Township rocked the road last spring, bigger rock and few fines. Didn’t get much rain to be able to work it in . They plowed snow and this is the result. I usually mow to the road, not sure what to do with it now.View attachment 137709View attachment 137709View attachment 137710View attachment 137711View attachment 137712View attachment 137713View attachment 137714View attachment 137715
Township rocked the road last spring, bigger rock and few fines. Didn’t get much rain to be able to work it in . They plowed snow and this is the result. I usually mow to the road, not sure what to do with it now.
Poor management and supervision.Township rocked the road last spring, bigger rock and few fines. Didn’t get much rain to be able to work it in . They plowed snow and this is the result. I usually mow to the road, not sure what to do with it now.View attachment 137709View attachment 137709View attachment 137710View attachment 137711View attachment 137712View attachment 137713View attachment 137714View attachment 137715View attachment 137716
It's not really a rock rake, it's a box rake, but where to the rocks go?Harley rock rake
If you look close you'll see that it has a pto to turn the carbide spiked drum and hydraulics to angle the drum. The sides that you see as a "box" are removable, you angle the rake and a winrow of rocks comes off the side. If you do a search for Harley rock rake you'll see several examples.It's not really a rock rake, it's a box rake, but where to the rocks go?
We have lived in this house 39 years, and have it to clean up every spring. Doesn’t seem to matter which county truck driver, have been many different ones over the years. I have used rakes and wheelbarrows, blade on tractor, and the self propelled walk behind power brooms. The power brooms work the best.Township rocked the road last spring, bigger rock and few fines. Didn’t get much rain to be able to work it in . They plowed snow and this is the result. I usually mow to the road, not sure what to do with it now.View attachment 137709View attachment 137709View attachment 137710View attachment 137711View attachment 137712View attachment 137713View attachment 137714View attachment 137715View attachment 137716
Ok I see, so the one you've shown in the picture is just being used to level out the farrows?If you look close you'll see that it has a pto to turn the carbide spiked drum and hydraulics to angle the drum. The sides that you see as a "box" are removable, you angle the rake and a winrow of rocks comes off the side. If you do a search for Harley rock rake you'll see several examples.
I agree. A landscape rake is what I use in the spring to get the rocks out of the grass. It's not perfect but better than having to do it by hand. Perhaps you could get the township to buy one and keep the citizens happy by touching up their mess.I've got almost a mile of gravel lane on our place and I use a landscaping rake every spring to recover as much as I can and to smooth the dirt out. At $35 a ton now for 57's I want it back. I barrowed a Harley rake one year and it scalped the "yard" along the lane and kilt my fescue I had planted.
Talk to the County or Twp engineer and see if they plan on cleaning it up since it's their mess and their road.
As others have said I consider rocks, or gravel in the ditch to be part of living in the country. If our plow operator left an inch of snow on the road, he would get called back to finish the job.
And put it in the center of the road if its gravel, tapering down to the sides. That's the way they build country roads down here.They need to bring a grader and cut that shoulder down. If the snow plow is bringing up dirt, that means the water can't get off the road.
Not the amount of dirt I saw in the pictures... Best just to cut the shoulder , gather up the windrow and take it back to the yard, possibly to shred and screen it for topsoil. You make sense , though, if the shoulder contains enough road material for a crown.And put it in the center of the road if its gravel, tapering down to the sides. That's the way they build country roads down here.
Around here, yes they own the ditch but as the adjacent property owner we are required to mow along the road twice a year and control trees and noxious weeds in the ditches.When I commented about the county owning a potion of the shoulder what I was saying is they are doing you a favor by allowing you to mow it, if push came to shove they could say stay of of their ditch. It would then grow into a bigger eye sore than a little spring clean up is.
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