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Drain Tile in a calving lot

jaclo

Well-Known Member
Joined
Apr 22, 2014
Messages
108
Location
Midwest
Im in the Midwest in an area that took a pretty good beating from the cyclone bomb whatever storm.

Compounding the issue is a spring that’s a tad on the wet side.

One of my customers is at his wits end with the mud, looking for a solution.

Think of an area a little smaller than a football field, with static water on a normal year being anywhere from 2’-5’ deep, erring on the shallower side most years.

I’m wondering how effective of a solution this would be. I’ve never put any in. It’s an easy enough concept but I’m worried that the static water table is just too high to do any real good, any tile guys around that could provide some feedback?

Thanks
 

AzIron

Senior Member
Joined
Jun 14, 2016
Messages
1,541
Location
Az
I've never done field tile but I have done French drains in a damp area and day lighted the pipe in a pit so the water had a place to go
 

Tinkerer

Senior Member
Joined
May 21, 2009
Messages
9,342
Location
The shore of the illinois river USA
Contact the local USDA office for guidance. I think they are heavily involved with farm drainage. At least they are where I live in Illinois.
Are there any open drainage ditches that a discharge could be run to ?
Is there a drainage district commissioner that could be available to help ?
 

colson04

Senior Member
Joined
Apr 11, 2016
Messages
2,057
Location
Delton, Michigan
Local NRCS office should be able to help you. Like @Tinkerer said, their local extension office will probably have an approved method designed for your area, or, they will design drainage for you. Also, if there is any grant money available for such a project, they can help you apply for it.
 

Trashman

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jun 9, 2008
Messages
216
Location
Texas
Occupation
Garboligist
I have never put in drain tile, but I have installed many French drains under streets and even under landfills. It all depends on how porous the soil, and if you have somewhere to drain the water. If you have to pump it; it will get expensive.
 

Tinkerer

Senior Member
Joined
May 21, 2009
Messages
9,342
Location
The shore of the illinois river USA
French drains work well if the ground conditions permit.
Jaclo has a problem with a static level to deal with, that being, the level is 2 to 5 feet below the surface.
There has been a tremendous amount of tiling in my area due to the financial incentives that colson mentioned.
 

Jeckyl1920

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jul 31, 2018
Messages
226
Location
Riverside, CA
So, from what I just researched, drain tile is basically French drain without the trenching to add gravel.

That being said, I think he has a plan to get the water out.

I would say tile drain would be the cheaper option to see if the system will work. If it works, but fails in a few years or so, then you can go with a heavier system like French drains.

That being said, a field with grass/crops on it, tile is likely fine. A cattle ranch with dirt and mud, likely need a heavier sediment system like French drains.

My 2 cents.
 
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