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Old 20-03-2013, 12:28 PM
Eco Maintenance Eco Maintenance is offline
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Mar 2013
Location: Tadcaster, North Yorkshire
Posts: 6
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Quote:
Originally Posted by [_2_] View Post
On Oct 6, 11:41*pm, songbird wrote:
gmb27 wrote:

...

Any advice or comments would be great thank you


* you need a professional on-site. *i hope
you observed what they have done already so
that it doesn't have to be dug up yet again.

* from here we can't tell how those drains
were designed and installed or what the
capacity is. *if there are ditches or sinks,
springs, soil conditions, site grades, etc.

* just too many factors for me to say much
else other than good luck.

* songbird


+1

One obvious big question is how extensive this newly
installed drain is and where exactly does it take the
water?
What is the situation like now ? Last year was unbelievably wet but still you should'nt have had that much of a problem. Possible causes;

1)There is something under the lawn restricting natural drainage such as compacted subsoil or builders rubble.
2)There is a burst water pipe or natural spring under you garden
3)The builders have put clayey subsoil in your garden

None of these are out of the question as builders are renown for not giving a s..t about what is under the lawn. It's usually full of rubble which has been compacted to within an inch of it's life by the heavy machinery and constant traffic during the building process. This rubble and crappy subsoil is then covered with an inch of topsoil and turfed over. It looks good for a little while and then the problems start to appear at which point the developer does'nt want to know. You are lucky that they have done anything at all.

I have looked at LOTS of lawns on new estates with this and other problems (usually dying lawns) and have had to give the homeowner the bad news about what their garden "soil" actually consists of.

Good luck with this and i am more than willing to give you any more advice you require.

Stuart.