Just keep the cold beers a-comin'

  • Active since 1995, Hearth.com is THE place on the internet for free information and advice about wood stoves, pellet stoves and other energy saving equipment.

    We strive to provide opinions, articles, discussions and history related to Hearth Products and in a more general sense, energy issues.

    We promote the EFFICIENT, RESPONSIBLE, CLEAN and SAFE use of all fuels, whether renewable or fossil.
Status
Not open for further replies.
Nice work myway. Very nice. Thanks for the pics. Did you buy that stone? Or is it on your property?
All stone was picked by hand from the area. Some was unearthed from the property for one reason or the other, including the soil work for the wall. That is kind of a big deal for me having done this completely from scratch vs having pallets of stone delivered. It would have cost thousands just for the stone to cover this much wall.
 
  • Like
Reactions: ScotO
Great looking walls and I admire the dedication. I love all the old stone walls in New England, especially when I'm walking or hiking in the woods and I pass by one of these walls which is now completely surrounded by woods. Makes one think about the past and how prominent farming was in new england in the past.


I'm trying for an old time look myself.

phpzH3CYxAM.jpg
 
  • Like
Reactions: ScotO
I'm trying for an old time look myself.

View attachment 77222
I've done random mortared stonework and a little dry stack myself, but I'm no expert. One thing the experts agree on is that there is a lot of waste with natural stone walls etc. You will need approximately 1.5x to 4x the amount of raw stone relative to installed stone (depending on the quality of your raw material) to get that look that is 'just right'.
 
  • Like
Reactions: ScotO
I love it! The beauty of natural over interlock and precast in an application like yours is that it actually looks better with age. The stone acquires a natural 'patina' and hopefully a fine moss will fill in all the gaps.

Oh, forgot to mention it is all drystack and now its 5 years old. Has not budged. I was scared as this was my first attempt at any stone work. and I had about 30% waste that I am still finding uses for.
 
  • Like
Reactions: ScotO and Realstone
I've done random mortared stonework and a little dry stack myself, but I'm no expert. One thing the experts agree on is that there is a lot of waste with natural stone walls etc. You will need approximately 1.5x to 4x the amount of raw stone relative to installed stone (depending on the quality of your raw material) to get that look that is 'just right'.

I bet you used "fake" stone, didn't you? ;)
 
I believe they prefer "Asians":cool:

;lol The first time I read through the post that went over my head. Reading to fast. Not politically correct Eatonpcat. Funny though!;lol
 
Sigh ;em, yes.

But I've also done lots of the real thing.

You must be some kind of a mind reader bro :eek:
I was just teasing, bud! With a name like Realstone, I never thought you'd use fake stone!

The "fake" stone they make now is absolutely amazing stuff. Cannot believe how realistic it is! I used the real stuff all through our house out of necessity....I couldn't afford the fake stuff!
 
Lick'm and stick'm rocks!
 
I was just teasing, bud! With a name like Realstone, I never thought you'd use fake stone!

The "fake" stone they make now is absolutely amazing stuff. Cannot believe how realistic it is! I used the real stuff all through our house out of necessity....I couldn't afford the fake stuff!
Doh! (Realstone smacks his forehead) How did I miss that one?

About the fake stone - it's amazing to me too. Out of 6 boxes of random ledgerock, no two are the same. Some are similar, but nowhere near re-coloured duplicates. You're right about the price too. Even with the factory only 2 miles from my home, it's still $7/ft²
 
  • Like
Reactions: ScotO
Little update on the project. The Pin Oak I transplanted took fine. I had moved 2, but had the feeling only the one would make it, and that is what happened. Topping the fill with 1.5-4 inch riverstone. Color is good, matches the wall well. There will be boxwoods planted in this bed shortly. Will follow up with pics...
 

Attachments

  • wall-tree.jpg
    wall-tree.jpg
    85.9 KB · Views: 132
  • wall-stoned.jpg
    wall-stoned.jpg
    148 KB · Views: 119
Little update on the project. The Pin Oak I transplanted took fine. I had moved 2, but had the feeling only the one would make it, and that is what happened. Topping the fill with 1.5-4 inch riverstone. Color is good, matches the wall well. There will be boxwoods planted in this bed shortly. Will follow up with pics...
looks fantabulous, brother! I was wondering if you were still working on this project. Did you end up putting a French drain in it?
 
Drain is in there. Did not see any heaving over the winter, so it seems the water is not building up. Just got done raking out the stone. Triceps and back are not happy.
 
  • Like
Reactions: ScotO
Nice work. It looks great. Definitely take a loooong beer break.
 
Would love to do that right now, but I have to umpire a playoff baseball game in an hour. I guess the cold one(s) will taste that much better afterwards. Thanks for the compliments....
 
Would love to do that right now, but I have to umpire a playoff baseball game in an hour. I guess the cold one(s) will taste that much better afterwards. Thanks for the compliments....
Have fun. I'll be putting some beverages away for the next 9 days......I'm on my first summer vacation!
 
Lotta nice work there.
 
Had 9 tons delivered (small ones for topping). Looks like that will just make the section I finished last fall.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.