This absolutely works. I did it in my yard several years ago. Problem solved. I saw it even my parents do it when I was young and I'm 63 in the meantime. Old ideas still work. Greetings from Belgium 🇧🇪🇧🇪🇧🇪🇧🇪
@gallagherhelenАй бұрын
Dug two holes right underneath my side gate leading out of the backyard to the driveway - was flooding so bad that water was getting into the garage and you had to step over a huge puddle just to get out the gate! unfortunately two holes at 24 inches was not enough...so I dug two more on either side of them, this time at 36 inches - like magic, no more pooling! even in a tight space I found room to dig the necessary holes and now, even after HEAVY rainfall, the water is gone is less than ten minutes, and there's no more flooding in the garage. GREAT solution for when you can't run a proper french drain out to the street or somewhere else.
@appledrainsАй бұрын
@@gallagherhelen good job
@rosew.1728Ай бұрын
@@appledrains I have a similar problem. Rainwater runs down my drive. Some goes into my shed while the majority runs over a bank next to it. The bank is quickly eroding. I won’t even talk about the damage it’s done to my shed. Do you think vertical drains might work on this heavy water run off?
@appledrainsАй бұрын
@@rosew.1728 it might but also might need catch basin with line to street
@Marktheshark94328 күн бұрын
Where does the water go ?
@Keifsanderson8 ай бұрын
Thanks for bringing this to us. I'm a geologist and am embarrassed I never thought of this. For everyone poo-pooing: it's not the volume of the hole that removes water, it's that the hole allows water to reach a more permeable soil layer and disperse within it.
@lolwtnick43627 ай бұрын
the water table says no
@Keifsanderson7 ай бұрын
@@lolwtnick4362 Certainly if the water table in your area of concern is effectively at the surface then this wouldn't work. But then again you also must live on the edge of a swamp, so there's that.
@MsOhinds7 ай бұрын
What about near the drainage field of our septic tank. Would that cause any issues?
@Keifsanderson7 ай бұрын
@@MsOhinds Hard for me to say definitively. How deep is your leech field? Do you know exactly where it is to avoid hitting it? What type of soil is in your yard? Have you done a percolation test? I suppose a risk could be you flooding your leech field with ground water and it backflowing into your septic tank. The primary benefit of these holes is in areas where the surface layers of soil have low permeability so water pools on the surface while it slowly drains away. Think compacted soils and clays. If you can penetrate that layer and allow the water to reach a more permeable layer (sand or gravel?) then the water will have a faster path to the water table. If you have standing water because your soil is already saturated and the water table is high in your area, then the benefit might not be there. I live in NW Florida nowadays and my soil is very sandy. During heavy rainfall I get pools of water that measure over a foot deep, but it drains within an hour or two, so putting these in doesn't seem necessary for me. If I had standing water or saturated soil a day later? I'd try.
@jorkirasalas27266 ай бұрын
Does limestone chippings fill have any chance of working to improve the drainage? Especially if you can't get below the clay layer?
@comfort.pillow4 ай бұрын
Thanks for the common sense project! Put 4 of these in today. Already working and looking great; forgot how much "fun" post-hole digging can be! 😆
@MartinD99997 ай бұрын
This is the 3rd *INCREDIBLY* useful and directly relevant solution to my water/plumbing issues I’ve learned from this channel. You sir, have saved me thousands and thousands of dollars in the last 3 years. Thank you.
@NanaWilson-px9ij4 ай бұрын
Do you post this comment every month?
@thisisashan4 ай бұрын
@@NanaWilson-px9ij The least he can do. This is easily the 4th INCREDIBLY useful and directly relevant solution to my water/plumbing issues I've learned from this channel. This sir has saved me thousands of dollars in the... beep boop. Return 0;
@TreeStump-and-CheeseKetchupIT4 ай бұрын
@@NanaWilson-px9ij Interacting on content boosts the channel.
@Timespider8 ай бұрын
If you've got a post hole borer do a deeper hole. Down here in New Zealand we use these drains quite a bit, nothing wrong with a 250mm (10 inch) by 1.5m (60 inches or 5 foot) to 3m (10 foot) , less holes but deeper. We just use the rock no sacking. We have a lot of clay.
