Okay, I give up being a professional trail builder with 15 years experience building trail who owned a successful trail building business that was a member of the Professional Trail Builders Association. Apparently, all it takes to build trail is to ride a mountain bike for a couple of years.
The steeper the trail is, the steeper the back side of the roller, which is what you're seeing in this case. I have already stated it needed more dirt, which we did not have. Once more, the front side of the roller should be longer for it to be ridden smoothly. It doesn't need ANY work for it to fulfill its primary purpose, i.e. to shed water. Furthermore, we would have filled the little rut after it if we had the dirt. Some claim it's more like a full-on downhill trail but bi...complain about a little rut catching a tire. :
The second erosion control device is a front side roller with a log back, which creates a drop
if one is going fast enough. Technically, a drop is something that, in order to be ridden successfully, requires one or both tires to be off the ground at the same time. My first statement of this paragraph negates this last statement. Here's an example: a picnic table isn't necessarily a drop; the wheel base of a mountain bike allows one tire to be on the table and the other on the ground, though I don't recommend riding it this way. If you ride it with some velocity, you can "huck" it or wheelie drop it. That still doesn't make it a drop.
Josh, please include me in any TTF workdays so I can continue the work we started and help make it the way it should be.
D