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Posted: Tue May 06, 2008 10:13 am
by IanMelb
seanandruby wrote:You skimping on the bedding layer? tut tut ???
Damn right!

It's a kind of protest - I'd rather have been attaching guttering and water butts to the shed

I reckon it's a good 60-70% chance that this thing is going to be moved again - maybe to somewhere where people will be walking on it *then* I'll give it the full type1 treatment. As it is, I had loads of rubble that I would have had to lug to the tip otherwise ...

Posted: Tue May 06, 2008 10:22 am
by matt h
no peace for the wicked eh:D

Posted: Sat May 10, 2008 1:01 pm
by IanMelb
My morning's work - 125kg of 8:1 semi-dry mix and the circle set and levelled (with a slight fall). Once it's gone off we can dig the hole out in the middle and plant the tree.

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Posted: Sat May 10, 2008 4:38 pm
by Suggers
Bugger - I think I might have dug me hole first Ian ? - want any of my mum's 30 yr old compost?

Posted: Sat May 10, 2008 6:43 pm
by IanMelb
I reckon that if I'd dug the hole first and planted the tree then I'd end up knocking the thing over with the wacker plate. If I'd dug the hole and not planted the tree then all my sub base and dry mix would probably have collapsed in to it.

I must admit to only having a very thin layer of rubble/sub base in the middle (planned) - it should come up quite easy (famous last words)

Posted: Sat May 10, 2008 8:39 pm
by Mikey_C
did you knock up your 8:1 using that cretebag thing or have you got a mixer yet, now you got a shed(read small dwelling) to store it in?

Personally I would hardly dig out the hole in the middle that way tree will die sooner and you can claim unsuitable ground and fill the circle in bring the job to complete.

Posted: Sun May 11, 2008 7:42 am
by seanandruby
Think i would have either the tree, or the patio, not both. seems like a lot of hard work coming your way.

Posted: Sun May 11, 2008 12:59 pm
by IanMelb
Yeah, but you're not married to my Mrs :D , still, managed to get the thing done this morning before the sun got too hot. Also managed to start a bit of scaping around it - maybe now I can have some peace ...

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Posted: Sun May 11, 2008 2:10 pm
by Suggers
Ian, forgot to add my congrats with all the others - whole project's been brill light relief from all the serious stuff on here.
Can I have some of your energy please ?

Posted: Sun May 11, 2008 2:49 pm
by IanMelb
>did you knock up your 8:1 using that cretebag thing or have you got a mixer yet

That cretebag thing's been a godsend - can knock up 30kg at a time - just right for this small scale stuff - no mess, no fuss and just fold it away at the end.

Posted: Sun May 11, 2008 2:51 pm
by IanMelb
>Ian, forgot to add my congrats with all the others - whole project's been brill light relief from all the serious stuff on here.

Cheers :D - I wish the whole project would have gone a bit quicker mind ...

> Can I have some of your energy please ?

Ha! If I told the SO that she'd be in stitches. I've got me feet up at the mo watching her jetwash the patio!

Posted: Sun May 11, 2008 9:40 pm
by seanandruby
IanMelb wrote:Yeah, but you're not married to my Mrs :D ,

]
we all have one like yours m8. a mans shed and surrounding area is his castle ( if they let us a? ) good job tho.

Posted: Mon Jul 03, 2017 4:29 pm
by IanMelb
IanMelb wrote:Took 4 days off work this week to make a start on my new shed. I thought I'd learn the value of doing things the 'manual' way rather than having a go with a mini digger. I'm now wondering whether I'm just a bit mad (a-wibble) and that someone created mini-excavators and dumper trucks for a reason ...

Shovelled and barrowed 8 tonnes of Type1 (£16/tonne delivered) from front to back:

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Shovelled and barrowed 6000 x 4500 x 400 mm of soil from the new building site.

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Probably a good thing I didn't hire an excavator, if I was using one then it may have been on its side after trying to remove this large length of rebar that seems to be driven a metre or so into the ground (it don't want to come out, so I'll get the angle grinder to it)

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I'm quite proud of it all really - normally I'm stuck behind a keyboard. The last time I shovelled this much s--t was around 20 years ago whilst working for a Steel foundry (Blackett & Hutton in Guisborough) during its summer fortnight shutdown (that's the time when we had to clear all the year's moulding sand out of the furnace areas and other locations)

Hey ho, now for the 100mm of sub-grade and the 100mm of C20...
Bloody hell, I started my Shed just over 10 years ago! :-O

Posted: Mon Jul 03, 2017 5:02 pm
by digerjones
So where's the picture of the shed, Ian.

Posted: Mon Jul 03, 2017 8:29 pm
by seanandruby
...fuuuuck that flew by.
Digger if you go to the back posts there are loads of shed photo's. Was a great job and posting.