@Tootsie8067 ай бұрын
I’m in Texas and also have clay. I wondered how efficient this would be.
@TOXICGURR7 ай бұрын
I have clay in my yard as well. I’m in Virginia Beach. Since y’all have clay, does it still work?
@albednarski7 ай бұрын
@@TOXICGURR In Virginia Beach as well, Birchwood area. With the rain we had the past few days, Ive got a couple of ponds in my backyard. I'm going to try the vertical wells.
@FarmerJim7 ай бұрын
Kia ora! Cheers.
@jorkirasalas27267 ай бұрын
I've seen this used in UK. Either fill with 2mm pea shingle or for clay use limestone chips-apparently the limestone slowly dissolves and converts the clay to loam (so I've heard) which will naturally improve the drainage
@Decentralized_World18 ай бұрын
Sometimes the easiest and cheapest solutions are the best solutions.
@Brockthedog3154 ай бұрын
I use a wider hole to make the fabric and gravel install easier. Used this trick for a long time. Really works. Don’t necessarily need the fabric but last longer if you do.
@crazybing22 ай бұрын
what type of fabric do you use? thanks for any reply!
@Madrid-1210Ай бұрын
I was literally wondering the same thing
@back40d98Ай бұрын
Hi Chuck I put in 7 vertical drains in my yard a month ago. The remnants of Debbie past by Ottawa today no water pooling Wow thanks
@cargr2236Ай бұрын
Thanks for shsting. I live in Montresl and Ineill never forget Debbie.. my basement was floided..will tty this!!!
@FullFlavorRetro8 ай бұрын
You are my hero!!! Im in los angeles and we are experiencing biblical rainfall this week, if i had not done the vertical drains im almost certain our home would have flooded last night. Rain started at 2pm and rained all night till 11am this morning, and just started coming down again, and is expected all week due to pineapple express. Thank you so very much for this video, i would love to buy you a beer!!! 🙏
@appledrains8 ай бұрын
That’s what Supers are for 😀 Good to hear you saved the house with your work Thanks Chuck
@yousefhamed8 ай бұрын
Im in Bakersfield, and my side of the house is quickly accumulating water. Once it dries up im going to do this
@CLove5117 ай бұрын
Not sure which will come first, California getting washed away, or them deciding the term "pineapple express" is racist
@draco45407 ай бұрын
i'll take the beer if mr. apple drains doesn't want any beer. 😅
@RottieMomCreations5 ай бұрын
My jaw is just dropping & I’m over the moon to do this vs the project I was dreading to do today….I AM SO EXCITED. 💜💜💜💜
@Tamale296624 ай бұрын
How did it go? The side of the house stays soaked after raining, no grass really grows. I was outside today trying to figure out what to do!
@RottieMomCreations4 ай бұрын
I didn’t think to check after the flash flooding we had but still decided to do another one in the front yard & near the rain barrels & bought more rocks…I have faith! 😁
@bayodaman4 ай бұрын
@@RottieMomCreationshas it rained again?
@David-bl1bt4 ай бұрын
Remember...before you dig....to always considet what utilitys may be hidden in the sub terrain....electrical cables, gas pipe, water pipe and drains etc
@cbcowart9337 ай бұрын
Very useful in all kinds of weird spots that hold water. You NEED THE FABRIC ... just filling the hole with rocks will simply silt up over time and you will be back at square one. That barrier to keep the dirt, mud separated from the rocks, is very important.
@Zeppled237 ай бұрын
What type of fabric? Weed barrier? Water needs to get through the fabric, correct?
