May 2007

Options in Hydroseeding Equipment

Professionals discuss tank size, pumps, and agitators.

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By Carol Brzozowski

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For those types of projects, R.J. Grondin & Sons uses a truck-mounted Reinco HG-20GX Hydrograsser with jet agitation. The unit has 2,000 working gallons.

Photo: Reinco
Tank size varies depending on the hydroseeding job at hand.

“You’ve got to leave room for materials to put in there,” Jordan notes. “That’s one thing I like. I had a smaller one before this one—a 1,500-gallon—and you keep filling up the smaller tanks.

“Because we do mostly bigger road jobs and site jobs with a bigger land area to cover, the tank size is important. Most smaller landscape companies have smaller tanks for the smaller lawns or house lots, but we’re set for bigger sites than that.”

Time is money, Jordan points out. “You don’t want to be running back and forth to a pond or a place to fill up every 10 minutes, because it usually takes about an hour to spray on a load of material, so if you can get that time to a minimum, you’re saving money,” he says.

Photo: Finn
Truck preference depends on the job. Smaller trucks are more maneuverable, but big tanks need less refilling.
Photo: Finn

Jordan has encountered many difficult jobs, such as landfills. Athletic fields are a particular challenge. “Everybody wants to have nice grass to play on, and you’ve got to do a nice job,” he says. “You’re talking probably 20 acres of seeding and you can handle that in a couple days’ work.”

R.J. Grondin & Sons does not replace its hydroseeding equipment often, Jordan notes. “It lasts pretty well,” he says. “We get the largest Reinco makes, so we wouldn’t need anything larger, but we do like the features they have on the Reinco.”

Jordan says the system enables workers to get into hard-to-reach places. While smaller units, such as 700- or 1,000-gallon machines, can provide even greater access, Jordan says he’s done enough hydroseeding to know what’s needed for a particular job and this particular unit is “pretty versatile.

“We can put on 400 feet of hose if it’s that long a distance from where you can get your truck, but there have been very few times we had to do that,” Jordan says. “With a long slope, you either have to build a road into it, find someplace where you can get access to it, or do it in stages. If you know you are going to be that far away from it, you might be able to do it in stages and get to it a little easier before access is closed off.”

Working Faster
Challenging jobs are an everyday occurrence for Shane Ross, owner of First Impression Landscaping in Westminster, MD, a company of five employees. Hydroseeding comprises about 60% of his company’s business, which is done seasonally.

To that end, he needs a hydroseeding machine that can handle the challenge. His company owns Kincaid Equipment Manufacturing’s AgiGator Contractor Series 900 hydroseeding machine. Ross likes trailer-mounted units because it means his employees do not have to have a commercial driver’s license to operate them.

The Kincaid has paddle agitation, which Ross prefers. “There’s nothing wrong with jet agitation; it’s just that it takes forever for it to blend the mulch up,” he says. “The paddle operation seems to bust it up better than the hydraulic ones. It pulverizes it. It’s pretty impressive.” And for people like Ross, that saves time and money.

“As fast as I can load the machine and blend it up, I can be spraying at the same time—it’s that fast,” he says.

First Impression Landscaping does a lot of sediment pond work. Ross finds he often encounters 1:1 slopes on the job. To address that challenge, he uses a tackifier and wood mulch in the Kincaid machine.

“We usually use a paper mulch, but with some of this sediment pond work, we use wood and spray it down on that hill. It held. The main thing with the slurry is it can pump down. With the jet machine, you can only mix a certain amount of bales in the machine. With the way the pump is designed on this machine, you can continually add to it.

“The steeper the hill is, the more mulch you want to get on it,” Ross adds. “You need that machine to be able to handle a number of bales. For running a heavy slurry through it, this machine does the job.”

In the event there is downtime because of an equipment failure, Ross likes the fact he has a good relationship with Kincaid so that problems are rectified immediately. “It’s always been minor difficulties, but with them being as far away from us as they are, they’ve always come through,” he notes. He also likes that he can get most of the parts locally and does not need to buy them directly from Kincaid.

Choosing Equipment to Match the Job
Keith Milligan’s hydroseeding company assesses a situation when determining what size hydroseeding units to use. “If we can run a lot of hose, we’ll use the larger trucks,” he says. “The smaller trucks are more universal. We have used old military trucks with six-wheel drive. Our smaller truck—the 1,100-gallon—has super singles, which means they don’t have dual wheels like you see on tractor-trailers, so you don’t have the mud that loads up between the tires. If we are going to go off the road, we’ll take that truck.”

Milligan is a manager for the Ken Chwal Hydroseeding Co. in Pipersville, PA. The majority of the company’s work is in residential hydroseeding.

The company’s work is seasonal. There are up to 30 employees working during the height of the season.

Among its equipment, the company has two large truck-mounted Bowie hydroseeding units, the Victor 1100 and the Imperial 1500. The company uses inch-and-a-half soft hose for application.

Milligan says the biggest challenge his company faces in hydroseeding is off-road work or a steep hillside. To successfully address those, the company has to combine erosion control matting with bonded fiber matrix. “We’ve had a good success rate with that,” Milligan notes.

The company uses Applegate’s Hydro-Lok, a cellulose hydroseeding mulch. “It comes as a dyed material, so as you spray that onto lawn areas, it will be green to simulate existing grass,” Milligan says. “We’ve had great success with it and have a great working relationship with the company.”

Another hydroseeding challenge Milligan’s company faces is the difficulties encountered during the rainy season, especially with residential work. “A lot of times, you are trying to suit the builder’s needs as far as making sure the settlement dates happen on time so the homeowner gets in, so in a rainy season you are working longer hours and possibly weekends in order to meet deadlines,” Milligan says.

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The company replaces the hydroseeding trucks every seven or eight years to keep pace with changing technology and reduce maintenance costs.

Milligan predicts hydroseeding will continue to “blossom” in the future. “Everybody is concerned about water runoff practices, so any type of soil stabilization that can be done is obviously going to be the way of the future,” he says.

Author's Bio: Carol Brzozowski is a journalist living in Coral Springs, FL.

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