Phew, so a few hard storms here in the Ozarks aaaand...we made some discoveries yesterday.
1) There's a spring-thingy! Yay! Maybe there's a cave under that hill?
2) Pretty waterfalls and full ponds and nice clean boulders.
3) Our roads and culverts are fucked.
We have multiple draws across our
land which head south to the road.
FIRST DRAW: The heavy rains dug a deep cut in the first draw, right by the "driveway", washed out our culvert and much of our gravel. The culvert is now pressed against the
concrete waterway under the road, giving me an accusing look of "I told you so, you sonofa--".
SECOND DRAW:
Water is rushing underneath the road somehow. It looks like maybe there are fallen
trees underneath the dirt and rocks and the water found good passage through. There appears to be no culvert in place. Road damage minimal.
THIRD DRAW: The culvert is
shooting as much water as it can from the "pond" on the other side of the road (dammed by the road itself, unfortunately), but it's not
enough. The water runs over the top of the road and has eaten it away a good two or three feet, exposing the culvert little by little. A few more storms like that and there will
be no culvert....or road.
STREET: We are losing material to the side of the road, where it fills the little water ditch and the state comes by and scrapes it back off the road. (Thank you, guys! Sorry!)
So. The land has voted to reject these contrary-to-nature implements called "roads" and "culverts". It's time for a compromise.
What can we do to allow for the flow of water AND the flow of people, equipment, animals, etc? Something up and away from the periodic GUSH of floodwaters, simple enough for two simpletons to construct by hand, and sturdy enough not to result in a trailer full of sheep tumbling down a canyon of doom. (Okay, it's not THAT dramatic...)
And before you say, "You mean like a bridge, dummy?" YES. I do. But...simpler. We need to get something up quick as we currently cannot access the property by vehicle.
Here's my thought....you know that second draw? The one with possibly some felled trees under the road? Why can't I take some of the many felled trees on my property (not rotted), put rocks and gravel under their ends, lay them over the "crik" and bury the ends with drainy/anti-water gravel material? As long as you keep the logs from tumbling off the sides, couldn't you use that as a bridge? I know "arches are the strongest shape known to the whole universe" but I want something simple. Why do measurements, buy brick/concrete and so on when I could slap some
local materials down and use that?
The attached photo is not mine, nor of my land, nor of my vehicle, but it is for general reference.