
06/09/13, 04:36 PM
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Join Date: Oct 2011
Posts: 704
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In commercial construction this type of problem is pretty common, since staying on schedule is critical, and there usually isn't time to wait for everything to dry out on it's own. Most excavators have at least some experience with "dewatering" if they work in wet climates. The goal is to create a place below the elevation of the bottom of the footing to provide a drainage basin, then pump it out from there. In this case the first move would be to dig a small pit at least ten inches deeper than the bottom of the footer , and 18" round, adjacent to the footer. Now throw a few inches of small gravel in the bottom to keep the pump from sucking tight to the mud in the bottom, and use a small sump pump to drain everything. If the weather allows, the trench bottom should firm up pretty quickly. If not, drain all the standing water off and use flat bottom shovels to shave the mud off the trench bottom. I built my first house in '89, and poured countless numbers of footers since. I've shoveled enough mud, ice and snow out of trench bottoms to last a few lifetimes. Good luck, it a sucky job.
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