HEAVY RAIN, CHECK DAMS ARE WORKING! Recharging Groundwater At My Off-Grid Oasis in Northern Arizona

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  • Опубліковано 6 вер 2024
  • Pleased the check dams are working to slow down water so it can soak into the ground. The results after a few heavy rains are promising and I look forward to adding more water conservation strategies to help my land recover. This area used to be a small wetland back before the road disturbed water flow and caused erosion. My goal is to recharge the ground water with these check dams and hopefully restore the wetland area. Very pleased with the progress so far!
    ~ Brian & Meadow

КОМЕНТАРІ • 189

  • @linesteppr
    @linesteppr Місяць тому +99

    Important note: BEFORE the pioneers came to the area, trappers would have already been there and wiped out all the beaver that created and maintained year-round wetlands and meadows. Yes! Beavers ARE NATIVE to all of Arizona except the Yuma dunes. They would have maintained not just grasses but also riparian trees and habitat for an unbelievable diversity of wildlife.
    Glad to see you are planning on swales to spread out that water. Mounds built on the downhill side with the spoil would be a great for cover crops that you could chop and drop for mulch as well as trees that could out-compete the juniper.

    • @chasbader
      @chasbader Місяць тому +3

      beavers do it for free. Get some.

    • @MaskOfLoki634
      @MaskOfLoki634 Місяць тому +12

      @@chasbader Well, they kinda need an environment that's habitable for them. As it stands right now they wouldn't survive due to the major shift Arizona took after they were wiped out. They may be able to survive in some small areas on established rivers, but definitely not on his land at the moment.

    • @estherbrown4084
      @estherbrown4084 Місяць тому +1

      Couldn't Brian and Meadow experiment with the Rocky Mountains juniper in certain ways based on at least the database of Plants For A Future?

    • @chasbader
      @chasbader Місяць тому +4

      @@MaskOfLoki634 Thank you! I'm not familiar with the environment down there in Arizona. I hope and pray that slowly but surely the habitat will recover. Dreaming of the day when flash floods are a thing of the past. Thinking of all the sediment being washed down into the ocean or reservoirs which could contribute to a deep layer of topsoil supporting all those willows and cottonwoods.

    • @Zyragonn
      @Zyragonn Місяць тому +1

      Yeah I also thought he should introduce some beavers to take care of dams.

  • @OGMrE
    @OGMrE Місяць тому +17

    My Grandma was born on the Rez in near Page AZ. She told me her great grandpa used to tell here stories of how beavers used to build damns in the canyons and they used to have way more water and marshy areas.

    • @Sacredview
      @Sacredview 21 день тому

      100% my wife’s grandma told the same stories on the eastern Rez…
      All the beavers were killed off. Now the creeks are seasonal. They used to run most of the year

  • @debdennison6947
    @debdennison6947 Місяць тому +27

    I live in northern New Mexico and we have also been getting the monsoon rains. I have been working my property for the last 3 years and tit is exciting to bring the natural grasses and flowers back to the land by simply slowing the water down. We're kindred spirits! I am getting ready to sell this property and relocate to Northern Arizona. I am excited to start again....helping another piece return to what it should be..

    • @jK-yj2tl
      @jK-yj2tl Місяць тому +1

      Wow… such a special video; I’ve watched it several times already.

    • @JerryK-ob7dl
      @JerryK-ob7dl Місяць тому +1

      Good work, I love to see and hear about people getting back on the land in a meaningful way not just to a big house on some cleared and graded rural lot. Bravo you everyone giving mother nature a hand. It was man who killed the beavers and cleared the forests, so it's fitting we make the repairs.

  • @viviangill1806
    @viviangill1806 Місяць тому +37

    Hey Brian. As a city girl I'll tell you that I learn so much from you and I love your content. I have always dared to be different. My kids are like, what in the world are you watching?

