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Norminn Norminn is offline
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Default Simple terracing in 1 ft steps, what material?

wheel wrote:
I have to deal with a hillside that has a 2:3 slope (if I'm saying that
right, slope goes down a two feet for every three out). The main goal
here is to forestall erosion, secondary to help plantings take root.
Hillside is about 70' wide, and it drops 10'. It has a mild contour to


Is that the entire slope, or just the portion on your property? ie, are
you on the top or bottom of a mountain?

it, so straight terracing wouldn't be ideal. Anyone have ideas re a good
material for the 'retaining walls'. I'm not really aiming at a full
strength retaining wall system which would probably cost a fortune to
install. More hoping that some easy going terracing will do enough.
Like, steel pegs knocked in two feet deep, with 1 foot up, and some
barrier material as the wall...what that would be I don't know, but have
wondered if there is some recycled plastic 3/4" x 1' king sized
benderboard material out there. Or are there 'systems' for this type of
situation? I'm not eager to use the cement blocks that are common, too
much weight to haul, it'd be a lot of block. There is no snow or
freezing where I live.


That is a pretty large piece of ground to rearrange. Is there erosion
now? Gullies? What is at bottom of slope? Where is your house in
relation to the slope? Soil type? Trees? Native plants? If you are
just dealing with a graded part of a building lot with a few bare spots,
I'd fill in the washed out soil first. Plant something with good root
system. Laying down a little flagstone with landscape cloth behind it
would help keep soil in place til plants fill in. I would consider
taking some photos to county ag extension service - they should be able
to offer advice (free) and give tips on what to plant that doesn't
require high maintenance.

If I understand the message right, the area in question is about 15x70.
New plants with shredded cypress mulch can hold soil just fine. Mondo
grass is one plant that is great for Florida, but we don't have
hillsides to worry about. it is a plant that is attractive, doesn't
require any particular care, and won't take over the landscape. A plant
like that, across a slope, would do a lot to slow runoff and erosion.