Down the side of many motorways, there are French drains to carry off surplus water. For those not familiar with these, they are basically open channels filled with coarse gravel. Over time, they obviously get silted up and need cleaned. Some 30+ years ago, the son of an old friend/colleague came up with an ingenious idea to do this fairly cheaply. He got hold of an industrial carrot washer, and ran this alongside a plough or similar which lifted the mucky gravel into the cleaner, which washed off the silt and the gravel went back into the gully. No idea how well he did with this, but I've now got a problem which needs something similar.
Our drive consists of a thickish layer (150mm or so) of what locally are called chuckies, 20mm rough gravel. Twenty years or so of driving over these, washing cars etc. added a goodly mix of silt, which actually made the surface more practical than the raw chuckies. However, we've just had a problem with the drainage from out septic tank, involving the construction of a new soakaway. The guy doing this used a middle sized Doosan digger, and the weight of this, plus the sideways movement of the tracks has really compressed the chuckies and squidged the silt and mud into a mucky layer on the surface.
Something like Ken's son's french drain cleaner would be ideal for tidying this up.
Anyone got any ideas of firms that might offer this sort of service? Don't fancy trying to rotavate it and washing the chuckies with a hose!
Our drive consists of a thickish layer (150mm or so) of what locally are called chuckies, 20mm rough gravel. Twenty years or so of driving over these, washing cars etc. added a goodly mix of silt, which actually made the surface more practical than the raw chuckies. However, we've just had a problem with the drainage from out septic tank, involving the construction of a new soakaway. The guy doing this used a middle sized Doosan digger, and the weight of this, plus the sideways movement of the tracks has really compressed the chuckies and squidged the silt and mud into a mucky layer on the surface.
Something like Ken's son's french drain cleaner would be ideal for tidying this up.
Anyone got any ideas of firms that might offer this sort of service? Don't fancy trying to rotavate it and washing the chuckies with a hose!