    • @WakeUpToYourself
      @WakeUpToYourself Місяць тому +3

      You must be a outdoors person at heart 🙏🏾

    • @viviangill1806
      @viviangill1806 Місяць тому +2

      @WakeUpToYourself I am. And I love fishing. Fresh caught fish is the best. Unlike Brian I don't release. I make sure they are the right length so I don't get a ticket.

  • @threeriversforge1997
    @threeriversforge1997 Місяць тому +10

    Good to see! People don't understand how the local ecosystem and weather patterns can be changed quite dramatically just by something as simple as removing the beavers who were managing the hydrology... which in turn affected the weather patterns at the local level. More water means more grass growth, but it also means more to evaporate at the local level and more rainfall at that point. It means cooler temperatures and less flooding. And when you remove that keystone species, the ramifications can be long in coming. Sometimes, so long that generations pass and people accept that what they see before them is how it's always been. They get used to the "new normal", never knowing how grand it once was.
    So kudos for trying to fix the problem. Those check dams will go a long way to helping make the land a little healthier, so don't get discouraged if things don't seem to be changing fast enough. It took a century to get like it is, so maybe it'll take a lifetime to rebuild.

  • @TylerChristoher
    @TylerChristoher Місяць тому +17

    My dream to have a property I could build dams just like that not even playing dude. I'm so happy to see that there's other people that are into this too

    • @OffGridBackcountryAdventures
      @OffGridBackcountryAdventures  Місяць тому +3

      We are cut from the same cloth, Tyler. I love doing this sort of stuff.

    • @thomassiegfried5409
      @thomassiegfried5409 Місяць тому +1

      Been making a bunch of them it’s my favorite thing to do

    • @samlarkin8102
      @samlarkin8102 Місяць тому +2

      Same here! I can’t wait to have my own land to regenerate. Wishing you the best in making your venture a reality 💚

  • @Ryan-gx3hs
    @Ryan-gx3hs Місяць тому +13

    You might want to plant a flag/marker next to the dams that need fixing so that you can easily identify it when it dries up. I love seeing your efforts to rehydrate the land!

  • @nmda9578
    @nmda9578 Місяць тому +12

    Grew up in Northern Arizona, and my ancestors were some of the first European-American settlers in the White Mountains region. I agree with how beautiful it is during monsoon season. You’re also correct about how much grassland there used to be. It used to support huge herds of elk, deer, pronghorn, and bighorn sheep. We’ve changed the grasslands and the forests so much in the last 150 years. I love what you’re doing with your land so far.

  • @tesha199
    @tesha199 Місяць тому +5

    There is a huge benefit of having so many treees, and it's abundance of potential mulch. Shaun Overton from Dustups project has way less vegetation on his main restoration site.

  • @keithjumbuckforge725
    @keithjumbuckforge725 Місяць тому +5

    Looking great, try and leave the middle of the rock check lower than the edges so water runs over rather than eroding around the outside. The top of the lower rock check should line up with the bottom of the next one up if you want to hold back the silt which will encourage the grass to grow and hold it all together. Looking forward to future updates.

  • @TheDog_Chef
    @TheDog_Chef Місяць тому +5

    Monsoon season is the most exciting time of year for people that are restoring these lands!!!

  • @Romano108
    @Romano108 Місяць тому +5

    It's so cool to see people recognizing the need to slow water flow and let it spread out and soak in.

  • @sydneyevans2637
    @sydneyevans2637 Місяць тому +3

    Consider using sticks and branches upstream side of the rocks to help seal your dams. Beaver have good results. Great property!

  • @bosquebear1
    @bosquebear1 Місяць тому +7

    Rocky mountain juniper are benefiting you in that they are producing biomass for you to use in placing the cut branches to slow down the water and making brushpiles for critters.. It's such a good thing you are doing with swales and rock dams. It's such a pleasure to see your project working. Best wishes from New Mexico.

  • @kurt3463
    @kurt3463 Місяць тому +15

    Playing with landscaping is fun!