@cbcowart9337 ай бұрын
@@Zeppled23 I usually Bought large rolls, but it isn't like the 'Home Depot' weed mat. It is a Woven Geo- Textile it is heavier than weed mat but it lets water flow through nicely. I used it on Retaining walls of Timbers, Lock Blocks (they have pins), every job is different, but especially if you are using rocks or perforated pipe it is imperative to keep the soil from getting to the rock as it will just fill all the spaces around the rocks and it is like solid ground. Did for 30 years and learned from a good teacher but also learned a lot along the way. Walls and features are not cheap if you want them to last for 35-50 years, seen many retaining walls looking pretty sad. Also for areas that hold water, like the video, here in Fl they build so close that there is a swamp between most houses during the rainy season. We would dig trenches the size of the Vertical drains we were going to use plus 6 to 12 inches depends on where the water is sitting. You line the trenches with that Geo Cloth with enough to fold over and pin in place afterwards. Put a base of course builders sand then install the vertical drains (google it) and back fill around the pipe as you go and it has fittings, I usually duct taped them so they never come apart. You more or less are making the drain like a hand shape that creates fissures for the water to drain away and hook to any solid pipe to flow away ore perf pipe if you have no place to dump. ( They use it a lot on golf courses on the tee or hole area to keep them dry) Then fold that cloth over all the sand and pipe and I would use ground staples to hold the flap tightly in place, and top with some soil and sod.Sorry so long need to right a book. There is so much to building something that will last.
@Zeppled237 ай бұрын
Awesome! Thank you so much!!!! All i had at the time was weed barrier and i actually tested this barrier beforehand to see if water could seep through and the water would NOT so i cut slits in the barrier. We will see what happens. Again, thank you so much for your reply!!😊
@myrrhavm8 ай бұрын
Did this years ago. I should have made a video 10 plus years ago. I used perforated drain pipe and wrapped it in weed block. I went down about four feet on two in my backyard. Put a drain cap on them like a normal drain would have exposed. My rear yard drains rather quick allowing the water to percolate into the soil. Asked a friend who is a landscaper about over saturating the ground, he said where I live it would never happen.
@dmonk25458 ай бұрын
While watching this I was thinking the same thing, why not use a perforated pvc straight down in the hole to ensure no collapsing of the soil or disturbing the rocks inside. Also what you mentioned about going 4 feet makes even more sense to me.
@Jim_Bob_Farm7 ай бұрын
Did you put gravel in the drain pipe?
@myrrhavm7 ай бұрын
@@Jim_Bob_Farm No. Gravel or rock will displace the volume of water the pipe can take in.
@scotsmanofnewengland77138 ай бұрын
Living here in New England and having a swamp in my backyard when it rains heavy. I dug two deep holes in two separate locations where the water pooled. I used gravel also and used 4” PVC pipe covered by fabric sock that went over the top and a drain cap. I noticed that the yard drained alot faster. Remember to clean the fabric off now and then or use weed block material on top. Thanks for the video.
@TOXICGURR7 ай бұрын
Did you put the ovc pipe in the hole vertical?
@scotsmanofnewengland77137 ай бұрын
@@TOXICGURR Yes I did. I made two such holes and so far they seem to work pretty good. I got those 4” drain slotted caps for the tops. Just remember to clean them once and a while due to sand and debris on the tops of them.
@TOXICGURR7 ай бұрын
@@scotsmanofnewengland7713 do you have clay in your yard as well?
@scotsmanofnewengland77137 ай бұрын
@@TOXICGURR hi It’s a mixture below the top soil of red dirt,sand and clay and a natural spring down about 12 feet underground. It drains better now with the two drain pipes I put in. I aerate the yard every year which helps also.
@scotsmanofnewengland77136 ай бұрын
@@TOXICGURRyes I did and it works good.
@Abfabcomic112 ай бұрын
Man…I am totally going to do this. Thanks so much for sharing!!!
@Builtwellhome8 ай бұрын
I used what I call is a French Trench. Like a French Drain just no exit. My neighbor over watered and it fixed my ponding in July and August. With little rain.
@alexiskomondorea88545 ай бұрын
I love your personality and attitude! You seem like such a chill guy and I love the positivity! Keep up the great work. It’s awesome to see someone in an industry continuing to learn and try new things to improve their craft!
@wrbbbb8 ай бұрын
Seems kind of like a mini dry well... worth a try if you're already at a very low point in your yard and are having trouble going horizontally
@woodrowboudreaux99514 ай бұрын
I did a quick search for the best material and it is “non-woven geotextile”. Non-woven lets water flow through better than woven. This stuff is usually sold in big rolls but the smallest one I could find online was 3’ X 25’ for about $30.00. Probably will settle for the weed mat stuff at the local store.
