Farm ponds, retention ponds, swimming ponds, and water feature excavation. Full site work from clearing to final shaping, dam and berm construction, and inlet/outlet installation.
Backwell excavates ponds for farm operations, residential properties, commercial sites, and stormwater management systems throughout Central Square, Oswego County, and the surrounding area. Whether you need a new farm pond for livestock watering and irrigation, a retention basin for a development project, or a recreational swimming pond, we bring the equipment and expertise to get the excavation done right.
Proper pond construction requires more than just digging a hole. We evaluate soil permeability, establish the right depth profile for your intended use, engineer the dam and spillway to handle your watershed, and install inlet/outlet structures to manage water levels. Our team handles all associated earthwork including clearing the site, shaping the basin, constructing the dam and berms, and final grading of the surrounding area.
Contact us today for a free estimate on pond excavation in Central Square. We will evaluate the site, discuss your goals, and give you a realistic project scope and price.
Central Square occupies the south-central part of Oswego County, on the sandy lake plain left by Glacial Lake Iroquois between Oneida Lake and Lake Ontario. The working soils across the I-81 corridor and Route 49 commercial zones are Colonie loamy sand, Elnora loamy fine sand, and Granby loamy fine sand — all rapidly drained on uplands but paired with Ira and Stockholm loamy fine sands in the low ground where a hardpan perches winter water.
The landscape drains in multiple directions through a dense network of small tributaries feeding Big Bay, Oneida Lake, and the Oswego River. Commercial excavation here usually trades one set of problems for another: upland sand handles septic and infiltration well but lacks cohesion for steep cuts, while the lower-lying parcels require extensive stormwater treatment, shallow-water-table mitigation, and select structural fill. Frost depth and erodibility both push design details on parking lots, culverts, and utility trenches. Bedrock is not a normal concern in the lake-plain soils.