HomeServicesAgricultural Drainage › Geneva, NY
Call or text:(315) 400-2654Free estimates • Ron responds personally

Agricultural Drainage Contractor in Geneva, NY

Subsurface tile drainage, open ditch work, and field drainage systems for farm fields and agricultural land in Central New York. Improve yields and protect topsoil.

Agricultural Drainage Services in Geneva

Backwell installs subsurface tile drainage systems, open drainage ditches, and field drainage infrastructure for agricultural operations throughout Geneva, Seneca County, and the surrounding area. Proper drainage is critical to farming productivity in Central New York — wet fields delay planting, compact under equipment, and reduce yields. We solve drainage problems permanently with the right combination of tile work, outlet structures, and surface grading.

Our agricultural drainage work includes subsurface perforated tile installation at designed depths and spacing, open ditch excavation and maintenance, outlet structure installation, and integration with existing farm drainage systems. We work with farmers, landowners, and agricultural engineers to design systems that address your specific drainage challenges and meet NRCS requirements where applicable.

Why Geneva Chooses Backwell

Contact us for a free consultation on agricultural drainage in Geneva. We will walk your fields, identify problem areas, and propose a drainage solution that works for your operation.

Free Estimate

Agricultural Drainage in Geneva

Email Us

Agricultural Drainage in Nearby Areas

Geography & Site Conditions in Geneva, NY (Ontario County)

Geneva sits at the north end of Seneca Lake on the border between Ontario and Seneca counties, on terrain dominated by the Finger Lakes drumlin field. Soils along the city's commercial corridors are predominantly Honeoye silt loam and Lima silt loam on the drumlin flanks, with Ovid silt loam on the lower slopes and Canandaigua silty clay loam on the lakebed flats close to the Seneca Lake shoreline.

Drainage flows into Seneca Lake directly — one of the deepest lakes in the country — which means any earthwork near the shore falls under tighter watershed protection standards tied to the Seneca Lake watershed. Commercial site work in Geneva regularly deals with cobbly, stony till on the drumlin crests, perched water on the lower silt loam slopes, and trenching constraints in the fine-textured lakefront soils. The downtown grid sits on a mix of historic fill and native till, so subsurface characterization is routine on redevelopment parcels. Shallow bedrock shows up occasionally on the higher drumlin summits.