
http://www.townofbloominggroveny.com/highwaydept.html
At the 8/16/07 Park Meeting Mr. Bohan was
present and made these comments about the roads:
Mr. Bohan went over the firehouse grant again.
As well as the private road set up we have to deal with everyday. The Highway
department will begin cutting the culverts on the edges of the main roads this
fall. $25,000 of the money for this is coming from FEMA from the April floods
the town has added $10,000 to that.
A woman from Paradise trail asked what could be done to prevent the wash out
that always happens there, which was 100% worse this past spring. Jim Farr, the
town engineer can be called to give his input and suggestions. The residence of the road would be responsible for any repairs
that they want to do.
Mr. Bohan reminded everyone that Road maintenance agreements can be signed and
attached to your deeds. If everyone signs it and reneges on paying for repairs
the road residence can go to court and have a lien put on the property if the
person doesn't pay their portion. It was recommended by Mike to hold a Road
Maintenance Meeting. A director is trying to work with the county to set up a
Road Maintenance district which would be funded by our tax dollars.
The Yellow Line on Mt. Lodge road should be replaced soon.

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Road
Maintenance Agreement in .pdf Format
Road
Maintenance Agreement in Word Format

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Map In .pdf Format (High Res)

How to
maintain a dirt road
by Marjorie Burris
It is our job to maintain two and one half miles of dirt road
if we want to get into our property. We are completely surrounded by forest
service land, and we have an agreement with the forest service to maintain
one mile of the road. However, when we reminded the forest service the other
mile and a half needed maintenance, too, they answered us in a tone that
brooked of no appeal: “We don’t like you living in the middle of the forest;
you are the only family at the end of that road; it costs us too much to
maintain that road for one family; therefore, it is up to you to keep that
road open. We call it your road anyway.” So, “our road” it has become. And
maintaining it has been an adventure. In fact, working the road led our
family into a chain of events we could never have foreseen, not even with
the help of a crystal ball gazer. (See Issue 30, “David and the D-4”).

Hubert Burris on a Ford
2000 tractor with blade attached
In
our 25 years of maintaining a dirt road, we have found that, whether you use
hand tools or heavy machinery, there are three main objectives: control the
flow of water around the road, remove obstacles, and fill in the
ruts—usually in that order.
Control the flow of
water
Water in any of its forms—snow, ice, sleet, or rain—is your number one enemy
when you maintain a dirt road. When it is raining, observe your road
closely. Water run-off takes the line of least resistance, and you can tell
what you need to do to control the flow and where your efforts will produce
the most results if you know the path the water naturally takes around or
over your road. You can also tell where water will puddle and stand in the
driving lanes. If water stands in a low spot, you know snow will collect
there too. And standing snow will freeze and thaw, making a bog, one of the
worst situations in a dirt road.
The
first step to drain water away from a road is to slope the road bed slightly
from side to side. Some people “crown” a road, that is, they make the center
of the road bed higher than the sides letting the water drain from the
middle of the road to either side. We have found making a crown hard to do,
especially on the steep grades of our mountainous road. In fact, when we
agreed with the forest service to maintain our road, they gave us pages and
pages of instructions for minimum standards for a single lane fair weather
road, and they recommended the side to side slope drainage. Their
recommendations call for an outslope of one-fourth inch per foot of road
width. At this rate a thirty foot wide road would be seven and one half
inches higher on the high side than on the low side. This doesn’t look or
feel like much slope when you drive down the road, but it is enough to force
the water to run off the side instead of following the road bed down the
grade and cutting ruts. (See Figure 1)

Outslope and ditch
If you can slope the road toward the outside edge of a road
bank and let the water run off down the side of the hill, your work is done.
But there are times when the contour of the land makes it necessary to
contain and direct water away from the road by means of a ditch along the
side of the road. The bank of the ditch from the edge of the road to the
bottom of the ditch needs to slope at an angle of no less than three inches
in a foot. (See Figure 1)
This
prevents the water from flowing back onto the road. An adequate ditch needs
to be at least one foot wide and one foot deep. In very heavy run off areas,
a ditch might need to be much larger. By watching your road during a rain
storm, you can estimate just how large a ditch you need in a given area. At
some point, either the water in the ditch, or water rushing down the side of
a hill in a wash, will need to be directed across the road. A culvert is
ideal here, but culverts are expensive and usually take a lot of work to
install. An easier way to direct the water across the road is with what the
forest service calls a “grade dip.” Our family calls it a speed bump because
it feels somewhat like a speed bump in a shopping center parking lot when
you drive over it. A grade dip is essentially a shallow ditch dug across the
road and lined with rock. The dirt dug out of the ditch is mounded across
the road on the downgrade side, making a bump which blocks the water from
running down the road and making it flow off the road through the rock-lined
ditch.

