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As I've mentioned previously in other threads, I'm in the process of
building a deck. At the moment, I've just dug holes 5 feet into the ground in preparation for pouring concrete pier-columns (the foundations which my deck will rest on). However, as soon as these holes were dug I noticed they would partially fill up with water, seeping in from the surrounding (clay) soil). I've drained them once with a sump pump, and I thought the holes would stay dry until I could pour the concrete into them, provided the weather remains dry til then. However, despite continued dry weather conditions, this morning I noticed that the holes have filled with water again. I surmise this to be related to my neighbor leaving his lawn sprinkler on the night previous, and that water seeping into the ground from that is what is entering my holes. All this has got me thinking... Will my concrete pier-columns be stable enough to hold my deck properly since the surface soil they will be buried in is obviously prone to holding water? Right now the weather is dry because it is summer. But most of the year it rains a lot here (Vancouver). If water from a neighbor's sprinkler can saturate my future foundation soil so readily, can I expect it not to turn into an unstable, sinking, muck when the heavy rains return. Responses please and thanks, Ken |
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