£461.39
info Summary
Small leaky woody dams are capital items under Countryside Stewardship Higher Tier, designed to slow water movement, push water onto floodplains, and increase groundwater recharge. This helps delay flood waters downstream, reduce flood risk, allow sediment to settle, and improve biodiversity.
format_list_bulleted What to do
- Secure the dam in line with Environment Agency, lead local flood authority consent or exemption (where required).
- Align dams at right angles to channel banks or direction of flow to reduce bank scour.
- In permanent or winterbourne streams, build dams to allow normal flows to always pass unimpeded, set at 0.3m above normal flow levels.
- Site dams on slow flowing reaches with an average of 2m of floodplain on either side.
- Build dams to a height sufficient to encourage water to spread onto the floodplain upstream.
- Do not install dams directly upstream of pinch points (bridges or culverts).
- Check and maintain dams to keep the structure effective and ensure the free gap underneath has not become blocked by debris.
- Follow requirements of any feasibility study or Catchment Sensitive Farming water holding structure action plan (if applicable).
- Avoid locations that could damage historic or archaeological features.
checklist How to do
- Choose logs that are long enough to embed into banks and extend into the floodplain for stability, with a curve or dip in the middle to funnel water.
- Stack logs so the lowest one is 0.3m above water at low to medium flows, using irregular shaped logs or carving straight ones to create gaps.
- Install wooden stakes in each bank on both sides of the logs, set back from the channel edge, and secure logs to stakes/trees using sisal rope or timber screws.
- Avoid using straight timber boards and do not site dams in areas of active bank erosion; choose stable bank locations.
- Consider the dam's effect on the surrounding environment and avoid locations that could damage historic or archaeological features.
description Evidence Required
You must keep written support from your Catchment Sensitive Farming adviser and provide this with your application.
You must also keep and provide with your claim:
- photographs of the completed works in place and installed
- any consents and permissions from the Environment Agency or lead local flood authority
You must also keep and provide on request:
- receipted invoices or bank statements where a receipted invoice is unavailable
- photographs of site before works start
- a copy of the feasibility study, woodland management plan or water holding structure action plan where applicable
Read the record keeping and site visit requirements in the Agreement holder’s guide: Capital Grants, Higher Tier capital grants and Protection and Infrastructure grants for more information.
If you’re applying for this item as part of a Countryside Stewardship Higher Tier (CSHT) application, read the record keeping and site visit requirements in the CSHT agreement holder’s guide.
tips_and_updates Additional Advice
- Consider local circumstances (tree cover, erosion risk), purpose (flood flows vs. groundwater recharge), material availability, and site access for design and location.
- For SSSIs or biodiversity priority rivers, consider using FM2: Carry out customised capital works to manage specific sites or species and seek Natural England advice.
- Improve water management by improving soil health, increasing appropriate vegetation cover, and using rural sustainable drainage systems.
- Regularly check and de-silt dams to prevent silt collection.
- Build dams in a series (minimum 3 dams) with spacing of 7 to 10 times the channel width.
View Official Guidelines
Access detailed information about this action on the RPA website
