The road across Miller's Bog (a.k.a. Ancora Bogs) is ready to blow. The beavers have been out of control for the last few years back here. They are now plugging the vertical outflow weir structures forcing water to find a path underground along the sides of the large diameter pipes that convey all of the Pump Branch beneath the roadway. I ran the dogs tonight but I kept them out of the water from here on out because the underground movement looks like it is causing the road to reach the point of failure. A huge silt plume has appeared on the downstream side which is the dirt being transported beneath the road that is circumventing the pipes.
The State rebuilt the crossing about 20 years ago and it seems that time is up. The road sees a lot of traffic during waterfowl and deer seasons and a lot of horse traffic from a horse farm to the south. Within the last two days, a truck tire dropped into the edge of the sinkhole but managed to escape. A major storm event or just a little bit of passing time is going to yield a total failure.
I have emailed a State employee and member of this site to let her know what I am seeing.
The location is here:
These are from tonight's dog run.
The silt plume.
The State rebuilt the crossing about 20 years ago and it seems that time is up. The road sees a lot of traffic during waterfowl and deer seasons and a lot of horse traffic from a horse farm to the south. Within the last two days, a truck tire dropped into the edge of the sinkhole but managed to escape. A major storm event or just a little bit of passing time is going to yield a total failure.
I have emailed a State employee and member of this site to let her know what I am seeing.
The location is here:
These are from tonight's dog run.
The silt plume.