Avoid headaches – regularly inspect your dam

23 April 2025

Regular inspection, monitoring and maintenance of your gully dams can reduce the risk of ‘failure’ such as leaks and bank collapses.

Agriculture Victoria land management extension officer Clem Sturmfels said stock damage, soil erosion, siltation and excessive vegetation growth can all contribute to the gradual deterioration of farm dams.

‘A rapid rise in dam water levels following an extended dry period can also add to pressure on dam banks, spillways and pipelines.

‘Gully dams fail regularly across Victoria due to poor or dry soils, poor construction and lack of maintenance.

‘We estimate more than 20% of gully dams in Victoria fail within a few years of being built.

‘Regular inspection and monitoring of dams should be part of normal farming operations and is critical over the 6 to 12 months after an extended dry period as dams start to fill again.

Mr Sturmfels encouraged landholders to carefully inspect and monitor their gully dams to pinpoint issues and act before the dam completely fails.

‘Landholders need to focus mainly on the dam bank, looking for signs of bank reduction, cracking or tunnelling.’

Regular inspection should include:

Reduce risks by having a reliable line of emergency communication and maintain emergency procedures so help can arrive if something goes wrong.

For more information on dam management read managing dams

Media contact: Makayla Rimington

Phone: 0473 914 662