@AbbreviatedReviews8 ай бұрын
I was considering a dry well at a spot in my back yard, but I think I'll try this when it gets warmer as it seems much easier and probably a lot more effective for working around the tree roots.
@BeingWolfy8 ай бұрын
Cool! We're never too old to learn something new.
@subliteral13808 ай бұрын
I've been thinking about trying this in my backyard for about two years, but I hadn't decided between a few large diameter holes, like you did, or many smaller holes using the longest drill-bit auger I can find. I have seen some that are 2 inches in diameter and 30 inches long. The main thing was to get through the hardpan as you said, but seeing you put that fabric in there made me realize that would be really hard to do with the smaller holes. Maybe the larger ones are the way to go. I'm on the east coast in Canada, and we have a lot of clay in our soil, so the fabric does extend the life of the drain, but it also makes it drain slowly. I had the pleasure of digging up the previous owners no-fabric gravel-only curtain drain, and the soil had completely filled in any gaps around the gravel. It was just very rocky soil at that point and did nothing to drain.
@stavroslask12928 ай бұрын
Put a 40-50 gallon flow well it’s way better
@subliteral13808 ай бұрын
@@stavroslask1292 Thanks for the suggestion! Looks like a dry well, but better.
@justadbeer8 ай бұрын
Better yet, consider a cheep power auger like the Harbor Freight Predator. I got mine for around $169 on sale and with coupons. This little thing has been a workhorse for us for setting fence posts, planting trees, and drainage projects.
@morrispet7 ай бұрын
You are a VERY good teacher I also appreciate your practicality and cost-awareness ! We DO have drainage problems A retaining wall and grading has been estimated at $10,000 I have NOTHING TO LOSE by trying this ! Just to see I'm subscribing 👊🏽
@kinderdm5 ай бұрын
This sounds like exactly what I need. My hardpan is so hard I couldn't even drive a screw in anchor into it without the metal giving first. I always get wet spots in the spring as my yard has zero slope, and I was doubtful I could have even gotten slope to drain a french drain. I'll try this soon, but it makes sense that it should work, and it's so cheap and easy that I don't mind trying just to find out.
@StayPositive0508 ай бұрын
Here in PNW the rain would have a good long laugh at that size hole. But the concept itself makes sense.
@cliffpalermo8 ай бұрын
Recently did this where a pool deck and house gutters had nowhere to go flooding the cellar. Dug a pit down to sand where the ground just sucked water up. Put the gutters into perferated pipe in the pit and filled to surface with pea gravel as a decorative rock garden that provides drainage between a concrete patio and a pool deck. Was a nightmare of a drainage situation that was fixed.with a simple technique and NO PUMPS!
@YourstepDadd5 ай бұрын
Soo thankful..definitely doing this this weekend in my yard👍🏼
@stickit2theman13 ай бұрын
This might actually work for me cause where we live it's literally sand after the hard pan. Thanks for the excellent video man!
@daddynunya90457 ай бұрын
I did basically the same thing but drilled holes in a piece of 2" pvc, wrapped it in landscape felt placed it in the hole and put gravel between the felt and the dirt. My soil is a sandy loam and just the one drains a swimming pool sized(only 3-4 inches deep) in minutes after the rain stops that used to stand in my driveway for days to a week. The puddle receives a considerable constant inflow and outflow of water while it is raining, but this doesn't seem to impact the drains performance. I have been using it for two years and have never recieved a greater benefit for 30 minutes of easy work in my considerably l9ng life.
@doedodger7 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing I was thinking the same idea, appreciate your confirmation. 😊
@jasonwaldron14323 ай бұрын
I'm going to give it a shot. I've had 2 separate companies come out and quote me $2500 and $3900 for french drains. I have a fairly large area, so I am going to go with larger holes.
@chrislyonm10 күн бұрын
how did it go?
@jasonwaldron143210 күн бұрын
@@chrislyonm didn't help in the least
@piscesdreams10232 ай бұрын
I may have to try this soon (rezoning behind home for new construction that may cause flooding in back yard) so you have my many thanks for this idea to try!!!
