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Perched Water table

PTArcher

Yearling... With promise
Have a .4 acre plot in the woods that is a gas well site. Hope was to make this a perennial clover/chicory plot and seed grains into each fall. Was wet with a little standing water when I soil tested in March, but didn't think too much of it.

Was there yesterday and it is about 40% standing water. Don't see how a perennial crop could survive 6 weeks under water. Looking for suggestions to deal with this, short of excavating for drainage.

Current thought is to plant tillage radish and hybrid brassicas for the summer and then Cereal Rye, oats, rape, and kale for the fall and see where it is next spring. Hoping I could maybe run this plan for a couple years and get the water issue under control. Any suggestions? Is this wishful thinking?
 
You can tell me I'm wrong. Gas well sites are usually at a higher elevation at the tip of a sandstone ridge. Or, wherever it is there just isn't enough soil depth allow water to perc. You're sitting on bed rock maybe? Whatever the issue, I doubt there's any reasonable means of changing the soil structure to accommodate your wishes. And you might need to consider the implications if this wet spot might be determined to be "wetland."
 
A mix of white clovers. Ladino did well submerged.
 
definitely make sure its not wetland..do a mix of mammoth red and alsike clover...ive had alsike submerged for a bit that just then popped back and thickened up and mammoth red is a good poor/wet soil choice also
 
It sits at 1680 ft, so pretty high up in NW PA. I think they removed any top soil that was there when the well was put in. That along with the heavy equipment on top the subsoil has made it pretty compacted. It dries up fine in the summer to fall. Had some buckwheat on it last yr and the neighbors horses got loose and along with the deer ate it to the ground in about a month. Don't want to risk Alsike because of the horses. Definitely not a wetland. Was planning to try Alice clover this fall as it seems to be bred for wet soils, but right now, I think it just needs to be an annual plot until the water situation can be resolved, if that is possible.
 
Is it clay?
 
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