Does it need to be dry for patio pointing? how dry
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I am having a nightmare with the "landscape gardener" who is doing my patio. He started it a few months ago. He underquoted so half way through went on other jobs and comes back occasionally to do 30 mins work. He keeps saying he'll be in one day but never does, then blames the rain.
All he has left if pointing, but its been waiting for about 3 weeks now.
The point is he says it needs to be dry and its been raining. Some days its beautiful sunshine but he;s on another job, then when he says he'll come in it "looks as though" it might rain, it has sometimes but not always. I know we havent had a great summer, but we have had dry days...
So he's waiting for it to not rain. It hasnt rained today or yesterday but he says it has...
Well if it has its been tiny. So my question is in an overcast day that MAY rain (or perhaps rained a bit) is pointing still OK? Can't the pointing not be covered over with a tarp or something to keep it dry.
At this rate, with british weather and his attitude it will never get pointed, whereas I see patios everywhere, I dont believe every patio in the UK has been pointed in zero rain.
Thanks a lot
All he has left if pointing, but its been waiting for about 3 weeks now.
The point is he says it needs to be dry and its been raining. Some days its beautiful sunshine but he;s on another job, then when he says he'll come in it "looks as though" it might rain, it has sometimes but not always. I know we havent had a great summer, but we have had dry days...
So he's waiting for it to not rain. It hasnt rained today or yesterday but he says it has...
Well if it has its been tiny. So my question is in an overcast day that MAY rain (or perhaps rained a bit) is pointing still OK? Can't the pointing not be covered over with a tarp or something to keep it dry.
At this rate, with british weather and his attitude it will never get pointed, whereas I see patios everywhere, I dont believe every patio in the UK has been pointed in zero rain.
Thanks a lot
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Whilst it does sound like he is taking the piss look at it from the contractors point of view.
If the weather forecast is not totally dry and i spend a day pointing then there is a large heavy shower late on i might need to remove the pointing and re-do so not only have i not got paid that day but i need to spend extra time cleaning up and another day re-doing it?
Covering with a tarp can sometime work but very much depends on the area.
You need to tell him that the next dry forecasted day you expect him to be there and finish it or this will drag on for another few weeks.
I don;t think its reasonable though to expect him to come on a maybe maybe not type forecast.
If the weather forecast is not totally dry and i spend a day pointing then there is a large heavy shower late on i might need to remove the pointing and re-do so not only have i not got paid that day but i need to spend extra time cleaning up and another day re-doing it?
Covering with a tarp can sometime work but very much depends on the area.
You need to tell him that the next dry forecasted day you expect him to be there and finish it or this will drag on for another few weeks.
I don;t think its reasonable though to expect him to come on a maybe maybe not type forecast.
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If he's underquoted (a near impossible thing to do on a patio) then the cheapest get out is to do the thing as promptly as you can messing around and going to a job on and off is the least profitable way of doing a job I never understand why some folk do it. Get in stick at it till it's done then move on to the next one multiple jobs and one squad is money down the drain.
Can't see it from my house
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Well seeing as he was stupid enough to under quote and sounds like he doesn't give 2 sh!ts about the job, you are probably best off just buying a tub of marshalls weatherpoint (can be done in the rain) and doing it yourself. Then tell him not to bother coming back. Job done.
I cant believe how some people can run a business like that though!
I cant believe how some people can run a business like that though!
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Sorry for late reply, looks like I am not subscribed to this even though I started it! So I had no notifications. Anyway....
Well he has done the pointing now, I kept complaining and he came in on a Saturday because it was the only day forecast sunny (week last Saturday, so about 12 days ago). It was a beautiful day.
So pointing looked OK. But then it rained the next day and the surface has washed away in a lot of places. It seems like the main pointing is concrete, its gray and solid, but then for the colour he put a thin sandy layer of pointing on top. Like only half a centimetre. This is what's washing away.
I am no expert but this sandy mixture would never stand a chance, even if it went hard it was so thin that walking over and the kids bikes would crack it and it would come off in bits.
