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Old 16-06-2010, 07:01 PM posted to rec.gardens
Bill who putters Bill who putters is offline
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: May 2009
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Default always wet area next to house

In article ,
Ohioguy wrote:

I've got a small area of soil right next to our house that I'm having
trouble with. It is roughly 3' wide and maybe 14 or 15' long, right up
against the west side of the house, between the house and the sidewalk,
near the front door.

I planted several things there this Spring, and everything has died.
I dug down in there, and found that the soil is staying very, very
wet. Also, though the good topsoil goes down about 3", the underlying
material is simply gravel, and that is wet too. There is no water or
anything visible there, and no water actually rushes into a hole when I
dig, but it evidently stays the wettest spot I've ever tried to garden in.

Yesterday I realized why - the prevailing wind and weather here comes
from the SW, and when it rains against the side of the house, the water
just runs down the side of the house and down into this little area. I
mulched the area, which probably holds the moisture in even more. I
don't think there is any good drainage under the sidewalk, so the water
just sort of sits there. I could probably grow rice there without too
much trouble!

So, I have two choices, really. I could start thinking of growing
only plants that don't mind having a lot of water just a few inches
below the surface.


Or, I could dig everything out down to about 9", leave two or three
trenches, and mound up some light, organic soil, sand and peat moss in
between the trenches, and plant there. I thought about trying to get
the area drained better, but I don't see any easy way to put in drainage
tile or anything like that, without busting out the walkway. That might
be a project to consider next year.


Anyone ever have a situation like this? How did you handle it?


We have what we call swells around here. Sort of like ground water that
travels in a certain direction and is usually be nigh. One runs into
my basement from the north and leaves our above brick work with a
permanent damp spot luckily outside. A remedy could be a french drain
.. I just learned to live with it. Weird as even in a drought that spot
is damp.

--
Bill S. Jersey USA zone 5 shade garden
What use one more wake up call?
http://ocg6.marine.usf.edu/~liu/Drif...atest_roms.htm