Short answer: To fix a leaking dam, first work out whether the loss is evaporation or seepage, then match the repair to your soil. The four proven methods are compacting a clay blanket, laying a bentonite blanket, applying gypsum to dispersive clay, and installing an HDPE or polypropylene liner. Cost rises in that order, and so does reliability.
A leaking dam is the most common call we take. Most owners assume the wall has failed; in practice the leak is almost always in the floor or a poorly compacted contact zone, and the repair you choose has to match the soil you actually have. Guess wrong and you can increase the leak. Lindsey Hughson has built and repaired farm dams across Queensland and northern New South Wales since the early 2000s, and the diagnostic order below is the one we use on every site before quoting any work.
First, work out whether your dam is actually leaking
Evaporation across an Australian summer is brutal — a typical Queensland farm dam can lose 1.5 to 2.5 metres of depth in a hot summer through evaporation alone, with no leak whatsoever. Before you spend money on repairs, separate the two losses. Drive a star picket into the floor of the dam in the shallows and mark the waterline. Run a second mark on a length of PVC pipe floating on a styrofoam block, sealed at both ends so it cannot fill. The floating mark records evaporation; the fixed mark records evaporation plus seepage. The gap between them, over a week, is your actual leak rate.
Seepage is the technical term for water moving through the dam floor, wall, or contact zone. A 1 metre thick compacted clay blanket should reduce seepage to no more than 2 millimetres per day, according to the WA Department of Primary Industries and Regional Development. If your gap-between-marks is larger than that, the floor is the prime suspect.
How can I tell if my dam is leaking or just evaporating?
Run the two-stake test described above for at least seven consecutive dry days. If both marks drop at the same rate, you are watching evaporation, not a leak. If the in-water mark drops faster than the floating mark, the difference is your seepage rate in millimetres per day. A reading above 5 millimetres per day usually justifies repair work.
What does a leaking dam wall actually look like?
Walk the downstream batter of the wall the morning after a calm night. A leaking wall shows damp soil, brighter green grass, or a slow trickle exiting at or below the original ground line. On heavy clay soils you may see no surface flow at all — the water is moving through the embankment but emerging diffusely. Tunnels, sinkholes on the upstream face, or boils on the downstream face are warning signs of a piping failure and should be assessed before the dam is refilled.
Why farm dams leak: the three real causes
Most leaks come from one of three sources. Knowing which one matters because the fix changes completely.
- Wrong soil for the site. Sandy soils, gravelly soils, and red loamy soils with broken rock are inherently leaky. DPIRD WA specifically flags red loamy soils as more likely to leak.
- Poor compaction at construction. If soil was placed too dry, in layers thicker than 200 millimetres, or compacted with the wrong machine, air voids remain in the embankment and water finds them.
- Dispersive clay that has tunnelled. Dispersive clays break down when wet and form internal tunnels. A 2017 summer storm in WA caused tunnelling in dispersive clay linings that had previously held water for years.
The four proven ways to seal a leaking farm dam
Australian government extension services have road-tested four methods. Each one suits a different soil and failure pattern. The table below summarises the trade-offs; the sections beneath it explain when to use each.
| Method | Best for | Typical cost vs new dam | Success rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| Blend and compact existing soil | Slightly leaky clay floor | One-third to two-thirds | About 50% |
| Local clay blanket (1 metre compacted) | Sandy or gravelly floor with clay available on-site | 1.5 to 3 times | About 80% |
| Bentonite blanket (mixed or pure) | Moderately leaky floor, no local clay | 2 to 3 times | About 50% |
| HDPE or polypropylene liner | Severely leaky dam, critical water supply | Highest | Greater than 90% |