@grahamparsons34068 ай бұрын
Many years ago my lawn used to get sodden, and that was ideal for moss. So I dug several of these around the lawn. We call them soakaways.
@appledrains8 ай бұрын
Hi Graham Watch for follow up video about soakaway
@frankdeflavio71198 ай бұрын
Ive been doing this for years. I dig a 6' x 6' hole 5' to 7' deep till I hit shale. Fill the hole part way with gravel add a layer of landscape fabric, finish to the top with more gravel. Works like a bathtub drain. In PA we have a lot of shale. Other areas of the country might be different as to how deep you have to go.
@agreylady7 ай бұрын
I was seriously just thinking about pulling my auger out and trying this yesterday and this popped up!!!
@sean60778 ай бұрын
Thanks for this! I have a place by my driveway that holds water after a rain. I tried digging a small drainage ditch that runs out to the large ditch that runs along the front of my yard to help it drain. However, it always gets clogged up with leaves (have 2 LARGE oak trees in my front yard that drop a LOT of leaves every fall). I may get out there and try this method to see if it works.
@AnthonyDibiaseIdeas8 ай бұрын
Great idea. Thank you. Where I live there's clay just 12 inches down. I'm going to have to dig through that clay.
@SusanHCooper2 ай бұрын
OMG!! This is genius!!My gutter drains directly into a grated drain in middle of my bricked patio. Whenever it rains hard, the drain can't handle the gutter's volume of water...It floods my patio & remaining water backs up against the foundation & drains into crawlspace under my house. It flows like a stream into a trench filled w rocks under the house.. Which keeps basement from flooding...My issue is the damp envronment will cause mold & a host of issues ..The patio drain isnt clogged ..its just not wide enough to handle the water...
@mybrainisshortcake21 күн бұрын
This might be exactly what I need. Awesome.
@searchandsave1428 ай бұрын
Very interesting and completely makes sense. Another thing I wished you had mentioned and more was changing the grade by adding soil in depression’s and grading high spots to divert water
@michaellane47628 ай бұрын
In my yard if I go below the hardpan, I am into the water table. It's only about 30 inches. Mike from MASS.
@harryl79468 ай бұрын
Sounds like a good idea for me to try. 1 side has a ‘bowl’ and the water sits. Grass does not grow very well when the water sits for a day or 4 so I’ll give it a go. The gravel will allow the water to flow and keep the dirt out. The top plug will do fine and the roots will grow through the fabric. 😊
@jasonsliger54307 ай бұрын
In Louisiana we have a high water table and get lots of rain. Im sceptical of this but for the cost its worth a try.
@MzSerenityPhenix7 ай бұрын
Did it work?
@quangthucha4005 ай бұрын
Yes, i will do this ... next weekend. Thank you.
@DIYTutorialGuy5 ай бұрын
Wow, this is awesome! I’ve been dealing with water issues at the top of my yard which has resulted in flooding in my lower yard. I’m thinking these may work at the top of my yard to capture a lot of the water runoff!
@Patso658 ай бұрын
Wow, that's awesome, I'm definitely gonna give that a try. My back yard here in Virginia Beach, VA pools up with water after a heavy rain. Been looking for a cheap way to drain it, this is ideal for me. Thank you so much for sharing.
@Valerie_Berettanelli8 ай бұрын
i grew up in VB - Thalia specifically. I could never dig a hole very deep without hitting water so I wouldn't think this would work where I lived. My backyard flooded all the time when it rained any significant amount. If you try it, I'd be interested to hear if it works for you. Digging holes with post hole diggers is pretty easy so I guess it's worth a shot to try, but I don't know where the water would go if there's already water down there. Good luck!
@robbeaton21788 ай бұрын
@@Valerie_BerettanelliThis was my question too - would it work in areas with a high water table? We live in a coastal area and hit water at probably only a foot or so. Also wondering if water would come back up through vertical drainage during high tides or heavy rains.
