February and March 2014
Tree clearing in preparation for the road continues. We have to work quickly so that we can get the road put in by mid May. If we wait much longer than that then we won't be able to seed the sides of the road and the ditches with grass to prevent erosion.Craig and Devon Tomlin came to visit.
We are bucking a lot of the logs to be used as firewood, but also leaving the straight trees in 10-12 ft lengths to be used to make a small log cabin. These are too heavy for us to move!
We have cleared about 500 ft of road length, 12 ft wide and are ready for the bulldozer to remove the stumps and install the roadbed.
Late April 2014
Scott laid down a 6.5 oz/sq. yd. polypropylene geo-textile material from US Fabrics after the road was shaped and before the gravel was delivered. This separates the gravel from the sub-grade and makes for a more stable, long lasting gravel road.
We had gravel delivered from the local quarry near Pelham. We used crusher run grade called Virginia 026 which is a crushed angular granite rock with quite a bit of fines to consolidate it well.
So far we have had four truckloads of rock delivered, but we need a few more! After we get our tractor we are going to spread what has been delivered a bit better and then get at least another 4-5 loads (~20 tons/truckload). Immediately after the excavation we spread about 75 lbs of grass seed and 30 bales of straw on the cleared areas to begin the "healing" of the cleared bare soil areas.
May 2014
The grass seed is sprouting! I was a bit worried about it because we had a torrential rain storm that dropped about 3" right after we spread it, and we had to go back and add a bit more and re-deploy some of the straw. However, Cherokee did a great job with the road, and the erosion was minimal. Hoping that May brings enough rain to get it established before the heat of summer arrives. Still waiting on our tractor so that we can spread gravel around and move logs on our own.The most recent project at the land has been to install a front gate. Now that the road is passable we don't want curious visitors driving down our road and stealing our firewood, and later on, our tractor and whatever else we decide to leave there.
So we have half the entrance gate installed. We purchased the gate parts and hardware from Gatecrafters.com. BIG mistake! The old bait and switch routine with these internet stores. When the product arrived, the hinge plates had only 1/4" piloted holes requiring you to expand them to 3/8" (not so easy to do on 1/4" thick plate steel --unless you have a drill press and some cutting fluid). The other problem I experienced was that the aluminum frames would not hold a semi-gloss metal paint even after priming/etching with the manufacturer's recommended product. One of the 4 hinges was the wrong size, so we are waiting for them to send us a replacement. The company marketing promoted the idea that their kits allowed one to make almost any kind of gate you want starting with the basic metal framework. However the hardware and basic frame or of only fair quality and unless you want to spend HOURS preparing the aluminum frame, go and buy a finished farm gate and hardware from your local store. After stripping and re-finishing two of the four frames to bare metal again I settled on a flat olive green spray paint which seemed to adhere to the primed surface without blistering. Skip Gatecrafters.com folks. Hit the bricks and mortar hardware stores when shopping for your gate needs.
That really is quite an involved process to go from suburbs to modern day. On the surface I thought you just cut down the trees and make the road. I had no idea those stumps all had to be removed down to the roots and how planting grass was so important to the process. Makes sense how the growing grass keeps from erosion weakening the road.
ReplyDeleteHeidi Sutton @ Ag Source Magazine