DO IT YOURSELF
Easy bridge construction, including diagrams, instructions.
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Outside of a drought or miracle similar to the crossing of
the Red Sea, there is no way to make a dry crossing over a
body of water without a bridge. I desperately needed one to
cross the Class One stream on our property in the western
Cascades of Oregon. So I decided to build a log bridge, one
that would meet my needs without causing damage to the
environment.
The first thing I did was take a trip to the area State
Forest office and make a request for a bridge-building
permit. That was followed by an on-site inspection by the
local forester, who decided the stream banks were level
enough so that water drainage from a road wouldn't flow
down onto a bridge and into the stream.
The permit explained the two best methods of moving logs
across a stream without harming the streambed. The method I
selected, explained below, involves an elevated-cable
system, a truck winch, and an anchored-log tripod with a
cable pulley. This allowed me to haul logs across the
stream without touching the streambed at all.
The other (more costly) method is to use a large backhoe to
lift the logs across the stream. According to the permit,
we were also responsible for reseeding those areas along
the roadway and bridge that were disrupted by our
machinery. The whole process was so simple and turned out
so well that I drew up some plans and diagrams to share
with you.
Illustration By Scott MacNeill

KEEP THINGS SQUARE:
If you have a plastic one-gallon milk container,
some plastic tubing, and water, you can make a simple water
level to even up the bunker logs.
Bridge Construction
Begin by finding (or, if necessary, hiring) someone with a
portable saw mill to saw planks for the bridge deck. We had
a friend cut forty 3 x 12s, sixteen 2 x 12s, and seven 4 x
6s. Fall and limb just enough cedar trees to make six 42'
span logs (which run across the stream) and two 12' bunker
logs (which hold up the span logs).
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