September-October 2000

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At Every Stone's Throw Erosion Control Strategies for New Trails

Bare earth and steep grades go with the territory of earthen trails. Step-by-step decisions about siting, alignment, and drainage can help backcountry byways stand the test of time.

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By Martha S. Mitchell

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An upslope breeze chases over McClure Meadow, just shy of 10,000 ft. in the High Sierra of California on an ordinary August afternoon. The glossy surface of Evolution Creek catches the purple sky, the bright granite ridges, and the soft cumulus and plays them against the deep green shadows of lodgepole pine where we are plodding along on the third day of a two-week odyssey - beasts of burden in a landscape of indescribable and beckoning beauty. Our shoulders scream, the sunlit meadow beckons, trout rise, but we are compelled to move on to a higher camp from where we hope to make it over a 12,000-ft. pass the next morning.

Mountain meadow
Meadows are magnets for people, wildlife, and livestock, yet their fragile nature requires careful engineering consideration if trails must pass through.

Everyone we meet in this section of the backcountry is hurrying under the strain of two constant worries: rations and weather. Some are walking toward a rendezvous with a packer and supplies that will enable them to prolong their trek in the high country another few weeks. Others are hurrying to or from high passes where sudden afternoon thunderstorms can ruin chances of getting over a pass. It seems that the success or failure of entire backcountry vacations comes down to the availability of calories and the behavior of capricious air masses.

One foot after the other, we climb out of the lush valley into pockets of sparse timber on a canyon wall scoured smooth by glacial ice. The wind picks up, the sky glowers, thunder rattles, huge drops spatter, and within minutes the slickrock that had been sunlit and magical has become dark and glistening. Thunder clatters as if the gods are bowling with giant granite boulders directly overhead. We scuttle downslope to a place we hope will not attract a lightening strike and hunker down to watch as the valley sides begin to stream with runoff.

An hour later, we resume our upward plod along the sodden trail and get a textbook tour of the relations among the factors of the Universal Soil Loss Equation: slope length and steepness, soil conditions and cover, rainfall intensity and duration. It looks as if a packer with a string of mules was hightailing it down from the pass when the weather hit. Where sheetwash from upslope has flowed onto the trail and concentrated on it, the loose earth has been whisked away, leaving lengthwise rills on the pitches and newly laid sediment deposits on the flats. Here the sharp hooves of the heavy animals have churned the wet soil to a depth of several inches.

Despite this seeming destruction, it is easy to see that our trail has been located and designed with worst-case conditions in mind: heavy wear, high-intensity storms, and erosion. These are the facts of life for trails. The best chance for their longevity comes from good initial planning, thorough field investigation, and thoughtful drainage design. The process starts in the office with an overview that encompasses soils, climate, vegetation, groundwater, geology, and slope.

Get a Hawk's View of the Landscape

An overview landscape view
An overview of the landscape of a proposed route can reveal both opportunities and constraints for trail siting, construction, and drainage.

To shake out large-scale considerations about where to locate trails and how to drain them, it is essential to get an overview of the general landscape using aerial photos and topographic maps. A good place to start is by noticing where the trees are. About 30% of a year's precipitation falling on short-needled conifers is intercepted by the needle surfaces, never even hitting the ground. This percentage goes down for long-needled conifers (pines) and drops to about 11% for broad-leafed trees. It is easy to see how the canopies of trees, particularly conifers, can be the first line of defense from erosion of trails by direct precipitation.

The tremendous absorptive capacity of leaf litter on the forest floor is an added bonus. The natural mulch of litter under a hardwood forest has been shown to absorb as much as an inch of rainfall per storm before precipitation even begins to filter through it to the soil. The litter safeguards the porous structure of the soil beneath, enabling water to infiltrate quickly during heavy or prolonged storms. This accounts for the fact that little if any surface runoff occurs in forested areas where streams are fed primarily by base flow.

Understand How Sheet Flow and Groundwater Will Behave

To avoid drainage surprises in unforested locations such as meadows and the delicate zones above the timberline, it is important to know the nature of the vegetative cover, the slopes, and the soils. Is the vegetation continuous or spotty? How long are the slopes above the proposed trail? How deep is the soil? These factors need to be considered together. At first glance, it could be inviting to locate a section of trail through a dense hanging prairie. But seasonally perched groundwater over shallow bedrock in such a setting can be daylighted by a trail cut, and the trail itself can be at risk of becoming a diversion ditch that inadvertently captures groundwater moving downslope. Likewise, a trail running perpendicular to a slope with spotty vegetation in a matrix of exposed soils can intercept sheetwash and overland flows. Drainage considerations such as these often result in the need for special alignments (such as stacked switchbacks at the edge of a hanging prairie) to avoid setting up a situation in which the trail becomes an eroding ditch. It is better to go into a trail project knowing this and including it in the budget than paying for it by default through years of expensive maintenance and repairs. Next Page >

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