I guess if the mud is soft, that could work. Culvert cleaning is not easy and many are replaced due to the difficulty of cleaning.Yeah…I wondered that also. Maybe push a long pole thru and then use it to pull the cable or chain.
"Jet" a hole through with a garden hose with a sweeper nozzle. All that water softens the muck also.One question: if the culvert is blocked, how do you thread the chain through it?
That works if it’s near the house, what about the culvert at the end of my road; 1500’ away?"Jet" a hole through with a garden hose with a sweeper nozzle. All that water softens the muck also.
500 gal water tank & a gas powered pump?That works if it’s near the house, what about the culvert at the end of my road; 1500’ away?
The idea is interesting because my road culvert is above half volume now due to sediment.500 gal water tank & a gas powered pump?
I keep forgetting that not everyone was a 200' driveway and 250' of garden hose.
Nice job. A couple of differences from the op: your ditch is narrow, not a wide swale. And you did a nice job constructing headwalls and using sufficient fill. It looks perfect for your application.I used 25' of steel 17" x 24". (pic shows one 12 1/2' section)
(they put a 20" in a big press & squash it)
But my ground is a LOT drier out here.
View attachment 97443
View attachment 97444
Thanks! link to the whole project:Nice job. A couple of differences from the op: your ditch is narrow, not a wide swale. And you did a nice job constructing headwalls and using sufficient fill. It looks perfect for your application.
fishing line with a small float/bobber followed by a rope.One question: if the culvert is blocked, how do you thread the chain through it?
How would you thread line for 20’?fishing line with a small float/bobber followed by a rope.