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Soiltac soil stabilizer willisl@iupui.edu 01-03-2007
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Posted by willisl@iupui.edu on January 3, 2007, 6:26 pm


Has anyone in these groups used or become familiar with a soil erosion
control product called Soiltac? If so, I'd like to know how it has
worked for you. I'm trying to find a way to stop some serious erosion
of a stream bed that's caused (of course) by the upstream parking lots
that the local big-time developers have laid out.

Thanks.

Lynn Willis
Indianpolis
willisl@iupui.edu


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Posted by =?iso-8859-1?Q?Z=EBbulon?= on January 3, 2007, 6:43 pm



> Has anyone in these groups used or become familiar with a soil erosion
> control product called Soiltac? If so, I'd like to know how it has
> worked for you. I'm trying to find a way to stop some serious erosion
> of a stream bed that's caused (of course) by the upstream parking lots
> that the local big-time developers have laid out.
================
If you don't get an answer here you can try calling your local Agricultural
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Posted by Momgoose on January 4, 2007, 2:18 am



willisl@iupui.edu wrote:
> Has anyone in these groups used or become familiar with a soil erosion
> control product called Soiltac? If so, I'd like to know how it has
> worked for you. I'm trying to find a way to stop some serious erosion
> of a stream bed that's caused (of course) by the upstream parking lots
> that the local big-time developers have laid out.
>
> Thanks.
>
> Lynn Willis
> Indianpolis
> willisl@iupui.edu


The website for the company that makes Soiltac is www.soiltac.com
(you gotta love Google! :>) I'm also interested in this product as I
have erosion behind a riverwall, requiring a lot of digging and lost of
grass going into the winter/spring storm season here in Alabama, and I
really appreciate Lynn's question, which brought this product to our
attention.

It appears that you can buy Soiltac in everything from a small
sample size to a tanker full!


Posted by Larry Caldwell on January 5, 2007, 7:39 am


willisl@iupui.edu (willisl@iupui.edu) says...
> Has anyone in these groups used or become familiar with a soil erosion
> control product called Soiltac? If so, I'd like to know how it has
> worked for you. I'm trying to find a way to stop some serious erosion
> of a stream bed that's caused (of course) by the upstream parking lots
> that the local big-time developers have laid out.

Tackifiers are used to hold mulch on slopes to protect them from
raindrops. If you are looking at stream bed erosion, your best shot is
to place some boulders in the stream to slow the water velocity. If you
are getting stream bank erosion, you might think about revetments,
riffles, or vegetation. Willow plug planted 12" O/C will only take a
couple of years to knit a bank together.

Call your local soil conservation office. It's listed in the federal
part of the blue pages, but administered through your county.

--
For email, replace firstnamelastinitial
with my first name and last initial.

Posted by Ann on January 5, 2007, 11:01 am


On Fri, 05 Jan 2007 04:39:17 -0800, Larry Caldwell wrote:

> willisl@iupui.edu (willisl@iupui.edu) says...
>> Has anyone in these groups used or become familiar with a soil erosion
>> control product called Soiltac? If so, I'd like to know how it has
>> worked for you. I'm trying to find a way to stop some serious erosion
>> of a stream bed that's caused (of course) by the upstream parking lots
>> that the local big-time developers have laid out.

Depending on where you live and whether any existing regulations are
enforced, you may or may not be allowed to do work in the stream bed
without a permit. Also, the developers should have been required to submit
a storm water management plan and/or one for sediment control. That said,
here the main source of excess runoff is logging rather than development.
Lots of luck getting the regulations enforced when the runoff is doing
damage on your property.

> Tackifiers are used to hold mulch on slopes to protect them from
> raindrops. If you are looking at stream bed erosion, your best shot is
> to place some boulders in the stream to slow the water velocity. If you
> are getting stream bank erosion, you might think about revetments,
> riffles, or vegetation. Willow plug planted 12" O/C will only take a
> couple of years to knit a bank together.
>
> Call your local soil conservation office. It's listed in the federal
> part of the blue pages, but administered through your county.

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