Since we finished our effort to rebuild and/or clean out the ditches over all the precinct, we have really worked hard on resurfacing and scabbing our roads over the west and central sections of the precinct. We started off in June with a complete patching effort over the entire precinct so we could have the time to spend on needed projects this summer. We started on CR1475 where so much ditching had been done. From there we went to CR1362 and repaired several spots with scabs. That road has almost no base, as I have mentioned before, and what base it has is what we have put in during our repairs. Anyway, our work drew two thumbs up from Gayla Dodd, a resident on that road.
We then stopped and sprayed the grass and weeds at bridge railings, intersections and blind corners that we had cut down three weeks earlier and again this year, we got a 100% kill at those locations. Our biggest concerns in precinct one are the highly traveled roads like CR1200, CR 1905, CR 1670 and CR 1635. We began to extend the repairs to CR1200 made last year by a considerable amount, completing almost two miles of new pavement. I think that next year, we will have resurfaced all of the "haul road" portion of CR1200 and most of the other.
We started then on the overlay of the road that Luminant built and donated to the county. It was in serious disrepair after only one year and I asked Luminant for some financial assistance on the expense of an overlay. They agreed and we ran a continuous pavement for 1.4 miles from US271 Bus to FM 2152. It turned out very good, thanks to my talented and hard working crew, and Jeff Parchman at Gerhart Excavating even agreed to keep his dirt trucks off of the soft pavement for two or three weeks while the pavement cured. Unfortunately, somebody realized that we had built a fantastic drag-strip and scarred it up. Ugh!
We had a pretty bad wind storm about this time and spent a good deal of both daytime and night-time getting trees off the roads. But by the beginning of July, the heat was severe and a great time to use a cheap paving method we found in 2009. We take the recycled asphalt that we get from the state for their shared materials program, ie. free, windrow it down the road, let the sun heat it up to 100 deg or more, oil it and mix the heck out of it, then lay it down on the existing pavement as an overlay. Now, it not appropriate for our highly traveled roads but for out-of the-way places where traffic is light, we find that it works well and only costs us the price of the oil. We began on CR 1490, where only one house is at the end of the road. It hadn't been worked on in many years and needed it badly. We then went to CR 1635, CR 1435 and CR 1455 and scabbed several places. From ther we went to CR1360 (Daphnes Prairie road) and put that special mix on over a mile of road. With last year and this year's effort, we should complete that portion of road, that has not been resurfaced in twenty-five years, next year.
6T Ranch purchased some land along CR1550 and was rebuilding a fence. We were able to slip in front of their fence builders and pull a good scallopped ditch the entire length thanks to Mgr. Chad Parrish of the 6-T. We are now working our recycling project on CR 1680 at JR's Bottom and hope to upgrade that mess considerably.
In a side note, the negotiations on the Constuction Management Contract for the loop project is just about completed, and hopefully, we can begin pushing dirt in October.
Tuesday, August 23, 2011
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