November-December 2007

Two Ways to Install Silt Fence

The many functions and forms of an evolving standby

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By DeWitt Smith

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There are two ways to install a silt fence—the right way and the wrong way.

The right way, it turns out, has a lot of variables, as any contractor knows. The choices are dictated by the type of soil, the slope gradient, and the length of time a job may take, as well as other influences. The wrong way often has to do with contractors using unfit materials and with lack of inspection and enforcement to correct installation errors.

Photo: Burchland Manufacturing
Preventing sediment runoff is silt fence’s biggest job.

While it’s not news that silt fences are a first-rate form of erosion control, what’s new is the growth of options and new products for the job. And contractors, young and older, new to the business or old hands, are using a variety of equipment to install silt fences.

Joe Johnson, 25, is a contractor just starting his own business in Hot Springs, AR. He learned the business of erosion control when he went to the southwestern coast of Florida after high school where he worked on jobs for the state department of transportation (DOT).

After five years, he wanted to return to his roots and start his own business. “I got homesick and decided to go back home to Hot Springs,” says Johnson. “In Arkansas, I feel that everything’s in its infancy. A lot of people don’t know what a silt fence is.”

He surfed the Internet to get pointers about writing his business plan, and he got an old hay blower, reworked it, and made a new machine out of it. He spoke with DOT contractors who said they installed silt fences with a silt fence plow.

“In Florida, we put things in with a trencher,” Johnson says. “Here, I’ve pretty much had to learn on my own. I didn’t have any mentors, and the Internet has been a great big help—finding the resources to start up and also tools.”

His first big purchase was a McCormick silt fence plow while his business—Integrity, Erosion Control & Landscaping—continues to grow by word of mouth.

He’s also learning about a different level of enforcement, more lax than what he experienced in Florida. “If you have less than 1 acre and don’t have any controls, you’re not in violation,” he says. “The problem is that the soil washes out on somebody else’s property. In Florida, just a half-acre lot had to have perimeters. Here in Arkansas people don’t even know they’re in violation. The specifications are here but are not being enforced.”

What is required in Hot Springs, he says, are wire-back fences. A problem, however, is that the wooden stakes break a lot and people want to use T-posts.

“There are a lot of variables that govern a job. The terrain here in central Arkansas has a lot of hills, and I’m used to a perimeter control all the way around a job site. That’s not needed here in some instances,” Johnson says.

“On one job, this place was washed out. It was a dirt parking lot on the edge of a field. The problem was the rain, and the customer waited too long after stabilizing the fence and to install permanent vegetation to slow down the flow,” Johnson explains. “There were rills and gullies across the 3-acre field that was a temporary parking lot. I had to regrade this surface. All the sediment had washed downhill, and it didn’t contaminate anything but their property. But they had waited months until they took care of the problem.”

The biggest problem is that people don’t know there’s a problem, which creates more of a problem, as far as Johnson is concerned.

On this parking lot job, he had to replace the fence and the hay bales used to reinforce the fence. The owners didn’t know their fence wasn’t going to last forever, which provides an example of people not knowing about a problem.

“First I had to get rid of the bales, and then we replaced the silt fence and made a series of rock check dams before I could regrade the slope,” Johnson says.

He goes on to say that one set of best management practices (BMPs) is not going to be effective in every situation—a slope gradient will be different, there will be different terrain, and the runoff factor is always different. “No one control fits all,” Johnson says.

Photo: Raygn Alexander
Raygn Alexander, who has his own business in Stillwater, OK, installs a fence with his McCormick silt fence plow.

Same Problem, Different Approach
David Minter of Houston is a co-owner of Construction EcoServices. He started his business five years ago with Bob Adair, a long-time friend, and has a different approach to sediment control.

“Most silt installers use a trench method, and when you trench a silt fence in, it disturbs a lot of the soil,” says Minter. “What we try to do is keep dirt and dirty water from leaving a construction site. So we use the tommy Silt Fence Machine. We found it to be a superior machine.”

If the contractor doesn’t compact the ground where the silt fence is installed, the water that’s trying to leave the site will try to underrun the soil. Water wants to run down and follow the line of gravity. Minter says that the tommy uses a static slicing method to install the fence so the soil is not disturbed or lifted up.

“It just goes into the ground with the J-hook in the ground, and we drive over and insert the silt fence material. Once the silt fence is installed, we drive back over it with our tractor and it fully compacts the soil. Water can’t underrun the silt,” Minter explains.

He says he’s seen some installations where people try to use the trench method. That aerates the soil, and the water takes the soil offsite. “That’s what we’re trying to do, keep the soil onsite,” he says.

The Houston-area soil, heavy clay or sandy, is not a problem. More often, a challenge comes in the form of a physical restriction on a site, like a fence or a building. “When the silt fence has to be right up against a building, then you have to put the fence in by hand,” Minter says.

Another challenge is getting people to accept a method other than trenching. “Many of the jobs are wire-back silt fences. We found that sometimes engineers ask for the wire back thinking that would add strength to the installation. But when you install wire-back silt fence, that creates more underrun,” he says. “In addition, when the job’s over, you have to take the wire out, and it’s more bulk to go to the landfill. That’s not very ecological.”

What Minter prefers is using synthetic hay bales, made from recycled carpet fibers, which run from $5 to $8 a bale. “We use them in deep swales where there’s a high flow and a high velocity. Natural hay bales have a limited life. And on long-term jobs that may run 18 months or two years, the synthetic bales last longer,” he says.

Minter says he recently discovered that Wal-Mart has adopted the slicing method for silt fence installation. For a long time, the big company, which does a lot of building, would accept only wire-back fence.

“I think it’s a positive move because it’s a superior method. We’ve been a believer in this method since we started five years ago,” Minter says. “When we started this business, we were looking for innovative and cost-effective ways to install BMPs, and our research led us to the slice silt machines. It not only does a proper job but also saves our clients money.”

Photo: Bonestroo
Adam Popenhagen, a compliance inspector with Bonestroo, checks the installation of a silt fence on a job site.

Another point of view about erosion and sediment control comes from a man who does compliance inspections. Greg Halverson, 30, works for Bonestroo, a private company in St. Paul, MN. Bonestroo is one of several firms doing this work in the St. Paul/Minneapolis area. In addition to doing civil engineering work for municipalities, the company has a water and natural resources group that checks inventory, water quality, storm sewer design, and stormwater compliance. The latter is governed by the National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES).

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“Municipalities have to have one of these permits from the state or feds in order to discharge pipes. Contractors need them in order to discharge water from construction sites. We help municipalities and contractors with compliance,” says Halverson. “We contract with municipalities and residential contractors to enforce the regulations.”

Halverson absolutely agrees with Johnson, the contractor from Arkansas, about the most common problem being a lack of knowledge. Next Page >

What Do You Think?

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matgolfpat

May 3rd, 2009 2:23 PM PT

yea I just got in to erosion control and a few jobs is a little hard to set up I have a lot of blow outs and would like to learn how to make my silt fence a little more effective.

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