November-December 2007

Two Ways to Install Silt Fence

The many functions and forms of an evolving standby

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By DeWitt Smith

2 Comments


One thing he has no quarrel with is his equipment. “I use the McCormick silt fence plow,” he says. “It is the best piece of equipment for the job. It does a great job of putting in a silt fence.”

Joey Marquez works in a different part of the country and under different conditions. One of 25 employees who work for Gallion Erosion Control in Santa Paula, CA, the 26-year-old has been doing silt fence work for eight years.

“We work in Ventura County and Los Angeles County, and sometimes the soil isn’t very good. It has too much clay, so it doesn’t absorb water well,” Marquez says. “If you have a heavy storm, there’s a lot of water.”

Right now, however, southern California is classified as being in an “extreme drought” by the US Drought Monitor, a partner with the US Department of Agriculture. So excess water’s not a problem at the moment, but controlling dry dirt is still a necessity.

“Soil has a lot to do with how you’re going to put the fence in. You compact it with wheel rolling. We use the tommy Silt Fence Machine,” Marquez says. “The tommy does it without the poles, which makes the silt fence tighter. It also buries the fence without the trenching, so the disturbed area is only about 4 inches.”

Up in Nebraska, there’s a different set of circumstances, according to contractor Jason Henderson. Henderson, 25, co-owns three-year-old Green Thumb in Nehawka, NE, which is 45 miles south of Omaha. “We do a lot of private work and a lot of state reclamation work, and the problems we have around here, especially around western Nebraska, come from the sandy soil,” Henderson says. “We have problems with the fence blowing out because of erosion occurring underneath the fence. We’ve also had problems in one area, in Broken Bow, that’s had 30 inches of rainfall this year, compared with the usual annual 15 inches.”

While Broken Bow is located in the center of the state, there’s a big difference between the eastern and western parts of Nebraska because of the types of soil. “The eastern part of the state has soil that is good clay, and there’s hardly any sand there. But you get west of Grand Island, and there are sand hills in western Nebraska. And you can’t compact sand very well.”

Henderson says his company has jobs on both sides of the state but that Green Thumb uses the McCormick silt fence plow, east and west. “We like the way it’s designed and heavy built, and we’ve been using the McCormick about three years,” Henderson says.

The company does, however, use different methods for installing silt fence in the western part of the state because of the sandy soil. “We plow it deeper, about 8 inches, and we bury it deeper, at the 12-inch mark. And we put our key posts together, spacing them every 4.5 to 5 feet instead of 6 feet,” Henderson explains.

He also takes extra measures in Broken Bow and other areas experiencing unusually heavy rainfall. “What we’ve done is put a silt fence in the middle of the slope to slow down the water and keep the silt from sliding downhill. Putting the silt fence in the middle slows down the runoff, and we catch sediment mid-slope.”

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And Green Thumb takes it one step higher: recycling the silt. “We take this silt to and reuse it to compact the road bed,” he says.

Now that’s erosion control at its smartest.

What Do You Think?

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greenfield

June 10th, 2009 3:02 PM PT

In the tropics where we work all over the world, the silt fence would not work because of the high intensity rain we have to put up with (Measured at 20 inches in three hours) we use a natural hedge of vetiver grass which can withstand the highest intensity storm the trpoics can throw at it, these hedges can last for hundreds of years with out maintenance see our website www.vetiver.org

matgolfpat

May 3rd, 2009 2:23 PM PT

yea I just got in to erosion control and a few jobs is a little hard to set up I have a lot of blow outs and would like to learn how to make my silt fence a little more effective.

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