  • @justinmilla
    @justinmilla Місяць тому +5

    Some landscaping fabric, hemp , burlap or straw on the high side of those dams will help accumulate silt and seal it up. You don’t want to remove the branches but maybe just break them up and set them in the right direction to slow the flow and accumulate debris. I had a creek that started forming through my property and some branches laid horizontal with a little landscaping fabric made a huge difference and gave me a good feeling about recharging my well. I don’t have all the rocks you have so used what I do.

  • @jediineducation
    @jediineducation Місяць тому +9

    Upgrading the quality of the land is what makes me feel better. Greetings from Austria

  • @brianvittachi6869
    @brianvittachi6869 Місяць тому +3

    All that water being held back, soaking into and rejuvenating the land, is a sight to behold.
    Well done.

  • @dannyhe4175
    @dannyhe4175 Місяць тому +2

    Great work, we need people like you to help re-greening the earth. People forget, that we only have one earth, and we have nowhere to go, so if we don't take care of Mother Earth, it would be just like living inside a fouled-up fish tank,

    • @tekken9476
      @tekken9476 Місяць тому

      But the earth has changed consistently for eternity nothing stays the same

  • @2A_supporter
    @2A_supporter Місяць тому +3

    Tohonos used to do rock and check dams all up and down temporary creeks making them last as long as possible sometimes making annual creeks perennial. Keep doing what ur doing plant many native plants and flowers of all sorts too get rid of them junipers! They suck up all the water that the native grasses could be using.

  • @RLeeVanCamps
    @RLeeVanCamps Місяць тому +2

    The satisfaction from all your hard work must feel amazing. Leaving it better than you found it😊

  • @AngelaMerkeltree
    @AngelaMerkeltree Місяць тому +7

    Great update - fascinated by what your doing here - keep the water harvesting updates coming!

  • @JuanGCorredorB
    @JuanGCorredorB Місяць тому +6

    Learning from you from Florida, originally from Colombia. I’m motivated by your love for nature and your land.

  • @joevandal4192
    @joevandal4192 Місяць тому +4

    Amazing job and inspiring to everyone who watches the channel. Thanks!

  • @madeleinerenteria2870
    @madeleinerenteria2870 Місяць тому +7

    What a nice piece of land you own. Love what you have done with it.

  • @Jeanetteinnes
    @Jeanetteinnes Місяць тому +6

    Your mini dams are working well! Great watching the water slowing and recharging your land. 😮

  • @deanmartin9358
    @deanmartin9358 Місяць тому +2

    happy friday Brian it looks like the check dams are doing their job certainly going to regenerate the land its funny when we think of Arizona we think of desert. how fantastic it must be for you to see nature taking its coarse good luck and have a great weekend still waiting for summer to begin in the Uk nothing but rain

  • @xavierroy5254
    @xavierroy5254 Місяць тому +2

    Well done chief,keep the good work going.

  • @improvetheworldnow
    @improvetheworldnow Місяць тому +2

    cool, it sounds like the main goal is raising the groundwater so that it can in the future support more life than it otherwise would

  • @teasea821
    @teasea821 Місяць тому +1

    Its not just the water you want to trap, its the soil. If you let it all run off you will by left with a rocky surface and grass wont grow to hold moister in the ground. Keep up the great work

  • @daneboro6847
    @daneboro6847 Місяць тому +9

    Love all the dams you created, I could sit there for ours to the relaxing sound of the trickle💧

  • @sgrvtl7183
    @sgrvtl7183 Місяць тому +2

    Really pretty land❗️summer rains are awesome and always welcomed. In S. Cal it is a rarity for summer rains- miss it❗️

  • @lewispaine4589
    @lewispaine4589 Місяць тому +2

    I find this kind of project/work really interesting, looks like you're making great progress.

  • @virginiajorgensen8614
    @virginiajorgensen8614 Місяць тому +4

    Great job Brian with the dams and water storage and you have wonderful views. Yes, the sound of the running water is nice and the pine removal has made a huge difference. Everything is looking so nice and Meadow is coming along.

