Surveying 101: Difference between revisions
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[[File:Site Map 2D.jpg |thumb| Google Earth and Buildings]] | [[File:Site Map 2D.jpg |thumb| Google Earth and Buildings]] | ||
[[File:Site Map Grid & Contours.jpg | | [[File:Site Map Grid & Contours.jpg |thumb| Grid and Contours]] | ||
=Design at FeF= | =Design at FeF= |
Revision as of 23:45, 26 July 2012
Tools
- Contractor's site level - shoots vertical intervals - drop in stairstep. Vertical intervals are equal unless there is huge variation in slope. Contractor's level is by Berger at Home Depot.
- Laser level - online - quickest is Forestry Supply has good options. Robust. No hassle. Self-leveling laser - where you don't have to do a bubble to level. Must have 360 deg compass on it. Laser shoots 360 degrees. Shoots lo less than 1000 feet in shooting length. TopCon brand.
- Stick - Forestry Supply - 16' stick. Reads in 10ths of inch. Read the back of it, so distance from ground rather than absolute.
- Weedwhacker + chainsaw. Offset 10' from trees if trees are in the way
- Always go in one direction
- Need a scale map of property
Procedure for Contour Survey
Summary: Shoot vertical intervals first (to help you find slope). Set up horizontal intervals (following contours, creates aspect).
- Find the steepest slope in your survey area
- Mark a 2' drop standard: use the rotating laser level and flags, mark 2' intervals (decreases in elevation) down the slope
- If the slope is too steep for a 2' drop standard, may need to be 3' or 4' at high slopes (for example, on a 10% slope)
- Marking contours: From your original line, follow contours (lines level with your starting point) to each side. Mark contours with a flag every 20'
- Objective: create 25' terraces. 25' is the guiding criteria, but if it's very steep terrain the terraces might have to be as narrow as 10'
- Result: smooth arcs of 100' marked by flags, distinguishing terraces with the narrowest point of the terrace on the steepest slope
Mapping Procedure
- Making Grid With a Transit
- Objective: map a 100' grid, using transit level and 2 compasses (because one might be corrupted)
- Number/label squares on grid, write on a map
- For each square you will be able to tell slope, aspect, and decide how you want to use that square (distinguish zoning)
- Map will be used to triangulate any location necessary in the future
Mapping Resources
- ArcGIS
- Google Earth
- Sketchup
For the Site Map we used ArcGIS to get the topographical layer, and added the Google Earth imaging on top of that in Sketchup. The Google Earth layer is three dimensional, the Arc GIS layer is flat, and there is a grid layer in between depicting 100' x 100' squares. To view all layers at once, select "View>X Ray." Here are some exported 2D graphics from the Site Map:
Design at FeF
Design: 5% slope not good for animals, west face not good.
Initial thoughts:
West strip
- more water, shade
- less erosion
- more established creeks
- proposed use: homesteads, collective gardens, ponds, water storage
East strip from S to N end
- Workshops
- large-scale storage (pole barns, tractor garages)
- greenhouses
- orchard/food forest (swales, trees, vines, edible groundcover)
- Ponds where there is good catchment (directly NW of orchard looks practical, as well as just N of the old workshop)
- pasture (organic shapes with edible fence following swales on contour)
- grazeland rotated by species, with cover crop and grain rotated seasonally
- rain catchment on animal shelters
- some shade trees planted
- water storage at top of slope, gravity-fed water troughs for animals
Native Trees
- remove ones with less utility, to be turned into biochar, lumber
- remove deadwood, leaving some logs to be inoculated with mushrooms
- Forested center space:
- Pond at north end, continuing into creek with ponds coming down the slope
- Pigs fenced in with pallets, left to forage and free range, fed the byproducts of civilization (whey, food wastes, fallen nut crop)
- Keepers: mulberry, elder, walnut, oak
Ask Parker on full soil report.
Resources
- Surveying Fundamentals and Practices - J. Nathansan et al.
- Dan Schellenberg;
- Site Survey