March-April 2008

Putting Erosion Problems to Bed With Blankets

Solving slope and drainage problems, aiding germination

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By Janis Keating

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Water, water everywhere—not the best site on which to use water-based applications, such as hydroseeding. For slopes or areas where water is meant to run, such as drainage ditches or retaining ponds, a covering of erosion control blankets or turf reinforcement mats can solve many problems. Water can’t move them—indeed, they soak up water, adding weight, and become more immovable—offering longer-lasting protection for sown seed.

Great Cover for Runoff
John Ziliak, erosion control division manager of Daylight Land Management in Evansville, IN, uses EC blankets in many of his projects. “We do a lot of waterways for government programs on farm fields. The Natural Resources Conservation Service will pay for some of this work, as does the farmer or landowner. In an agricultural field, erosion is a problem; the natural drainage of the field might create a gully. We make a flat-bottom conveyance channel for the runoff and line the channel with erosion blankets and then seed with fescue. This channel slows the water and also keeps the agricultural runoff from going anywhere else.”

Daylight Land Management, which usually installs Western Excelsior Corp.’s products, also works on some industrial sites, and often uses other best management practices (BMPs), such as hydroseeding, on these more level sites. “On a 3:1 slope or better, we’ll cover the area with a blanket. Our company uses a little of both EC blankets and turf reinforcement mats [TRMs], but I haven’t used too many TRMs, because they’re more expensive,” Ziliak explains.

Photo: Illinois Tollway
Erosion control blankets along a slope near the Illinios Tollway

Although sloping is a consideration when choosing to use an EC blanket, Ziliak pays more attention to the speed of the water flowing down that terrain. “We might use a blanket on a slope of 2:1; it depends on the runoff’s velocity. I’m not concerned as much on slope, but if a lot of water goes over a slope, we have to look at different avenues. Whereas 90% of our EC blankets are called for on industrial sites, these areas are pretty flat, and we end up doing more hydroseeding and seeding than installing blankets.

“I also factor in the soil type as well as how much water will be moving across what I’m stabilizing,” he continues. “That is the greatest influence on what I try to use. A lot of the work I do is contract work, which has specifications on what type of blanket to use and where it goes, but generally, any ditch 3:1 or greater will receive double-net straw or coconut [coir] matting. We don’t use seeded blankets; we seed separately, not only because every job has its own specific seed mix, but also because I want seed-to-soil contact, which is very important for germination.”

Any maintenance problems with EC blankets? “Several people have complained about the blankets’ netting getting into their mowers, but now several companies are making biodegradable products netting, which should biodegrade in 60 days,” he says.

For flatter surfaces, Ziliak takes into consideration how much water is going to move over the area. “Splash erosion from the rain probably doesn’t need a blanket. Maybe just some straw mulch or hydroseeding is sufficient.”

He hasn’t had a really big blanket job recently, though. “We have been using quite a bit more BFM [bonded fiber matrix], mixed in with hydroseed, instead of blankets, a decision made primarily from a labor standpoint. BFM is easier to install, and the cost of installing an EC blanket is a ‘moving target’—the labor cost of installing blankets is higher, because you have to stake them down. In my area, select spots may have major erosion problems, but once you get them stabilized, that’s it. We don’t have the severity of hills to deal with as is found in some parts of the Ohio River Valley.”

Photo: Illinois Tollway
Erosion control blankets cover the slopes at the interchange of Interstate 55 and Interstate 355 in Bolingbrook, IL.

Blankets Keep Toll Roads Free of Sediment
Despite the fact that much of the Chicagoland area is tabletop flat, new road construction creates slopes that cannot be allowed to erode. Natural Creations of Joliet, IL, worked on the recently opened 12.5-mile south extension of the Veterans Memorial Tollway (formerly the North-South Tollway), Interstate 355. This major traffic corridor now runs from the I-290 extension in DuPage County’s Addison in the north to I-80 in Will County.

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Working with the Illinois Department of Transportation (IDOT) and the Illinois Tollway, Craig Hyslop, Natural Creations’ registered landscape architect and estimator, rarely gets his choice of EC products: “They have definite blanket standards on their jobs. If there’s special provision, perhaps we can use something else. Ninety-five percent of Tollway jobs use EC blankets but, at times, also use other practices for permanent seeding.” Hyslop frequently uses blankets manufactured by Evansville, IN’s North American Green.

Other BMPs are often used in conjunction with blankets and mats. “The Tollway would do basic control with mats; then we’d either hydroseed or apply seed manually and fertilize. We don’t necessarily hydromulch it much.” Next Page >

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