LandCo | Land Investing and Ownership podcast

Waterfowl Property Development Series | E8 – Fixing some development mistakes and learning about the property

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In this podcast episode, I provide updates to our waterfowl development project if Fulton County, Illinois! We made a few mistakes which we had to correct and learned a bit about how the birds are starting to use our wetlands! We hope you enjoy it. PODCAST TRANSCRIPTION(these are fairly accurate but not perfect...please forgive any errors or inconsistencies) Hey guys, welcome back to the Land Co podcast. This episode is I don't even know the episode anymore, but it is the Waterfowl Development Series. I'll put the episode on the notes and the title is probably like episode seven-ish, but I wanted to chat with you guys on the development that we have that Pudik and I have on 135 acres in Canton. Again, we bought that. I think we're going on a few years now with the goal of making it just like an awesome waterfowl farm. So we're developing it strictly for waterfowl and. The first several episodes went over what we built the plans and we are at the stage where like we're we have a few more things to build. But most of the big Earthmoving is done. So now we're on to like details and getting water to wetlands, getting power places, getting blinds and pits out there. But now where we are at the end of the development, I believe the last episode, we were just getting ready to pump everything full and everything was fine. The only issue we had was if you remember when we we so we pump from our lower wetland and again, I'll throw pictures on the if you're listening on like just in your truck like an on Apple podcast hop on the website we we also post these to the website to the, to the blog and on those pages I'll throw some pictures beneath it if you want to go kind of check out what I'm talking about. But the middle of the 135 is our only like, well, it's our biggest low ground wetland, like bottom ground, like wet area and it's I think it's eight acres, but we pump from there up to a new one that we built that we call a center field wetland, which is historically been like our best dry field. So we're they seem to like that area. So we're, we were really excited about that center field wetland. We thought it would do well. Last year we had a. We didn't have a way to pump water up there. So we were relying strictly on rainwater and it filled it like last year was a good year for filling wetlands with water. And it didn't even that it didn't fill it all up. So like it probably folded up halfway. So we never got a sense of how good the wetland was going to be or how much they'd use it. So we knew we had to pump water from the bottom, which we call clam wetland, up about 1000 feet and. We used the corrugated tile and it was like, I don't think we wouldn't have done that for a client. I was just sort of curious if that would work. Like you always hear, you know, in our industry, there's always like all these like old, old legends and like, you know, of what works and what doesn't. But a lot of them I like. It's not that I don't believe them. I've just never seen anyone try it like one of them. So like this one, it's like, Oh, you can't use corrugated pipe to pump uphill because it's too much friction and it won't work. And whatever. We tried it anyways. It was cheaper. You know, we could use that six-inch corrugated like just tile and it was a lot cheaper. So we tried it and again, I had heard that it wouldn't work, but I've never like, I don't know anyone personally that's tried it. It's like, Oh yeah, I tried, but that didn't work. Everyone's always like, No, it just doesn't work. I just know that. All right. Well, we tried it because it was cheaper and like, it didn't work. So we can officially be like those people that, you know, don't put corrugated tile into pump uphill because of that pressure. It worked like we got water lay up. But like, eventually the pressure, like not, not like uphill or where it's coming, like filling the wetland is like the junction.

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