T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
641.1 | Location. | HPSVAX::SHURSKY | House < $200k = Mass. Miracle | Wed Mar 23 1988 13:16 | 3 |
| One thing I forgot to mention. Location. I live up in North Andover
where the rocks are granitic. This means the darn things are any
shape but flat.
|
641.2 | Cheap source of railroad ties | SKINUT::GROSSO | | Wed Mar 23 1988 13:31 | 3 |
| Maybe you could make your wall out of railroad ties from that
unused railroad track behind the other house where we're all dumping
our creosote. ;-)
|
641.3 | Hee Hee Hee :-) | HPSVAX::SHURSKY | House < $200k = Mass. Miracle | Wed Mar 23 1988 14:00 | 6 |
| (chuckle) Some of you guys really read all of these notes don't
you?! I got quite a laugh from .2. I believe they are planning
to put that railroad line back in use some day. They may get crabby
if some of the ties are missing.
Stan
|
641.4 | Wanna buy some air too? | MERLAN::GREEN | | Wed Mar 23 1988 14:23 | 4 |
| How about a poured concrete wall with a "New England Brickmaster"
look-alike face on it topped off with real brick top. Does poured
concrete cost more than cheap rocks? Put some shrubs and greenery
around it with bark mulch and Voila! :^)
|
641.5 | | AUTHOR::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome (Maynard) | Wed Mar 23 1988 14:37 | 20 |
| There is supposed to be a place in Westminster, which of course
I can't remember the name of right now, that sells rocks for
$65/ton, or did a couple of years ago. I got the name of the
place from a landscaper in Harvard, Neil Jorgensen Associates.
A phone call to them would probably get you the name.
However, even $65/ton is not cheap. I have thought about this
too, because I want to build a wall sometime. I've thought about
picking up rocks along the road; especially in the springtime,
there tend to be rocks at the bottom of some of the cuts in the
rock along highways. I've also thought about asking at construction
sites where blasting is going on. Another idea - call up a blasting
company. They might have some suggestions.
Moving the things is definitely a problem, even with a truck. I
think I'll use the "gradual collection" approach, picking them up
here and there as I find them. If you're the type of person who
wants to start a project and finish it at a definite time, that
way of doing it probably wouldn't work. But if you're willing to
build your walls a little at a time, it might be one way to do it.
|
641.6 | Rocks, dirt, water - haven't paid for air yet! | HPSVAX::SHURSKY | House < $200k = Mass. Miracle | Wed Mar 23 1988 14:40 | 19 |
| re: .4
Geez, air indeed. Everybody is a comedian.
If you want, I will launch into my tirade about buying *dirt*. You
think dirt is dirt cheap, dontcha? Try buying 375 cu yds of topsoil
to put in a lawn. :-{
And how about water? You know that No. Andover gets their water
from Lake Cocheciwick (sp - or something like that)? Well, the
city fathers didn't clamp down on development in the watershed area
soon enough and the lake is not crystal pure and clean anymore.
No. Andover is one of the only towns in the US that doesn't have
a filtration plant (never needed it)! We will have one in 1989 or
'90. Until then it is bottled water for this guy! :-(
All you guys take rocks for granite! :-)
Stan
|
641.7 | Cedar Junction for Rocks??? | USWAV3::FAGERBERG | | Wed Mar 23 1988 15:07 | 6 |
|
This may sound silly, and it might even be stealing, who knows?
But, what about the falling shale rock you see along rtes 128 and
95? Its the same stuff, isn't it? I drive by quite a bit of it
that has peeled off. I wonder if you can stop and get it?
|
641.8 | | MYCRFT::PARODI | John H. Parodi | Wed Mar 23 1988 15:44 | 25 |
|
I've been told that there are people who will pay upwards of $1000/ton
(yup, one thousand smackers) for "aged" rock -- the ones that have been
sitting in the rock walls and getting weathered for a hundred years or so.
Truly amazing.
