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Getting Rid of Standing Water in Your Yard By
Michael J. McGroarty Do you have one or more areas
in your yard that hold water after a rainfall? This is a common problem, and sometimes
difficult to solve. Over the years I’ve talked with dozens of people trying
to battle this problem, and on several occasions I have been hired to solve
the problem. So what can be done? Too often people come to me
asking what kind of a tree, or what kind of shrubs can be planted in a wet
area to dry it up. This is the wrong approach. Most plants, and I mean almost
all plants are not going to survive in an area where the soil is soggy for
extended periods of time. The roots need to breath, and planting a tree or
shrub in a water area will kill it. Another common approach is to
try and fill the area with topsoil. Depending on a variety of variables, this
can work, but many times adding additional soil to a wet area will only shift
the water to another area just a few feet away. If you are lucky enough to
have some natural fall to your property, or a drainage ditch near by, this
problem is easy enough to solve. If you happen to live in an area that was
developed over the past few years, there might even be system to remove storm
water near by. In many new home developments I’ve seen storm water catch
basins already installed in backyards. Trust me, this is a good thing. There
is nothing worse than having a soggy yard all the time. If you are fortunate to have
some fall to your yard, or a storm water system that you can drain water
into, this problem is easy to solve. Make sure you check with your local
officials before you do anything at all with a storm drain. All you have to
do is go to your local building supply center and buy some 4” perforated
plastic drain pipe. The best kind for this purpose is the flexible kind that
comes in 100’ rolls. This type of drain pipe has small slits all around the
pipe. These slits allow water to enter the pipe so it can be carried
away. Just dig a trench from the
center of the low area you are trying to drain, to the point that you intend
to drain it to. Using a simple line level you can set up a string over top of
the trench to make sure that your pipe runs down hill all the way. A line
level is a very small level that is designed to attach to a string. Any
hardware store sells them for just a couple of dollars. Set the string up so
it is level, then measure from the string to the bottom of your trench to make
sure you have constant fall. You should have 6” fall for every 100’ of
pipe. The highest point is going to
be the area that you are trying to drain, so you only want your pipe deep enough
at this point so it can be covered with soil. Once the trench is dug just lay
the pipe in. At the highest end of the pipe you’ll need to insert a strainer
into the end of the pipe to keep soil from entering the pipe. Cover the pipe
with some washed stone, and then backfill the trench with soil. The washed
stone creates a void around the pipe so that the water can find it’s way into
the pipe. Washed stone is usually inexpensive stone that has been washed so
it is clean and free of mud. The only part of the pipe that needs to be
exposed is the low end, where the water exits the pipe. Do not put a strainer
in that end. If you do not have anywhere
that you can drain the water to, you still might be able to do something. But
first consider what is happening, and why the water is standing where it is.
Even if you have well drained soil, water can not soak in fast enough during
periods of heavy rain, and it runs across the top of the ground and
eventually finds the lowest point, and either leaves the property, or gets
trapped. If you have well drained soil,
the trapped water usually soaks in. If you have heavy clay soil, the water
lays there, and the soil underneath becomes very compacted, and the problem
compounds itself. The more water that stands, the worse the drainage
gets. What I have done in areas like
this, where there is standing water, but nowhere to drain it to, is to
install a French drain system that actually carries the water away from the
low area, and allows it to seep into the ground over a larger distance, where
the soil is not quite so compacted. To install this French drain system you
do everything exactly as explained above, except instead of draining the
water to a lower area, you can send it in any direction you like. Even in the
direction from which it came, which is uphill. When installing this type of
system, it’s a good idea to dig a number of shorter trenches, all heading
away from the area where the water stands. Using the line level, make sure
your trenches fall away from their point of origin so once the water enters
the pipes it will flow away from the wet spot. What is going to happen is
that during times of heavy rain the low area is still going to trap water,
but much of that water is going to seep into the drain pipes and eventually
leach into the soil under each trench. Because this soil has not been
compacted by the standing water and the baking sun, it will accept the water.
It won’t happen near as fast as if you could just drain the water to a ditch,
but at least you will have a mechanism in place that will eventually disperse
the water back into the soil. It’s a lot easier to leach 200 gallons of water
into a series of trenches that total 100 lineal feet, than it is to expect
that water to leach into a 10’ by 10’ area that is hard and compact. _________________________________________________________________________________________________ Copyright
by Michael J. McGroarty Michael J. McGroarty is the author of this article.
Visit his most interesting website, http://www.freeplants.com
and sign up for his excellent gardening newsletter, and grab a FREE copy
of his E-book, "Easy Plant Propagation" |
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