Early Agricultural Drainage in North Central Iowa by Mary Tesdahl

Drainage is the practice of removing excess water from the subsurface of the soil.  Soil types and slope dictate the number and size of tile needed.  When done correctly, tile should be capable of removing ½ inch of water from the surface in 24 hours.

Early settlers talk about Wright County being so wet farmers could only farm the hilltops. To increase tillable acres, farmers drained  water from the high ground and created  permanent pastures. They ran surface ditches from one slough to the next. They dug in underground tile lines. The first job for many immigrants was working on a tiling crew and digging  ditches by hand.  As soon as drainage  districts were laid out, engineers became part of the process.  An engineer would determine and mark the grade and then come back to check on the progress of those digging. Because so much tiling needed to be done, farmers came up with creative ways to allow tiling to go on all year.  They might dig one spade depth in the fall before the ground froze, then fill the ditch with straw. The next  layer would not freeze and could be dug deeper when there was time.  One farmer put cobs on top of the path for his tile line and set them on fire overnight.  In the morning, the ground was thawed enough to dig. Sometimes ditches  were  saved  for  winter    the  sides  of  the ditches would freeze overnight and would provide safe conditions. Digging in the winter was a cold job, so that would be the time to be happy to be digging in the bottom of the ditch.  The advantages of removing excess water had  been  known  for  many  years.  Some old wooden  tile  have  been  found,  but  most  tile were made of clay.  Goldfield and Dows had clay tile factories for a while, but the clay was better quality near Sheffield and Mason City, so local factories did not last. The importance of  keeping  accurate  records  of  tile  lines  has become  more  evident  as  telephone and other cable  lines  began  being  laid  in ditches.  Also, heavier machinery  used  today  has  damaged some tile. In Wright County, 65% of soils are drained  in  some  way. This is approximately 236,595 acres and that work continues today. Clay tile worked  well  and  acres  of  rich  farm ground continue to be drained by these tile laid over 100 years ago.  Today, long plastic tubes are used instead of clay tile and a GPS system tracks the slope. The goal remains the same: allow rich northcentral Iowa soils to reach maximum productivity.

October 2018