You might post this in the GARDEN notes file -- New England gardens emit
rocks at a furious pace at this time of year. Maybe people would be kind
enough to save them for you? Or maybe post it in ASKENET? I'm sure someone
in this company has a pile (or a field full) of rocks they'd like to get
rid of...
Last year the grade of our dirt road was raised several feet by the use
of what they called "rip-rap." It's the stuff left over from blasting
operations and consists of rather flat pieces of granite with sharp
edges, about six inches (or less) across and a couple of inches thick.
Being flat and rather small, these rocks might be easier to build a
wall with -- but it's probably not what you have in mind.
I don't think taking rocks from retaining walls on interstate highways
would be such a hot idea. And I'm sure you know that taking rocks from
a rock wall -- even if it's deep in the woods -- can get you arrested
(or shot in NH).
JP
|
641.9 | I'll volunteer a whole box full. | VIDEO::FINGERHUT | | Wed Mar 23 1988 15:56 | 5 |
|
What's your mailstop? I bet if everyone in this conference mailed
you 1 rock each, you'd have enough and wouldn't have to buy hardly
any.
|
641.10 | Free rocks | VIDEO::FINGERHUT | | Wed Mar 23 1988 17:55 | 5 |
| Or if you don't want us to mail them to you, I probably have enough
rocks for 1 or 2 pickup truck loads.
Where do you live? You can have them if you come get them.
|
641.11 | | VLNVAX::SUMNER | Senility has set in | Wed Mar 23 1988 20:10 | 0 |
641.12 | Unshaped stones are everywhere | RGB::SEILER | Larry Seiler | Thu Mar 24 1988 01:22 | 0 |
641.13 | Leave the stone walls alone... | 38974::VHAMBURGER | Common Sense....isn't | Thu Mar 24 1988 08:50 | 20 |
|
> I don't think taking rocks from retaining walls on interstate highways
> would be such a hot idea. And I'm sure you know that taking rocks from
> a rock wall -- even if it's deep in the woods -- can get you arrested
> (or shot in NH).
A neighbor of mine has a very old colonial house with several hundred
feet of stone wall in front of it along to road. She told me one time she
had to call the police because our other neighbor had taken a good many
rocks from her wall to landscape her new swimming pool! Seems the neighbors
reasoning was that the wall was just there but not being used...so the
rocks were fair game to take......Needless to say, neither neighbor speaks
to the other and I bet there is some cop somewhere still shaking his head.
I think your best bet is to find some local construction company doing
site prep and see if you can't buy a couple of truck loads of rock from
them. Freshly fractured granite makes a beautiful wall, with or without
cement.
Vic
|
641.14 | So many rocks - so few hands! | 39682::SHURSKY | House < $200k = Mass. Miracle | Thu Mar 24 1988 09:21 | 22 |
| re: .4
I'm not interested in a concrete wall with NE Brickmaster face on
it. This sucker is going to be real. Everything else I am
constructing is real.
re: .5,.6,.7,.8
I am not really going to steal rocks. I have thought of the "grab
a few on the way home every day" approach. I would like to get
this project started soon and finished soon. Actually, by the time
it is done I will probably be very thankful. I have been constructing
a couple of loose rock pillars (one done) at the end of the driveway.
The done one is about 5' high x 3' wide and tapers down to about
3' to fair in with the old wall. You would be surprised how many
rocks disappeared into that!
__________
<-- 3'---> /|
/_________/ \
^ | | ` -------------
| | \ 3'
5' | ` _____________
|
641.15 | Unhand that rock! | HPSVAX::SHURSKY | House < $200k = Mass. Miracle | Thu Mar 24 1988 09:39 | 21 |
| re: .13
I know what you mean. I have 150' feet of disheveled stone wall
along the front of my property (which I hope to repair). If anyone
tries to remove it, they are in trouble. Actually, most of the rocks
are over 100#. They will probably get a broken back long before the
police get to them.
