longgonesilver wrote: » What's the soil like? Was it drained before? What's growing in it now? Is there somewhere to drain it to?
orchard farm wrote: » Having plenty of this land myself I know it's difficult to manage but can throw up serious grass when drained can be great veggie ground too.clean out open drains first.cheapest way is to try get fall to these drains by sloping the ground,heard bad reports of how brittle c agri pipes are,others have suggested make your own with roll of terram and normal pipes,cud be a goer.stones are a wast of money as will eventually block up but on the plus bogland is easy to drain and will improve tenfold
farmer2018 wrote: » Yes the parts that are dry grows great grass. So the terram and normal pipes without gravel is the way to go you reckon? The good thing is the all fields can be drained into open drains, the question is the best way of doing it.
farmer2018 wrote: » Where can a roll of this Terram be got? Would you use it with 4 inch JFC pipe? Connacht Agri do not sell that pipe anymore, they are just selling the sleeve which is 12 euro for 6 meters.
kerry cow wrote: » In bog , we dig down till you meet the mud layer . Pop in a 80 mm pipe , roll out a bale of 4x4 straw .pike it in on top of the pipe . Back fill .use a sewer pipe at the open end .work perfect .has been here for 25 yrs .and watch the water flow when it rains . Place 3 m apart
Gudstock wrote: » From what I have seen, for bog or peat ground that was originally raised bog cutaway, if you do a trial hole when the ground is wet you will see how the water collects from the clay layer up into the peat - it can't get though the clay hence why the bog formed in the first place. You need your perimeter open drains to be deeper than the clay below the bog. Then your piped drains across the field should have the pipe laid in the clay layer with stone backfill up just above the clay layer just into the peat. Ensure that the clay dug out is well mixed up with the peat when backfilling so that it doesn't clog the stone you've put in. When reseeding and after use gran lime only instead of ground, gran won't soften the peat surface like ground does and avoid poaching at all costs. This type of ground well drained and cared for can surprisingly grow huge volumes of grass.
Markcheese wrote: » Has anybody cleaned out ,or jetted drainage pipe ? Or is it pointless ?
farmer2018 wrote: » Lads, I am finding it hard to see the whole purpose of a pipe in peaty soil. Will clean stone not just work better?
farmer2018 wrote: » Should you have to be cleaning out open drains every few years realistically? What depth are your open drains in general? I notice any drains that are deep enough that have met stone do not need to be cleaned but other open drains fill with mud/weeds again in no length.