  • @samlarkin8102
    @samlarkin8102 Місяць тому +2

    Amazing work, thanks for sharing!

  • @bobbiolah2320
    @bobbiolah2320 Місяць тому +3

    Amazing through your knowledge and labor the beauty and positive accomplisments of your land. To listen to the brook's flow creates a happy and relaxedl time. The view from your new home will be surrounded by incredible beauty..🎉

  • @deborahdougherty3208
    @deborahdougherty3208 Місяць тому +2

    I love this video! You and Meadow look so happy and healthy. Those dams are amazing!!

  • @JensOdense
    @JensOdense Місяць тому +3

    I love your work with the dams!

  • @340wbymag
    @340wbymag Місяць тому +2

    I cannot express how cool this project is. I am old now, far past my prime, so I will never be able to take on such a project. That makes me sad, and a bit envious too.

  • @2509zg99
    @2509zg99 16 днів тому

    So many check dams! Amazing job! So you win, but also everybody else wins because this benefits all the surrounding land as well as the wild life, not to mention recharging the aquifer.

  • @margaretgood580
    @margaretgood580 Місяць тому +2

    Hello Brian and sweet Meadow 🐕❤
    Love the title of your video..
    " OFF GRID OASIS " 🌈🐕

  • @larryboschen1287
    @larryboschen1287 Місяць тому +2

    Awesome effort and I can definitely see your Results.

  • @thomassiegfried5409
    @thomassiegfried5409 Місяць тому +1

    Cows will go right through that natural barrier

  • @mehAudio
    @mehAudio Місяць тому +2

    You could use the trunks and larger branches and drive them into the ground. Then weave in the small branches like a basket. Then fortify with your boulders. That should slow down the water enough for the sediments to settle. You don‘t have to fill up you dams manually that way. Also, any sand you throw onto the boulders will just wash away.

    • @76MUTiger
      @76MUTiger Місяць тому

      The old Roman Roads were really big rocks at the bottom, topped by smaller rocks, then another layer of even smaller rocks, then gravel, etc. The dam would work the same way. Sand would wash through these big gaps between rocks, but small rocks would not. Just shovel gravel onto the upstream face of the dam and let nature move the gravel until the pieces jam in the gaps, leaving smaller gaps. Then tiny rocks get washed along until they run into a gap they can't pass through, partially sealing it, etc.

  • @bebe60602
    @bebe60602 Місяць тому +2

    Well, that’s interesting. I wonder… if maybe I do something like this on a smaller scale in my front and backyard. I live in Tucson and we do have monsoon rain and even last winter we had quite a bit of rain. Right now I did channels and catchment basins but this video shows me something more natural, especially the small waterfall off of basins. This natural landscape inspired me. Thank you sir, I enjoyed watching this video very much and will look for others about this topic in your playlist.❤️🙏🐾

    • @OffGridBackcountryAdventures
      @OffGridBackcountryAdventures  Місяць тому +2

      Thank you for tuning in, I hope your landscaping endeavors go well in Tucson! I absolutely love doing stuff like this, can't wait to see what my place looks like 5-10 years from now.

  • @vlif479
    @vlif479 Місяць тому +2

    Very exciting to see your property grow & restore. Thanks for sharing. ✌️

  • @creinicke1000
    @creinicke1000 Місяць тому +1

    Great water management..

  • @robertoalvarez6850
    @robertoalvarez6850 Місяць тому +2

    Great job my friend, I love this stuff, I've built few rock structures my self , keep it up brother!!

  • @intractablemaskvpmGy
    @intractablemaskvpmGy Місяць тому +3

    Juniper has been known to kill year round springs. Once they were eradicated form the area the springs started flowing again.

    • @OffGridBackcountryAdventures
      @OffGridBackcountryAdventures  Місяць тому +4

      I am really pleased with the results so far, looking forward to seeing what my place will look like 5-10 years from now.