@michelletinkham91016 ай бұрын
@@Valerie_Berettanelli I came across this video on Friday, live on the boarder of chesapeake and virginia beach, and gave it a try. did 5 drains according to the instructions in this video. I think it helped! a specific area up against our house looked like a bowl of soup after the the rain we got in the first half of last week, and now, it's dry, and i never really saw any rain accumulate during the rains on saturday. I think it's worth giving it a try. I dug about 2 feet down, found the hard pan he refers to in the video (clay that won't absorb water), and once I got past it and found water starting to accumulate, that's where I stopped and did the fabric/pebbles.
@JValderrama6 ай бұрын
Here in RM (Chile) a farmer thought a similar idea, and used TNT to break hardpan sections and plant apple trees (filling the holes with fresh soil) eventually over time the hardpan regenerated and the trees died before entering full production, they dug and found the roots completely surrounded by the hardpan. I´m not saying this metod didn´t work, but depending on your soil hardpan characteristics your mileage will vary on how long lasting this solution will work
@vipahman4 ай бұрын
I believe this is called a dry well. It is commonly used for routing gutter spouts fro the foundation away from the house.
@shawnmendrek3544Ай бұрын
What a good guy. This is even better than another video I saw. Easy work. Saving thousands hahaha.
@Cmack21132 ай бұрын
Great idea, thank you for the video!
@NutmegThumper6 ай бұрын
I wish we had soil like that! Ours is filled with rocks of all sizes in CT. I’ve dug holes like that for fence posts but it takes all day!
@jimwright38575 ай бұрын
Yes. To reiterate, 1) down through the hard pan, and a rare 2) assumes that the water-table is not directly below the hardpan.
@johnsmith-wd5sq8 ай бұрын
Thanks Chuck! Go easy on the new idea's! You are gonna put yourself out of business!
@kaltrex94657 ай бұрын
That is so simple and neat! I get puddles in the backyard, so I can just dig a cylinder down and put rocks in there that I already have.
@joehobbs4907 ай бұрын
Totally depends on soil type and if you can get it deep enough to actually drain. Many places with solid clay you would have to go down 5 or more feet or may never punch through and you accomplished nothing. Right soil layers and it works great
@DavidMChampeau4 ай бұрын
Definitely giving this a try. Here in the temperate rain forest of Appalachia I have water puddling in a couple of places. Thank you.
@appledrains4 ай бұрын
Good luck with your project
@DavidMChampeau4 ай бұрын
@@appledrains thank you. tried to dig one today. went 40 inches down. used landscaping stuff then filled with rocks. didn't drain well. what type of wrap did you put in the hole?
@appledrains4 ай бұрын
I used StaGreen from Lowe’s. I hope you have success from your project
@DavidMChampeau4 ай бұрын
@@appledrains that's funny because that is what I bought. Until 3 months ago I was working PT at Lowes LOL I was still in clay at 40" down. I will try to get farther. But my hand hole digger won't go much farther. Thanks
@appledrains4 ай бұрын
@@DavidMChampeau I understand. Sometimes it’s a slow drain. Here is really works great. Keep us posted
@lynnf626 ай бұрын
This is an amazing idea...thank you for sharing with us! I will be trying this for sure.
@uhly1016 ай бұрын
excellent! I will be trying this in my yard. thank you.
@uhly1016 ай бұрын
Does it make a difference whether you add the fabric or not? Thanks again for the informative video. I've been wondering how to handle this small puddle for years. This is great!
@steveslate26773 ай бұрын
I tried this a couple years ago. Worked amazing. Went 4 ft down. Stopped working the second year. Hence im watching these videos again. Im gona dig it up and see why it stopped draining. Had to have clogged up somehow.
@appledrains3 ай бұрын
Let’s us know what you find!
@chrismarshall71245 ай бұрын
I’d be interested in a follow up video on how these hold up. Did you notice a different with the weed barrier and the non barrier? Also has the gravel compacted leaving a divot where the holes are? Should I compact the gravel with a tamper?
@sanibel35 ай бұрын
Great idea, will try this in my horse paddocks! ❣️🍀
@appledrains5 ай бұрын
Go for it! You can do it!
@StoptheLie8 ай бұрын
That wasn't gravel, it was crushed stone - a big difference. Great idea, I look forward to trying it because it makes sense to me.