He said thats what he was told (he said like he only just read some instructions or something). He keeps saying how good is patio jobs are, but I get the impression he hasnt done much.
So is this normal, to put a thin sandy coloured mixture over the top of the main pointing which looks like concrete?
When I get time I am going to brush away all this sandy stuff (which is the colour I want) and leave the grey concrete there.
When he quoted I didnt know, and he quoted all the money I had saved up (~£2200). If he said it would be say £4000 (like some other guy I had in to look at the job later), I would not have gone ahead. So I really did not have the money to pay more. BUT I dont want this guy back, so I am saving again, and will get someone else in to give me an opinion on what he did right/wrong and to quote on tidying it up. I am self employed and I underquote sometimes, but you just have to do it to finish the job and put the overtime in if you need paid jobs during the day. He wont do the overtime so I hardly see him now even though there are a few other things left.
Well he has done the pointing now, I kept complaining and he came in on a Saturday because it was the only day forecast sunny (week last Saturday, so about 12 days ago). It was a beautiful day.
So pointing looked OK. But then it rained the next day and the surface has washed away in a lot of places. It seems like the main pointing is concrete, its gray and solid, but then for the colour he put a thin sandy layer of pointing on top. Like only half a centimetre. This is what's washing away.
I am no expert but this sandy mixture would never stand a chance, even if it went hard it was so thin that walking over and the kids bikes would crack it and it would come off in bits.
He said thats what he was told (he said like he only just read some instructions or something). He keeps saying how good is patio jobs are, but I get the impression he hasnt done much.
So is this normal, to put a thin sandy coloured mixture over the top of the main pointing which looks like concrete?
When I get time I am going to brush away all this sandy stuff (which is the colour I want) and leave the grey concrete there.
You know he has underquoted so just offer him some more money to come and finish it?
When he quoted I didnt know, and he quoted all the money I had saved up (~£2200). If he said it would be say £4000 (like some other guy I had in to look at the job later), I would not have gone ahead. So I really did not have the money to pay more. BUT I dont want this guy back, so I am saving again, and will get someone else in to give me an opinion on what he did right/wrong and to quote on tidying it up. I am self employed and I underquote sometimes, but you just have to do it to finish the job and put the overtime in if you need paid jobs during the day. He wont do the overtime so I hardly see him now even though there are a few other things left.
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Figured that would be the case. Was just tossing the idea out therecoolstan wrote:You know he has underquoted so just offer him some more money to come and finish it?
When he quoted I didnt know, and he quoted all the money I had saved up (~£2200). If he said it would be say £4000 (like some other guy I had in to look at the job later), I would not have gone ahead. So I really did not have the money to pay more. BUT I dont want this guy back, so I am saving again, and will get someone else in to give me an opinion on what he did right/wrong and to quote on tidying it up. I am self employed and I underquote sometimes, but you just have to do it to finish the job and put the overtime in if you need paid jobs during the day. He wont do the overtime so I hardly see him now even though there are a few other things left.
The way he has done it would have been ok if the mortar in between the joints hadn't dried yet but because he has left so long to point it up it won't work, it should have been raked out and filled to a proper depth (twice the width of the joint minimum).
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I might try to see if I can take a good image later, I am no DIY expert but just does not look right. I think the main concrete pointing was not by hand, he mentioned some sort of gun, but the top layer must have been I think.
I wondered if it was a way to save money, i.e. if the top layer costs more then dont put so much down, put concrete underneath. I dont know though.
I wondered if it was a way to save money, i.e. if the top layer costs more then dont put so much down, put concrete underneath. I dont know though.
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Take a look at these two images! Awful or what. Now would this be normal pointing and I am unlucky with the rain (which was the day after), or is this just terrible pointing?
http://imgur.com/a/UKIkT#0 (click on the two thumbnails top right to view them both)
http://imgur.com/a/UKIkT#0 (click on the two thumbnails top right to view them both)