  • @fernandobanos7255
    @fernandobanos7255 Місяць тому

    Great job. I am sure you will have a wonderful and expensive piece of land in the near future. And millions of followers doing the same for the environment

  • @curious736
    @curious736 Місяць тому +1

    Wow.... that pasture rejuvenation was amazing....... God's country!!

  • @Treesusb
    @Treesusb 2 дні тому

    Excited for year 2 update. Your fruits will began to compound exponentially year after year… if humanity did this, we’d be find

  • @racebanning6390
    @racebanning6390 Місяць тому +1

    The Sound of the Brook water , and looks so much better. Land restoration is Kool. plus designing it with your own preferences👍👍🤙🤙Awesome. Be blessed Bro🙏🙏🇺🇸🇺🇸

  • @Jordanehart
    @Jordanehart Місяць тому

    Great video. Lots of good work.

  • @Luvcards
    @Luvcards Місяць тому +2

    I was watching a video on a man that was modifying his wife’s Armada (I have one ❤) and he mentioned that he was an Art major and having 3 major colors makes the “artwork” more appealing. Most of your videos have green, blue sky and red or brown. You live in a natural art picture!! Your land is gorgeous and getting prettier!

    • @OffGridBackcountryAdventures
      @OffGridBackcountryAdventures  Місяць тому +2

      I love how the landscape is responding so fast to my re-greening efforts. Imagine what things will look like a decade from now! Looking forward to seeing how the land regenerates.

  • @Patvk8
    @Patvk8 Місяць тому +1

    Hi Brian, great job on working your land. The dutch farmer has a great video on swales and rehydrating land. Great video, thanks for sharing 👍

  • @CharlesGann1
    @CharlesGann1 Місяць тому

    Well done

  • @the_wandering_brute
    @the_wandering_brute Місяць тому

    Property looks AMAZING!!! Incredible what you’ve done in a year.

  • @dds3159
    @dds3159 Місяць тому +1

    Hey Brian and meadow hope you're doing well your place is really improving ... YES CANNOT WAIT FOR THE MONSOONS TO HIT THIS WEEKEND .. SAVING MONEY CATCHING WATER AND WE don't have to water the plants or the animals this year with new rain catch setups 🤘

  • @nekoDan
    @nekoDan Місяць тому +2

    Great to see your progress. Half moon ditches on the hillside should help too. I wonder if some boards or even tarp or plastic at the base of the check dams would stop the water and help the sediment accumulate.

    • @racebanning6390
      @racebanning6390 Місяць тому +1

      Great idea. Pond liner😁👍Would def help.

    • @76MUTiger
      @76MUTiger Місяць тому

      Won't sediment just fill up the space the water should occupy, creating a series of mesas rather than holes for water to stand in? Will the ponds need to be scooped out from time to time?

  • @jaytuberr
    @jaytuberr Місяць тому

    Loving all of the work with the check dams, if it were me I'd be doing the same exact thing obsessively building check dams, leaky weirs, and swales any free minute I get.

  • @ConorFlynn-conorpro
    @ConorFlynn-conorpro Місяць тому +1

    This is great! I can’t wait to hear an update at the end of the monsoons. Have you read Rainwater Harvesting for Drylands and Beyond by Brad Lancaster? HIGHLY recommended!!

  • @johnganshow5536
    @johnganshow5536 Місяць тому +3

    North of Prescott here, still waiting for some rain. Seems like we get more during the winter when the storms are slamming into California...

  • @alvinmousseau1100
    @alvinmousseau1100 Місяць тому

    Awesome video

  • @kezzatries
    @kezzatries Місяць тому

    Nice little corner of the world Mate. From down under here.

  • @Luvcards
    @Luvcards Місяць тому

    That’s cool that you know so much about landscaping. Your place is looking great!

