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#1 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Bow
Posts: 1,874
Thanks: 521
Thanked 308 Times in 162 Posts
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My point stands. While I agree that erosion is a fact, I disagree on your point that it is solely caused by "over-sized boats".
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Getting ready for winter! |
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#2 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Florida (Sebring & Keys), Wolfeboro
Posts: 6,028
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Thanked 789 Times in 564 Posts
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Explain how this phenomenon exists, with the lake at an August "low":
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Is it "Common Sense" isn't.
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#3 |
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Senior Member
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To stop that erosion problemo, go get some el cheapo 70-lb paper bags with concrete mix, (sand-cement-gravel) for about $3/bag, and align them along the shoreline there under the water.
The water soaks through the paper, the concrete will set up under the water, harden into solid concrete weighing maybe 250-lbs/bag, and will protect the shoreline. Just load up an old rowboat with dry concrete bags, and set them along the shoreline, underwater ..... easy-peasy! This actually does work very good and concrete like this will last under water for 100 years or more.
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.... Banned for life from local thrift store!
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#4 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Moultonboro, NH
Posts: 2,953
Thanks: 484
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Quote:
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#5 |
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Senior Member
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This is what people over in Maine do. Maine is loaded with small ponds, rivers and big lakes. Some of those small ponds are simply a stream that got dammed up, 200-years ago, by building a rip-rap, home made dam, using paper bags of concrete mix piled up, interlocking style, to make a dam.
Back in 1818, they maybe were using cotton bags filled with sand-cement-gravel. Here in 2018, you use the 70-lb concrete paper bags. As already mentioned, it works great, with the water soaking thru the heavy paper bag, and the concrete mix sets up in place, under the water. So, how many 70-lb bags of dry concrete can be loaded into a 12' rowboat before it sinks? Quikrete really stumbled onto something when it designed the heavy paper bags because the heavy brown paper allows water to permeate through, but stops the sand, gravel and grey powdered cement, all mixed together, from permeating or osmosifying out into the lake water. You just plop the heavy bag into the lake, and 24-hours later it will be a solid block of concrete within a paper bag that tightly hugs whatever is below it ..... pretty danged good.
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.... Banned for life from local thrift store!
Last edited by fatlazyless; 08-09-2018 at 04:20 PM. |
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#6 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2016
Location: Waltham Ma./Meredith NH
Posts: 4,421
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