Pond Boss Magazine
https://www.pondboss.com/images/userfiles/image/20130301193901_6_150by50orangewhyshouldsubscribejpeg.jpg
Advertisment
Newest Members
M4 Aquatics, TexasHomesteader, Jlphillips1, MississippiFish, Carpet Bagger
18,274 Registered Users
Forum Statistics
Forums36
Topics40,633
Posts553,150
Members18,274
Most Online3,612
Jan 10th, 2023
Top Posters
esshup 27,962
ewest 21,384
Cecil Baird1 20,043
Bill Cody 14,950
Who's Online Now
7 members (JoshMI, TexasHomesteader, Sunil, Fishingadventure, FireIsHot, bob_esper12, KenHorton), 1,197 guests, and 159 robots.
Key: Admin, Global Mod, Mod
Previous Thread
Next Thread
Print Thread
Page 2 of 2 1 2
HTNFSH2 #558584 05/22/23 01:29 PM
Joined: May 2023
Posts: 3
P
Offline
P
Joined: May 2023
Posts: 3
Hello - I am new here. I posted this as a different thread, but it seems like I should have asked it here instead.

I recently purchased a home in Vermont with a large pond. There is a 300 ft earthen dam with a 5ft wide corrugated metal vertical drain that runs into 4 ft wide horizontal drain. The metal pipes are in disrepair. They are rusted and full of holes. In addition, the LLO is inoperable.

The total pond area covers about 8 acres. The average depth is probably 4-6 feet. The deepest point is probably about 10 ft.
There is a secondary spillway that allows water to flow around the dam in case of an emergency, so I don't see the water overtopping the dam.

Is there any way to repair the spillway pipes without actually replacing them? I am told digging out the pipes and putting in new ones would be extremely expensive. But I have also heard that liners or PVC can be used as an insert to repair.

In addition, I am also wondering how to fix the LLO, since that prevents lowering the pond depth in case of an impending storm.

The state is also asking me to get soil testing & water inundation testing done. I would really appreciate any advice or contacts for inexpensive service providers.

Please help. All comments are welcome.

Last edited by PatMcM; 05/22/23 02:50 PM.
HTNFSH2 #558585 05/22/23 01:57 PM
Joined: Nov 2007
Posts: 2,739
Likes: 512
F
Lunker
Offline
Lunker
F
Joined: Nov 2007
Posts: 2,739
Likes: 512
Wow, a 4' diameter culvert. That is a big outlet.

Is there a small creek that runs into your pond? Or do you have a gigantic watershed (drainage area) for the pond?

Why is the state involved? If your rotten culvert collapses, there is a very high probability that the dam would wash out and send all of the pond water volume downstream. Are there any humans or habitations at risk if that happens?

Sorry for the bad (apparent) news.

I am NOT a dam expert, but I believe that it would be very expensive to replace a culvert style outlet of that size.

If you had a 10" diameter outlet, you might be able to block the downstream end, fill it all with cement to remove the collapse risk, and install a siphon-style water outlet to handle your heavy rain events. That would be prohibitively expensive at the apparent sizes that your pond dam requires.

How large is your pond in surface acres? What is the average depth? What is the depth at the deepest point? Is there an emergency spillway?

If you add that information to your post, then hopefully some of the experts will chime in and give you some helpful advice.

P.S. You should probably go back and delete your other post, so all of the responses are consolidated under this "active" post.

Good luck getting your pond back into good shape!

Joined: May 2023
Posts: 3
P
Offline
P
Joined: May 2023
Posts: 3
Hello -

Thank you for the response and I appreciate your reply. I will edit my post so it includes the information you suggested and answers your questions.

HTNFSH2 #558713 05/27/23 07:39 PM
Joined: Jan 2009
Posts: 27,962
Likes: 644
Moderator
Ambassador
Field Correspondent
Lunker
Offline
Moderator
Ambassador
Field Correspondent
Lunker
Joined: Jan 2009
Posts: 27,962
Likes: 644
Welcome to the forum! I've had a long day and can't figure out what a LLO is. Can you elaborate?

You could have a company put in a coffer dam around the rotted culvert, replace it, then pull the coffer dam. I have no experience sleeving something that big.


www.hoosierpondpros.com


http://www.pondboss.com/subscribe.asp?c=4
3/4 to 1 1/4 ac pond LMB, SMB, PS, BG, RES, CC, YP, Bardello BG, (RBT & Blue Tilapia - seasonal).
Page 2 of 2 1 2

Link Copied to Clipboard
Today's Birthdays
Alabama Woody, R&R, TheWayISeeIt
Recent Posts
Digging with existing water
by Sunil - 09/22/23 01:38 PM
New pond stocking
by FishinRod - 09/22/23 10:20 AM
What is the maximum allowable drive time?
by Knobber - 09/22/23 07:45 AM
Need advice
by Sunil - 09/22/23 07:09 AM
Aeration How many hrs per day to keep on?
by canyoncreek - 09/21/23 09:14 PM
What do CC do ?
by Sunil - 09/21/23 07:40 AM
Feeder for Optimal 5.5MM floating
by FishinRod - 09/20/23 06:28 PM
Lost one of our best friends today...
by Zep - 09/20/23 02:00 PM
Little update and a question on harvesting
by esshup - 09/19/23 07:26 PM
Shoreline plants now submerged. Will they die?
by esshup - 09/19/23 02:34 PM
Hog Wild
by FireIsHot - 09/19/23 12:13 PM
Newly Uploaded Images
Sharing the Food
Sharing the Food
by FishinRod, September 9
Nice BGxRES
Nice BGxRES
by Theo Gallus, July 28
Snake Identification
Snake Identification
by Rangersedge, July 12
Caught fishing without permission
Caught fishing without permission
by Theo Gallus, June 22
1 acre Northern Catskills NY
the "grass" in our pond
the "grass" in our pond
by Mama Rachael, May 28

� 2014 POND BOSS INC. all rights reserved USA and Worldwide

Powered by UBB.threads™ PHP Forum Software 7.7.5