@garykentner75578 ай бұрын
what do you think gravel is....crushed rock small stone go to a quarry and watch a rock crusher smash down rock into gravel such as 3/4 minus screened 3/4 or 1 inch, 2 1/2 3 inch etc. pea gravel gravel crusher dust (all the minus) is rock period. I have been an excavator and a drainage specialist for over 40 years. not bragging I just know because ive walked in those boots. his idea is like a manhole drain but much simpler and dirt cheap.What an awesome idea anyone can do. Round rock crushed rock w/o the minus all works the same. Cheers and spread the word. Good day
@StoptheLie8 ай бұрын
@@garykentner7557 I've been buying gravel and crushed stone for years and they are two different products on the invoice. That's like saying 1.5 " stone or 2.5" stone is gravel. You probably call concrete cement too. What I saw come out of the bag was stone and he can tell us what the product is called. I would never put gravel in a drainage trench, always crushed stone. I hope you do the same?
@StoptheLie7 ай бұрын
@@garykentner7557 I've been buying gravel and crushed stone for years and they are two different products on the invoice. If you put gravel in drainage trenches instead of crushed stone rapped in fabric, you are not the genius you think you are. Water moves through crushed stone a lot better than gravel. You probably also call concrete cement.
@no_handle_required6 ай бұрын
looks like a great way to open up a sinkhole down here in Florida
@AUBigwozza7 ай бұрын
This is common in the UK where storm water runs into a "soak away" pit - usually 1 cubic meter or more - filled with rocks/gravel
@violetjames753410 күн бұрын
Nicely done!!
@carltrano13258 ай бұрын
Omg I love this idea can’t wait to try this. Thanks for sharing this
@erikhayes3515Ай бұрын
How do you know you're below the hard pan?
@eldnah28 ай бұрын
Would like to have seen your 'before' photos to show standing water. This seems very logical.
@appledrains8 ай бұрын
Did you watch to end?
@ericpetteway38417 ай бұрын
Used this my whole life, grew up on a farm lol
@Zeppled237 ай бұрын
Will weed barrier work for the fabric?
@Bcdangable6 ай бұрын
I’m so happy this video popped up. My property just holds water in the yard with massive rains. Weeping tile can’t move it anywhere. We just installed a sump pump so we’re waiting to see how it responds. Will try this after I get city to look at the yard for wires or pipes. The water stands near the home. Is there anything I should be concerned about? Subscribed!
@marvl64723 ай бұрын
This probably could be used with a circular grate also.my house was built in 1931 and there are colums with holes 3 ft lobg in back yard. I think there was another house, business here back in the day but. I find boulders and all kinds of huge 12 in wide, tall square stones buried in the ground..i use the grates to cover the holes of those post in the ground and collect some water..my backyard was flooding previously..
@ratsumatra30037 ай бұрын
Thank you for this information. I guess I'm getting a post hole digger.
@peterrose53735 ай бұрын
If your problem is a fairly shallow and thin impermeable layer, is fine. if you're sitting on ledge, or 9+ feet of clay, it won' help at all. Either way, you probably ought to give some thought to where the water ends up going. A puddle is better than a sinkhole or a flooded basement. and if you waterlog the wrong hillside, you might wind up at the bottom of it.
@dannmann178 ай бұрын
That was awesome, I have the perfect yard to try this👍🏻🇺🇸
@rbhughbanks4 ай бұрын
Thanks so much for this video. I’m going to try it.
@appledrains4 ай бұрын
You can do this!👍
@skydancerforever8 ай бұрын
What is a hard pan and how do you know you are below it?
@misterdubity30738 ай бұрын
A layer of clay that is very hard, plant roots usually won't penetrate it. Sometimes almost as hard as concrete. Often found in areas that were plowed many times over the years, so typically a little deeper than the plow reached.
@williammoore22596 ай бұрын
What kind of fabric did you use and what size stones did you use and when do you know when you hit hard pan in the hole thank bill
@sly25995 ай бұрын
Interesting... i dug a hole and after about 12 in deep I could see standing ground water in the hole is that the water sitting on top of the hard pan?