  • @outdoorsadventurer
    @outdoorsadventurer Місяць тому

    Really impressive results by the check dams! Pretty soon you'll have full sheeting in areas that were ravine like ditches. The payoff is amazing. Glad to see the septic test sites going in as well. You'll have a nice system in place very soon. What a convenience that will be for you. Great work Brian! Loving that Meadow, she is really getting big now. You friend in Vegas...

  • @glorgau
    @glorgau Місяць тому

    Check dams are basically beaver dam analogs. Very cool project.

  • @USFBL
    @USFBL Місяць тому

    great job

  • @zoizisi5598
    @zoizisi5598 Місяць тому

    Hello Brian and meadow,,,, very Good job you have dove ❤👍❣️

  • @Bennie32831
    @Bennie32831 Місяць тому

    Adding lots organic matter like branches under the Rock will help and more lower down were the camp site will help 👏

  • @Orchardman53
    @Orchardman53 Місяць тому

    Reuse the Juniper. If you have a wood chipper, incorporate the chippings into your check dam walls.

  • @JPSURF16
    @JPSURF16 Місяць тому

    Awesome work and keep it up. I hope to soon be in the Northern West part of Arizona doing something very similar with 40 or so Acres.

  • @benjaminspencer6507
    @benjaminspencer6507 Місяць тому

    I have missed you for awhile! Love the rainy season too! Keep it up!!

  • @mandandi
    @mandandi Місяць тому

    Hi Brian, the dams looks good. Of course they will need some improvement, but you wouldn't know if you had not put in the effort. It would be interesting to see how swales would work on your land. There is a good gradient you could use to redirect the water from the dams into some swales to allow more water to infiltrate the ground.

  • @ethanhood204
    @ethanhood204 Місяць тому

    Sweet content!

  • @loboxx337
    @loboxx337 Місяць тому

    I 've seen small reservoirs used to retain water during the rainy season for cattle to use but it's hard for the water to last because of evapotranspiration in the dry semi arid land. Which never changes even when a good rainy year.

    • @OffGridBackcountryAdventures
      @OffGridBackcountryAdventures  Місяць тому

      Hi Lobo XX, this is actually the first step in many to recharge the groundwater in my lower meadow. If you look up rock check dams on UA-cam and you'll be presented with quite a few videos which talk about this proven method to recharge groundwater in semi-arid environments.

  • @nomex1996
    @nomex1996 Місяць тому

    Hi Brian!
    If you could sift some of your soil with some wire screen you could use the smaller rocks to place upstream of the check dams with.
    What you are doing is awesome. Love it!

  • @Jellybizzy
    @Jellybizzy Місяць тому +1

    hey. good results so far man!

  • @HillsideHomesteadOG
    @HillsideHomesteadOG Місяць тому

    So cool to see the progress!

  • @arjones57
    @arjones57 Місяць тому

    Grass and grass mulch hold the moisture better than any wood mulch.

  • @charlesurrea1451
    @charlesurrea1451 Місяць тому

    It's a good start. Now that you know the lay of the land you can make more thoughtful efforts.
    I suggest digging Tanakos.
    Imagine a cistern for runoff.

  • @CARvideoshareit
    @CARvideoshareit Місяць тому

    If you could get some beavers started. Plant food sources for them. They would do a lot of the work for you.

  • @najruqwi7008
    @najruqwi7008 Місяць тому

    Your place is looking good 👍

  • @andrewrivera4029
    @andrewrivera4029 Місяць тому

    Yup, in addition you can trench at say every 50 foot perpendicular to the streams, think terrace, this way you hold the water at each elevation letting the water seep, this will keep the water on the land.

  • @garagejim1956
    @garagejim1956 Місяць тому

    Hi Bryan, just got back after a 11 day stint out the property. Glad to see that your check dams are progressing well. That was one of tasks while we were there. Started on one with the brush and rocks we gathered. Much like yours, it has 3 feeders and will require more effort to get it set up. We also discovered many beautiful pines as we walked the property, these be cleaned up and opened up from the junipers. Question: how do tell the difference between the native juniper and the Rocky Mountain juniper.
    Monsoons were awesome, Saturdays dropped almost 2" of rain and a healthy amount of hail, not to mention a great thunder and lightning display.
    Keep up the great work and your video updates. Best to you, neighbor.

