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Pond builders in Dallas County, Missouri

Looking for a pond builder in Dallas County, Missouri? Ozark Pond Builders connects Dallas County landowners with licensed local pond and excavation contractors for farm ponds, recreational lakes, dredging, and dam work. Most private ponds in this area fall below Missouri's 35 foot dam permit threshold, so qualifying projects can move forward without a state dam safety permit.

Dallas County is deep Ozark country, drained by two Osage basin rivers: the Niangua, which runs north through the county and bends east near Buffalo toward Bennett Spring, and the Pomme de Terre, which feeds Pomme de Terre Lake downstream. That puts the whole county in the Kansas City District for federal purposes, so a pond that affects a stream and needs a Section 404 review goes to the US Army Corps of Engineers Kansas City District. Confirm the office for your parcel.

On the state side, most private farm ponds have a dam below Missouri’s 35 foot threshold and need no state dam safety permit, as our Missouri pond permit guide lays out.

The ground here is classic cherty Ozark upland soil, low in clay and prone to seepage, so plan on the real possibility of a compacted clay core or a liner. Some sites have fragipan subsoils that seal a little better, which is exactly why a parcel-level look at the NRCS Web Soil Survey pays off. Our will my pond hold water guide covers the options.

For sizing, plan roughly 10 to 20 acres of drainage per surface acre of water (watershed sizing guide). For a qualifying agricultural pond, the Dallas County SWCD and NRCS office in Buffalo can help you pursue cost share (Missouri pond cost share guide). When you are ready, we connect you with one licensed local contractor who works in Dallas County.

Local pond planning facts

County seat
Buffalo
Primary drainages
The Niangua River and the Pomme de Terre River drain Dallas County, both in the Osage River basin. The Niangua flows north and turns east near Buffalo, and Pomme de Terre Lake, a Corps of Engineers reservoir, lies downstream to the northwest.
Soils and water holding
Ozark uplands, predominantly cherty silt loams over cherty limestone and dolomite, with fragipan subsoils in places. Generally low in clay and high in seepage risk. Most sites are cherty and low in clay, so a compacted clay core or a liner is commonly needed, though fragipan subsoils give some natural sealing. Confirm your parcel with the NRCS Web Soil Survey.
Army Corps district (Section 404)
Kansas City District. Dallas County drains wholly to the Osage basin (Niangua and Pomme de Terre), and Pomme de Terre Lake is a Kansas City District project, so Section 404 questions here go to that district. Confirm the reviewing office for your specific parcel.
Soil and Water Conservation District
Dallas County Soil and Water Conservation District, in Buffalo, co-located with the USDA Service Center and NRCS field office. Look up current contact details in the USDA Service Center locator.
Floodplain and grading
Missouri floodplain rules apply: a floodplain development permit is required for construction or land disturbance in a mapped special flood hazard area, and pond work near the Niangua or Pomme de Terre that crosses or impounds a stream can trigger a federal Section 404 review. Confirm the rules for your site.

Towns in Dallas County

Services in Dallas County

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