Third course down and started the fourth. I think the base layer shifted a little with the recent moisture we had.
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Looking good!
The ground the base layer sits on has to be undisturbed, or compacted very well, for larger walls.
We made sure to set the base layer of mine (posted earlier) on undisturbed dirt, with the thinnest layer of sand for leveling. It worked out well. Where I didn't do that (where I wrapped a second level back to make a garden bed) they have settled a little.
We've got to do a retaining wall in the back yard; the slope gets more severe every year.
We were thinking more along the lines of landscaping timber. Looking at the photos, I'm wondering if blocks are a better bet.
husky390, wanna job? You're good at yard stuff.![]()
"There is nothing in the world so permanent as a temporary emergency." - Robert A Heinlein The Moon is a Harsh Mistress
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This is what you can look forward to with wood timbers.
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"There are no finger prints under water."
If you're planning to be there awhile, I'd go block as Irving pointed out the issues with timber. The PO of my house built a timber retaining wall along the fence line in my backyard but never deadmanned it so I get the fun job of pulling two timbers, deadman it and rebuild. I'd love to do block but there are buried power lines right where I need to dig so that's not happening.
No, I'm good with my little project and definitely not good enough to charge someone money.
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"There is nothing in the world so permanent as a temporary emergency." - Robert A Heinlein The Moon is a Harsh Mistress
Feedback for TheGrey
"There is nothing in the world so permanent as a temporary emergency." - Robert A Heinlein The Moon is a Harsh Mistress
Feedback for TheGrey
If I remember correctly, those timbers were well under 10 years old. I want to say less than 5.
"There are no finger prints under water."