  • @stphns1737
    @stphns1737 Місяць тому

    That is sooo awesome!

  • @theflyfishingnomad9641
    @theflyfishingnomad9641 Місяць тому

    Looks great!

  • @MaskOfLoki634
    @MaskOfLoki634 Місяць тому

    Southern Utah and still waiting for those monsoon rains.

  • @leslieg9406
    @leslieg9406 Місяць тому

    What a beautiful place you have! I wish you'd send some of that rain down here to the valley. I think it's been about 3+ months since we had rain.

  • @RV_Chef_Life
    @RV_Chef_Life Місяць тому +2

    Brian have you noticed the monsoon season in AZ is wetter than last year. Last year our first year in New Mexico probably didn’t even get half the normal rainfall. This year might even be wetter than normal so far.

  • @nanshe3x
    @nanshe3x Місяць тому

    Looking good!
    The rain looks so refreshing on the landscape.
    I would have wiped the atv seat off with a towel. 🤷🏽‍♀️

  • @traildriving
    @traildriving Місяць тому

    Juniper berries are edible when they turn that purplish color ( takes 2 years for them to ripen). You could do some digging into goats. They might help tear down the juniper. Not sure if they would be a good fit for your property.

  • @coolhand6669
    @coolhand6669 Місяць тому

    All the check dams are helping but you need to do one of my cousins up in Northern California is in that area similar to what you are in when it rains it rains and then when it's dry it's dry so all the areas where the water runs during raining season he's put in dams and capture the water he has about over a dozen different little Lakes on his property some like 10 by 20 others couple hundred feet across in a couple hundred feet wide and like 50 ft deep. Where you have the water running the most I if it was my property I get back home in there and I dig up 10 foot minimum to the bottom and 20 feet across and probably 20 ft the other way maybe 40 ft and have a really nice pond

  • @adammac4381
    @adammac4381 Місяць тому

    The leaking under the check dam is stopped by sticking straw into the underlayer on the up-stream side. A couple of bales of straw or hay is your best friend right now.. The idea is to get the water flowing over the top a bit more.

    • @user-fy6ne2pu1v
      @user-fy6ne2pu1v Місяць тому

      The leaking from the check dams is not from under, but through them. Straw bales will work, but as we can all see he has no shortage of free rocks.😀

    • @adammac4381
      @adammac4381 Місяць тому

      ​@@user-fy6ne2pu1v no bro, your not understanding my meaning. Use rocks, you have plenty, but get handfulls or armfulls of straw and stuff them into the bottom one third or half of the check dam. I've built plenty, they are supposed to leak only through the top bit, or over the top.
      There are still 2 stages you have to build on a check dam,,,, build a contour holding swale at high water mark, so as to spread the water over a few acres, and then planting riparian areas beside the check dam areas.

  • @rainman7992
    @rainman7992 29 днів тому

    if you don't want the waters to go around the edges, make top of the dam shallow V-shaped with the middle portion the lowest point

  • @michaelide9380
    @michaelide9380 Місяць тому

    Morning, as long time subscriber I want to suggest hugelculture raised beds . Use all that waste wood as your base and you will grow more food than you can eat

  • @texmexbbq7085
    @texmexbbq7085 Місяць тому

    Create some major sinuosity in those creeks along with the check dams... more stream length on your land

  • @razorbackg.7004
    @razorbackg.7004 Місяць тому

    The more you can get rid of those junipers the more water for grass you will have, they just pull tons of water out of the ground.

  • @johntouchet7178
    @johntouchet7178 Місяць тому

    Combine grasses with your check dams to create more absorbent and durable terraces.