@luvsbeenruffonme4 ай бұрын
I love KZbin!!. Thank you
@hardeoshiwprashad5 ай бұрын
Would this technique work for a leach/septic field? Would a 10x10 field work?
@phillipbonner52158 ай бұрын
Awesome thanks Chuck
@WanderingNatureАй бұрын
Thank you ❤
@dave_ecclectic8 ай бұрын
If your puddling is due to hardpan and not soil saturation it might do something, if you penetrate the hardpan. If it is due simply to the soil being saturated with water, then this won't work.
@itsasinine33376 ай бұрын
if its just saturated with water, no vertical,french drain will fix it, meaning that its at or near the water table and shouldnt have anything built on there in the first place.
@zacknoneofyourbusiness7 ай бұрын
I'm going to give this a try.
@ppsteiner8 ай бұрын
Hi Chuck. This solution has me thrilled to try it out. I'm in Wisconsin with serious clay soil just 6 inches down. There is nowhere to move my water without creating a problem for my neighbors. My back yard is a swamp after rain. How will I know I've dug deep enough in this type of soil and would it be a good idea for me to first put in a pvc pipe and fill that with rocks and maybe add an overflow cap?
@robertklinkhammer92696 ай бұрын
I'm in Wisconsin and I am going to try sand mixed with the stone, fill the gaps to filter the dirt out. Tamp the gravel mix or pour some water to move the sand to fill the gaps completely. The hole may have to be 2 - 4 feet deep because of the clay. Good luck.
@christinebrown79346 ай бұрын
Well I'm gonna try this for sure. Cheap and easy. Thank you thank you!!
@erikgayoso60677 ай бұрын
how do you know if younhave dug deep enough to get past hardpan or into the hardpan? i live in MD/DC area and have dug about 23 inches and noticed a soil type change from a moist topsoil to a dry sandish like layer. is that the hardpan? any info would be greatly appreciated.
@markthomas89798 ай бұрын
Great idea I have a driveway that floods when snow thaws too fast. I’m trying this for sure definitely can’t hurt..I’ll let ya know how it works.🙏
@keystone135524 күн бұрын
Can I dig one or two close to my well head? Thanks, I can't wait to try this.
@keystone135524 күн бұрын
Also read that filling with sand is better, any opinions?
@TDHofstetter7 ай бұрын
We get our chestnut-size crushed rock from the quarry. By the truckload. It's cheap.
@mikemojc6 ай бұрын
Brilliant!
@Marktheshark94328 күн бұрын
Great video Where does the water go ?
@hawkerjd7 ай бұрын
This is genius
@cryptoman95308 ай бұрын
Great idea! Will this work in soil with a lot of clay, or will the clay prevent water from penetrating? I have a fairly large area in my backyard that pools water just like you were showing in your video.
@jeffreyesguitar51298 ай бұрын
Id like to know that too.
@steveletson66168 ай бұрын
I think you missed the point. The clay is the hatdpan. Need to dig deeper than the hard pan clay level.
@jeffreyesguitar51298 ай бұрын
@@steveletson6616 bold of you to assume there’s a shallow area of clay where we live.
@steveletson66168 ай бұрын
@@jeffreyesguitar5129 Is your clay layer deep?
@DoingItCheap7 ай бұрын
It is a 9 inch square hole. Not a 9 square inch hole. 9x9=81 square inches
@elmerkilred1598 ай бұрын
Cool idea! Thank you!
@john78lewis3 ай бұрын
Is there a way to calculate how many drains and how far apart each would be needed for an area? Does installing a lot of these impact the integrity/safety of the ground? Tx.
@mydrouno5 ай бұрын
Using larger stones creates more voids which will increase drainage speed. ONLY if you use the fabric otherwise it will fill in fast!!
@dilipdesai723426 күн бұрын
How much area is covered by three holes? My complete backyard needs drainage .
@janrichardson83318 ай бұрын
What is the hard pan? I live in Texas and have a heavy clay (caliche) just below the surface dirt. Do I need to dig below that?
@AJPemberton8 ай бұрын
Hard pan is just a dense, impermeable layer of soil at some point below the topsoil. That would be your caliche layer. You'll need to dig through it, unless you topsoil in very thick.