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Pond Excavation Contractor in Palmyra, NY

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.

Pond Excavation Services in Palmyra

Backwell excavates ponds for farm operations, residential properties, commercial sites, and stormwater management systems throughout Palmyra, Wayne 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.

Why Palmyra Chooses Backwell

Contact us today for a free estimate on pond excavation in Palmyra. We will evaluate the site, discuss your goals, and give you a realistic project scope and price.

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Pond Excavation in Palmyra

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Pond Excavation in Nearby Areas

Geography & Site Conditions in Palmyra, NY (Wayne County)

Palmyra occupies the Ganargua Creek valley in western Wayne County, inside the Finger Lakes drumlin field. Soils across the village and the Route 31 commercial corridor are dominated by Palmyra gravelly loam — the series named for the village — and Honeoye silt loam on the drumlin flanks, with Canandaigua silty clay loam and Wayland silt loam on the creek and Erie Canal flats.

The Erie Canal, Ganargua Creek, and Red Creek all define drainage on the village's buildable land, and the canal prism triggers NYS Canal Corp review for any adjacent earthwork. Commercial site work in Palmyra regularly involves cobble-heavy trenching in the Palmyra outwash, structural fill on the clay-loam flats, and dewatering on canal-adjacent parcels where shallow groundwater is common. Stormwater design ties into the Ganargua / Clyde / Seneca River watershed. Shallow dolostone bedrock can appear on the higher drumlin summits. Frost depth is moderate, reflecting the lake-moderated western Wayne climate. Projects near the canal also have to coordinate grading with the NYS Canal Corp maintenance easement. Structural fill is common on the low-lying clay-loam parcels.