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Fence posts in wet location?
#301914 04/14/10 06:21 PM
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I'm considering fencing in part of my yard, the lower part of which is wetlands. As I near the wetlands...say, twelve feet away... the water table seems to be a foot or so below the surface. I'd rather not fence in only the area that has a lower water table, as I'd miss out on too much area that I want to enclose.

I know there's cement that gets put in a hole dry, to have water added on top. But does anyone know of solutions that work in very wet areas? Such as the above cement in a sonotube that is coated to stop water infiltration or regular cement in a sonotube wrapped in a plastic bag?

Of course, cement may not even be the way to go, but as the ground gets fairly soft around there, I'm assuming a hole filled with stone just won't do it over the long haul...


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Re: Fence posts in wet location?
MarkSJohnson #301917 04/14/10 06:38 PM
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10 years ago when I bought my house, I had an area in the back yard that would get soggy with standing water whenever it rained really hard.

There used to be a store nearby called Earl Mae, but they've sense closed down. They sold a product that you put in a garden hose end sprayer and you wet down the soggy area with this and it contained some sort of biological stuff that would drill down and change the soil so that it would drain.

This worked really good. About 8 years later, I started having standing water again, but not as bad. I've searched the internet looking for this product but it doesn't seem to exist anymore.

Edit: I was sort of hoping someone would say "I know what that is, it's....."

Last edited by CatBrat; 04/14/10 07:17 PM.
Re: Fence posts in wet location?
CatBrat #301919 04/14/10 06:41 PM
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Problem is, the water isn't coming from above, but up from the ground. \:\(


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Re: Fence posts in wet location?
MarkSJohnson #301922 04/14/10 06:51 PM
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I googled this one.

http://www.forums.woodnet.net/ubbthreads/showflat.php?Cat=&Number=4821218&page=&view=&sb=5

Seems to be a lot of conflicting advice though. Some people advise against setting posts in concrete when there's a water table nearby. Others say they've done it and their posts have lasted for years and years.

Re: Fence posts in wet location?
MarkSJohnson #301924 04/14/10 06:55 PM
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While not exactly the same, I have see telephone poles in extremely wet areas buried into the ground as usual but with another pole bolted to it horizontally along ground level. Guy wire(s) to a solid location on the 90 degree axis do the rest. In an area where it needs to remain a bit more picturesque, they will bury the attached horizontal pole just under the surface so it is not seen.

I suspect you don't need, nor would you want, guy wires, but burying some horizontal timber attached to the fence posts might help it from sinking or tipping. You could even use two in an X pattern. That might be overkill though as the structural integrity of the fence itself would prevent any lean along the axis parallel to the fence.


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Re: Fence posts in wet location?
Murph #301925 04/14/10 07:08 PM
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As long as you have adjacent support from the fence, you might be able to use bolted U-channels on top of the concrete/sono tubes such as is common in decking. This'll keep the fence posts above the watertable but support for the fence might be an issue unless it's in a corner area.


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Re: Fence posts in wet location?
Adrian #301927 04/14/10 07:26 PM
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use the new fabricated plastic fencing.


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Re: Fence posts in wet location?
Adrian #301928 04/14/10 07:27 PM
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But will the cement set in the wet ground?


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Re: Fence posts in wet location?
MarkSJohnson #301929 04/14/10 07:36 PM
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Mark I found this thread about somebody inquiring the pouring of concrete under water and pouring footers in wetlands, it might either help you with your quest to get the proper footing for the fence post or it may lead you on to another thread regarding the information you are looking for.

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Re: Fence posts in wet location?
MarkSJohnson #301930 04/14/10 07:42 PM
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I'm quite sure there are types of cement for wet ground or even underwater....think marina docks, bridges ect. Cement is actually a chemical reaction between it's ingredients, I don't think the fact that it happens underwater changes that. Within a sono-tube, you'd probably force the standing water out of the tube when you pour the cement in, wouldn't you?

Example of Marine Application.


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