Masseys Dredge Project Is Underway In The Staging Stages

DNREC preparing for upcoming dredging of Massey’s Ditch 

Doug Parham took this shot of the Dredge barges all hooked together and ready to start.

(Dec 12, 2019) … I dropped by Masseys Landing the other day to watch the J.F. Brennan crews work on the dredge barges. These boys have some serious equipment. There are workers here from Wisconsin with the company, but they have three to four Delaware union guys working with them as well. Good to see the local boys on the job. We will be working with the crews the next few months, great to be a part of this project” … Joe “Fish” told me. The shoals around Masseys Ditch are numerous.

The dredge can dig pretty deep

LONG NECK (Dec. 10, 2019) – DNREC’s Shoreline & Waterway Management Section is preparing for the upcoming dredging of a vital channel for Delaware boaters, Massey’s Ditch, which is the main waterway connecting Rehoboth Bay to Indian River Bay. The northern portion of the waterway known as Baker’s Channel will also be dredged as part of the project. Baker’s Channel is the alternate route for boaters to take to get from Rehoboth Bay to Indian River Bay when Massey’s Ditch becomes impassible due to shoaling.

Masseys Ditch Dredge project map of pipes and channel areas to be dredged in black

In preparation for the project, DNREC’s Division of Watershed Stewardship channel-marking crew is removing all aids to navigation (buoys) from Baker’s Channel. Over the last several years, numerous buoys from Baker’s Channel have been lost during the winter, due to icing and extreme weather conditions, and it has become very expensive to continue to replace them. The channel-marking crew will return in the spring prior to the boating season to restore these navigational aids.

Masseys Ditch dredge project time line

The Massey’s Ditch dredging project will begin early next month, and be completed by the end of February.  When the project is complete, Massey’s Ditch will be dredged to a width of 100 feet and a depth of 7.5 feet. About 100,000 cubic yards of material – almost completely comprised of sand – will be dredged, and pumped to the north side of Indian River Inlet to help replenish the beach at Delaware Seashore State Park in order to protect against erosion and storm damage. 

The dredge on its frame or chassis.
Pumps will move the dredge slurry (sand) to the pipes and all the way to the northside beach at the Indian River inlet
Pumps will also be stationed between the pipes at certain areas to help move the slurry to the beach
The dredge head, that thing is going to find a few anchors and who knows what else.
Massey’s Dredge project staging at Massey’s Landing in Long Neck Delaware .. Driscoll Drones
Massey’s Dredge project staging at Massey’s Landing in Long Neck Delaware .. Driscoll Drones