The road crew begins the installation of the new culvert. |
John quickly figured all this out and explained it to me, telling me that we need a culvert. So we called the town and Clem, Barton's Road Commissioner, dropped by and heartily agreed with John's conclusions. Clem doesn't even know why the driveway was allowed to be built so wide without a culvert. Now, property owners buy the driveway culverts and the town will install and maintain them. So John and I took off for Newport and bought a culvert and had it delivered. The Barton road crew dropped in on July 1, after Route 16 was paved and improved, to install the culvert. These photos illustrate the process.
Tractor chicken heard the town tractor and came down for grubs. |
The ditch for the new culvert is dug. Clem uses a transit to make sure the ditch is level. |
The ditch immediately fills with water from the apple orchard. |
Tractor Chicken & her sisters move in closer. |
Tractor Chicken is determined to get to the new ditch. |
Clem chases the chickens away. |
The connector is added to connect 2 20-ft sections. |
Clem gives one final push on the culvert to send it into the ditch. |
While Clem worked, I chased Tractor Chicken & her sisters away. The hens took to sneaking around through the woods to get to the tractor. Very sly little chickens! |
Clem makes sure the culvert is flowing freely. |
The culvert is buried with dirt. |
The west end of the culvert. |
The culvert is installed! |
Tractor Chicken runs in |
East end of culvert |
Clem & crew drive off when they are done. |
The completed driveway. |
_/\_/\_
ha ha ha! :-D
ReplyDeleteNo so funny I guess.