas, Oklahoma, New Mexico and Colorado. I'm sure there are other places but I am the most familiar with Texas and the possibility of dealing with clay soil expansion that affects your homes foundation, cracking the foundation and walls, as well as water seeping into the basement. My husband and I dealt with this recently. We had an inspector come out and survey the damage and we found out that we were dealing with the clay soil expansion, as have many others in our area. We hired a great company, Childers Brothers Foundation Repair. They are well-known in this area for their quality work and knowledge in dealing with clay soil expansion. They saved us a ton of money in future home repairs and gave us a solution that helps protect the value of our home. I anyone is experiencing issues similar to this, I recommend you check out their website at http://ChildersBrothers.com.

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