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Trail Construction and Maintenance Notebook

Trail Foundation

Here's how you can make sure your trail has a strong, long-lasting foundation.

Rolling Contour Trails

Constructing contour trails into the sideslope requires excavating the side of the hill to provide a solid, stable trail tread. Stay away from flat areas because water has nowhere to go. Keep grades sustainable by using the half rule and add plenty of grade reversals. Slightly outsloping the tread (about 5 percent) is a must to help move water across the trail.

Full-Bench Construction

Trail professionals almost always prefer full-bench construction. A full bench is constructed by cutting the full width of the tread into the hillside and casting the excavated soil as far from the trail as possible (figure 26). Full-bench construction requires more excavation and leaves a larger backslope than partial-bench construction, but the trailbed will be more durable and require less maintenance. You should use full-bench construction whenever possible.

Drawing of how a full-bench trail is constructed.  Text in the drawing reads, Existing hillside and outsloped tread.
Figure 26--A full-bench trail is constructed by cutting the full width of the
tread into the hillside. The tread needs to be outsloped at least 5 percent.

Partial-Bench Construction

Partial-bench construction is another method to cut in a trail, but it takes a good deal of trail-building experience to get this method right. The trail tread will be part hillside and part fill material (figure 27).

Drawing of a partial-bench construction.  Includes text that reads, Existing hillside, outsloped tread, and fill.
Figure 27--With partial-bench construction, the trail tread is part hillside and
part fill material. The tread needs to be outsloped at least 5 percent.

The fillslope needs to be composed from good, solid material like rock or decay-resistant wood. And it has to get compacted evenly--this is the puzzle to solve. Solving Sudoku puzzles doesn't guarantee you'll get this one!

Backslope--The backslope is the excavated, exposed area above the tread surface. The backslope should match the angle of repose of the parent material (the sideslope). You may come across trail specifications calling for 1:1 backslope. This means 1 meter vertical rise to 1 meter horizontal run.

Most soils are stable with a 1:1 backslope. Solid rock can have a steeper 2:1 backslope, while less cohesive soils may need a 1:2 backslope (figure 28).

Drawing explaining backslopes.  Includes text that reads, 1-meter horizontal, 1-meter vertical, 1:1 backslope, 0.5-meter run, 1-meter rise, 2:1 backslope, 1.3-meters horizontal, 0.5-meter vertical and, 1:2.6 backslope.
Figure 28--Backslopes are noted as a ratio of vertical rise
to horizontal distance, or "rise" to "run."

Bottom line, angle the backslope until loose material quits falling down onto the trail tread. Stabilize the entire backslope by compacting it with the back of a McLeod.

Stable Backslopes

Look at the surrounding landscape and soil to see areas that are stable. Create a somewhat gentler backslope than you think necessary. Although you will initially expose more raw soil, the chances of your trail remaining stable and revegetating are greater than if you leave a backslope so steep that it keeps sloughing.

One option to reduce backslope excavation is to construct a retaining wall. This can be less obtrusive than huge backslope excavations and more stable if the wall is well constructed.

Fillslope--The fillslope is that area below the tread surface on the downhill side. A full-bench tread will not have any fill on this side of the trail. Fillslopes are critical. Fillslopes often need to be reinforced with retaining or crib walls to keep them from failing. Fillslope failures are common and will wipe out the trail. That's why most trailbuilders prefer full-bench trails.

Moving Dirt

Looking at construction plans is one thing, but going out and building a rolling contour trail is quite another. Here is a proven method that works even for the complete novice. This procedure is for the actual dirt moving once vegetation has been cleared.

Drawing of a hiker standing on a trail with with a water bottle being used as a level. Includes text that reads, Water bottle as a level.
Figure 29--If your ankles start to roll, the tread has too much outslope.


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