mmolaison
Civil/Environmental
- Feb 2, 2016
- 3
I'm dealing with a piece of property that, in a normal year, would likely be a high-and-dry hillside that drains to an intermittent stream and wetlands. I'm in Florida panhandle- so underlying geology is most likely limestone bedrock with red clay then sand deposits on top. Topsoil is very sandy, and drains extremely fast!
However, due to this insane amount of rainfall this fall/winter, this hillside (where I'm trying to build a house and barn and clear pastureland) has wet-weather springs seeping out all over it! The grade is roughly 5% on average- very gently sloped- and the hilltop is on another piece of property, 20-30' in elevation higher, still at around a 5% slope to the top.
SO- question #1- assuming I build a home on a monolithic cement slab, or on a crawl space, with no basement, is it a problem to build where a wet weather spring may occur during extremely persistent wet weather?
Question #2- can I dry it up? I'm venturing out of my area of expertise here- but I know enough to be dangerous Could we dig a ditch along the upper elevation area where the wet area begins, and route the water around the area we need dry, and let it drain on off down the hillside that way? Just an open ditch, as opposed to a real (and costly) French Drain system? Any SWAG about how deep said ditch would have to be to intercept the flow of water from the higher elevations?
It needs to be something we can handle economically- funding is limited.
I was told by an old farmer in the area, that if we just go in and clear the land (it's currently a mixed growth "forest" with thin tree cover as it was partially logged a few years ago) and establish grass, it will dry up on its own. I don't believe it- I think it's going to flow until the rains relent and the ground water table subsides a bit.
However, due to this insane amount of rainfall this fall/winter, this hillside (where I'm trying to build a house and barn and clear pastureland) has wet-weather springs seeping out all over it! The grade is roughly 5% on average- very gently sloped- and the hilltop is on another piece of property, 20-30' in elevation higher, still at around a 5% slope to the top.
SO- question #1- assuming I build a home on a monolithic cement slab, or on a crawl space, with no basement, is it a problem to build where a wet weather spring may occur during extremely persistent wet weather?
Question #2- can I dry it up? I'm venturing out of my area of expertise here- but I know enough to be dangerous Could we dig a ditch along the upper elevation area where the wet area begins, and route the water around the area we need dry, and let it drain on off down the hillside that way? Just an open ditch, as opposed to a real (and costly) French Drain system? Any SWAG about how deep said ditch would have to be to intercept the flow of water from the higher elevations?
It needs to be something we can handle economically- funding is limited.
I was told by an old farmer in the area, that if we just go in and clear the land (it's currently a mixed growth "forest" with thin tree cover as it was partially logged a few years ago) and establish grass, it will dry up on its own. I don't believe it- I think it's going to flow until the rains relent and the ground water table subsides a bit.