Grade dip
A good grade dip will be at least 70 feet wide, counting the
width of both the ditch and the mound. The ditch part should be about 50
feet wide; the mound should be at least 20 feet wide and have a rise of at
least 30 degrees—but 45 degrees is preferable. (See Figure 2) If the uphill
grade of the road is steeper than five percent, the grade dip should be
widened five feet for each one percent of grade rise. For example, a road
having a grade rise of 6 percent should have a grade dip 55 feet wide; a
road with a 7 percent grade rise should have a grade dip 60 feet wide. We’ve
maintained some grade dips on our road for at least 20 years, and they
continue to be very effective.
In
low areas where water puddles or snow collects, a simple turnout might be
all that is needed to drain the road. A turnout is a shallow notch dug into
the outslope edge of the road which encourages the water to flow away. (See
Figure 3) Turnouts sometimes need to be lined with rock so they don’t cause
the edge of the road to erode.
Remove obstacles
It seems like there’s always something in the way on a dirt
road in the backwoods. After a big rain, snow, or wind storm, our first
question is, “Is our road open?” We are prepared with food and emergency
supplies to be stranded for several weeks at a time, and most winter seasons
there are at least a few days when we are not able to get out of our
homestead. We’ve learned to wait until a deep snow melts enough for us to
safely clear the road, and for the road to dry some after a downpour before
trying to travel it. We scooted our crawler tractor over the edge of a sharp
turn once when we were trying to clear a 30-inch snow from the road in order
to get out in a hurry. We slid the Ford tractor over the edge three times
and our little Toyota truck has gone over once. We’ve been lucky, as none of
our vehicles have turned over, and we have been able to haul them back up
with lots of hard work. Figuring that some day our luck might run out, we
have finally learned to be prudent and just wait awhile before trying to get
out of here. It is a lot more comfortable to stay in the house with a cup of
hot cocoa and a good book than it is to risk your neck out in the wet and
cold, huffing and puffing with pulleys and cables, trying to undo something
that needn’t have happened in the first place.
However, there are times when some things just have to be removed from the
road. One ongoing nuisance for us is the huge rocks that keep heaving up in
our road bed. The first method of attack is to dig them out. We outline the
rock with pick and shovel to see just how big it is, dig down a way all
around the rock, then try to slip a chain or cable on it and pull it out
with a vehicle. I don’t even want to guess how many rocks we’ve gotten rid
of this way.

