Sediment & Erosion
Eroding banks and accumulated muck are the two biggest long-term threats to pond value. We stabilize one and remove the other.
Eroded shorelines almost always trace back to one or more of: inadequate vegetation (lawn to water's edge), wave action from boats or fountains, waterfowl traffic, burrowing animals (muskrat, beaver), or stormwater outfall scour. Before we recommend a stabilization method, we identify the dominant driver — otherwise the fix fails within two seasons.
Native wetland plantings (arrowhead, pickerelweed, bulrush, switchgrass) installed into coir fiber logs or natural-fiber mats anchor the bank, filter stormwater, and create habitat. Lowest cost, highest ecological value, and preferred by most HOAs that have adopted "no-mow buffer" policies.
Graded limestone or fieldstone placed on a geotextile fabric. Durable, low-maintenance, and effective on high-wave-action and waterfowl-heavy sites. Installed to state-approved slopes (typically 2:1 or flatter).
Vertical bulkhead solution where property lines are tight or where a clean, architectural edge is desired. Higher cost; 30+ year service life.
Interlocking cabled blocks used on larger municipal and stormwater applications where riprap is inadequate and vegetation cannot establish.
Midwestern ponds accumulate sediment at 0.5 to 2 inches per year depending on the watershed. When average depth drops below 4 feet — or when the accumulated muck becomes the dominant nutrient source — dredging is the only durable solution.
A floating cutter-suction dredge pumps a sediment slurry to a geotextile dewatering tube or containment cell on shore. Best for soft, unconsolidated muck; minimal shoreline disturbance; the pond stays full.
Excavators work from the bank (or a barge) to remove consolidated sediment. Requires either drawing down the pond or working from temporary roads. Fastest option for dense clay sediment and small, accessible ponds.
Dredging in Kansas or Missouri often triggers Section 404 (Clean Water Act) review from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, plus state-level water-quality certification. We handle the permitting package — jurisdictional determination, plans, mitigation, and coordination with KDHE or MDNR — as part of every dredge scope.
Beavers, muskrats, and burrowing rodents cause catastrophic bank failures and dam blowouts. We provide trapping (through licensed nuisance wildlife control operators), burrow-filling, and armoring to prevent recurrence.
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