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RE: [RC] Random Trail Surface Observation - Bob Morris

Linda:
 
What you have seen, but not observed, on the trails is that each of those "pockets" serve to deter erosion. Each and every one of them break up the flow of the water and allow it to percolate into the ground instead of run off carrying fines (erosion)
 
Watch what happens in a bicycle tire groove compared to a hoof print when it is raining.
 
Bob
 

Bob Morris
Morris Endurance Enterprises
Boise, ID

-----Original Message-----
From: ridecamp-owner@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:ridecamp-owner@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx]On Behalf Of Linda B. Merims
Sent: Sunday, May 11, 2003 8:31 AM
To: ridecamp@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [RC] Random Trail Surface Observation

One of the things that other trail users and land
managers really dump on horseback people for is:
"Horses tear up the trail."
 
The worst offense is considered to be riding
a horse when a trail is wet and muddy.  The
horses' hooves create thousands of little
coffer dams in which water pools and does
not drain.  When the trail surface dries
off, it is pockmarked with these craters
and the bike people and the hiker people
raise the dickens about how awful it is
and that horses should be banned &etc.
 
I made an interesting observation this past
spring.
 
The wet winter made all of the paddocks at
my barn into an unholy mess of mud.  Each
and every step created a hoof crater until
the whole paddock looked like some miniature
Chinese landscape terraced with rice paddies.
I'd spend hours with the shovel digging drainage
canals and puncturing the wall of one
hoof-print-cum-rice-paddy to drain into the
next.
 
Now, here it is mid-May and:
 
 You'd never know that these paddocks had
 been a wet morass just one month ago.
 
And it's the horses themselves who have solved
the problem.  Hooves make coffer dams, and hooves
also knock them down and grind them flat as the
soil dries out.  The tread in the paddock is now
flat, level, compacted dirt.
 
Linda B. Merims
Massachusetts, USA
 
 
 

Replies
[RC] Random Trail Surface Observation, Linda B. Merims