A turnout for draining
water off the road
Then there are the boulders that are just too big to dig out.
We’ve used “poor man’s dynamite” many, many times. That’s when you heat a
rock as hot as you can get it, then dump cold water on it. The sudden change
in temperature causes the rock to split and shatter. If the rock is small
enough, we heat it with a blow torch. If it is too large to heat with a
torch, we make a trench around the rock, then drag brush and downed trees in
from the forest and cover the top of the rock with a bonfire. It takes
awhile to heat a rock this way, but it is effective. Of course, we can use
this method only when there is no fire danger, and someone has to attend the
fire at all times. We carry barrels of water in the back of the truck when
we want to douse the fire.
We’ve used real dynamite once and that’s enough for us. It didn’t go off
when it was supposed to. That was scary. If we have another job that needs
real dynamite, we will hire it done. Placing dynamite is an art that is
worthy of its cost. We don’t know much about dynamite, but we do know enough
to leave it to a professional. Branches and trees fallen across the road
after a wind storm are always a possibility in our area. For several years
we attempted to carry a small chain saw in the truck every time we went down
the road. Naturally, when we forgot the saw, or didn’t have room to put it
in the truck, that’s when we needed it. For a while we tried carrying a
two-man cross-cut hand saw, but that was bulky to pack, too, and was hard to
use.
Then
we read a product review in Backwoods Home written by Don Childers about the
Short Kutt Pocket Chain Saw (issue 14, page 61). This is a small chain saw
blade about 31 inches long with detachable handles, all of which rolls up
and fits into a small can not much larger than a shoe polish tin. And the
blade is sharp. It really works. The Air Force uses it in their Survival
School. We immediately ordered the handy little gadget and stuck it in the
glove compartment. It has helped us clear a path in our road more than once.
Landslides onto the road after a period of wet weather plague us. Half a
century ago when our road was built, there were no regulations about how
steep a bank could be when a rural road was cut into the side of a hill.
Some of our road is cut straight down into the side of the mountain with the
bank above it at an angle of 80 to 85 degrees. Today it is recommended to
out an angle of about 55 degrees in common soil, up to 65 degrees in hard
pan or soft rock and 70 degrees in hard rock. This helps to prevent
landslides.
When
the steep bank does slide down, we leave as much of it as possible at the
base of the cut instead of shoveling all the dirt away. This is gradually
building a more gentle slope from the roadway up to the top of the cut.
Several places on the road are too narrow to leave all the debris, however,
so we have tried to pull some of the dirt down from the top of the bank to
work it back farther away from the road. We weren’t very successful, so
decided to let nature keep trimming away at the top and we keep shoveling at
the bottom. It is a lot of hard work.
Those branches from overhanging trees and shrubs which slap you in the face
as you drive by are annoying in the summer time, but they can be downright
dangerous in the winter when they are full of snow and ice and block your
vision. We make a trim-the-branch run down the road in the fall after the
leaves have fallen off the deciduous trees and the sap has gone back down
the trunks. By standing in the bed of the truck, we can reach most of the
offending slappers and saw them off. We stack the branches in the back of
the truck, then take them to a gully where we dump them for erosion control.
There they can do some good.
Fill in the ruts
One of the most effective ways to fill in ruts is by dragging
something heavy over the road behind a vehicle. A good drag can be made from
a log, a railroad tie, or a piece of an iron I-beam. The drag should be as
long as your vehicle is wide. Drill a hole in each end of the drag about a
foot from the end. Thread one end of a chain in each hole and bolt the chain
into place so the drag will not slip up and down the chain. (See Figure 4)
Fasten the chain to the vehicle, making one side longer than the other so
that the drag follows the vehicle at a slight angle. This helps to maintain
the slope in the road which forces water to drain off the road. We have
found that the moisture content of the dirt in the road makes a big
difference when using a drag. Too dry, and the drag just moves a little dust
around. Too wet, and the mud rolls up under the drag. The road is about
right to work when a hand full of dirt makes a crumbly ball, which is the
same test that shows when the garden is right to plow. One pass over the
road when it has the right amount of moisture in it is better than five
passes over the road when it is either too dry or too wet.

A homemade drag to be
used for leveling a road
Some persistent ruts
will need to be filled with rock before they heal. We have found that rocks
about the size of two fists make a good base in a rut. After these work into
the road during a wet spell, they can be covered with either dirt or smaller
rocks. We have lots of rocks so we simply crawl across a field and toss the
rock into a trailer, then dump it on the road where needed. Over the years
we have eliminated many ruts and boggy places in our road with our rocks.
Helps to clear our fields of bothersome rocks too. We often laugh and say we
are just moving things around where they need to be to do the most good.
In our opinion, without
question, the best piece of equipment to own to maintain a road is a small
farm tractor with a blade attachment. This is not a small tractor, sometimes
called a garden tractor; it is a farm tractor the size of a Ford 2000. This
size tractor has enough power to pull a blade, is comparatively easy to
maintain, and will work hard for years, not only on the road but just about
everywhere else too. A four-wheel drive is preferable, but a set of tire
chains on the big back wheels makes a two-wheel drive tractor work almost as
well in mud, ice, and snow as a four-wheel drive.
One
other thing we learned the hard way—to avoid making ruts in a wet road, try
to drive on it only when it is frozen. That’s usually between four and nine
a.m. in our area, if the road is frozen at all. The less ruts made, the less
you have to fill. Even if it is extra work, we think living out in the
boonies at the end of a dirt road is very much worth the effort.
http://www.backwoodshome.com/articles/burris48.html