This brings up a slightly humorous problem. I have to hide a rock
about 2.5' in diameter. The builder put the bugger on top(!) of
the wall. I have rolled it off (side away from the road :-) and
now I have to move it out of the way (and out of sight). I don't
want to rent a Bobcat ($125/day) to move one rock. I may need one
at a later date for further landscaping I could wait. I don't want
to lasso the bugger and drag it up the driveway or across the lawn
with my car. It is all uphill from here. I can't hide it in the
wall (too many immovable boulders already there. I have tried with
minimal success to make little rocks out of it with a sledge. I think
the only thing to do is buy a fluffy bush.
Stan
|
641.16 | Don't fool with mother nature... | FREDW::MATTHES | | Thu Mar 24 1988 09:59 | 5 |
| One sage technique is to rent a drill or if you have the time a
small sledge and a star drill and drill a couple of strategic holes
about 6-8" deep.
Wait one winter and move the pieces in the spring.
|
641.17 | Bury it! | CHART::CBUSKY | | Thu Mar 24 1988 11:43 | 11 |
| Stan,
I have "hidden" a large rock before by digging a larger hole next to it
and rolling it in, cover with dirt, seed it and its "gone". Just make
sure that you calculate the size and location of the hole properly
(over estimate to be sure) because rolling it in is a one shot deal,
Try to make it at least 1 foot deep so that you can get good topsoil
coverage.
Charly
|
641.18 | Easy | SALEM::MOCCIA | | Thu Mar 24 1988 12:12 | 15 |
| No problem.
Stake off an area about 20 feet square in your backyard. Outline
it with twine on the stakes. Get a spade, pitchfork, garden cart,
and bag of fertilizer. Leave them outside.
Overnight, all of the wall-size rocks within a two-mile radius
will pass the word, and slither underground to the site of your
supposed garden plot, to rest about six inches below the surface.
Just go out and dig 'em up. And when you have enough, you'll also
have a prepared garden bed.
pbm
|
641.19 | Watch out for falling rocks | USWAV3::FAGERBERG | | Thu Mar 24 1988 13:18 | 10 |
|
re.13
Vic, what I was refering to about "stealing rocks along the hiway"
was there are these granite formations that were blasted through
to build the road or on/off ramp. Every winter the pile of "flakes"
build up at the base. There are, every spring, those orange and
black trucks (that sleep three, four on overtime) removing the stuff.As
long as its not a traffic hazard and you aren't ridiculous about
going about it, there probably is no harm done.
|
641.20 | How long does it take to turn to sand? | HPSVAX::SHURSKY | House < $200k = Mass. Miracle | Thu Mar 24 1988 13:35 | 22 |
| re: .17
Hmmmmmm. That means I would have to make the hole about 3'x3' by
3.5' deep. Sounds almost big enough to be my grave. I have to
dynamite to plant a shrub. I can get all the rocks I want. I just
have to dig down a foot. .18 had about the right idea. My house
is built on ledge. They had to blast for the foundation. They had
to remove 3' of granite to put in the septic tank. (and I'm looking
for rocks, right?) I know where plenty of them are, I just want
flat ones. (I bought a lot of dirt just to cover the ones I couldn't
see to pick up and make walls)
Burying it is a good idea. For now I think I will get a come-along
and roll it out of the way. I will have to get a Bobcat in at some
point. I'll move it then.
My original solution (my wife was against it) was to push it off
the wall and let it come to rest in the road. Then I would call
the town and tell them that a dump truck from the development down
the road dropped it.
Stan
|
641.21 | Good luck with a bobcat! | FREDW::MATTHES | | Thu Mar 24 1988 15:06 | 5 |
|
3' x 3' by 2.5' (one foot of dirt over)
You ain't moving that sucker with your average bobcat!!!
|
641.37 | Field Stone | GRAMPS::LASKY | | Mon Aug 22 1988 14:06 | 9 |
| I live in a cape and the front of the house has a Field Stone fence
(dry, no cement). The house sits on top of a concrete foundation.
I want to put either real of fake field stone around the foundation
up to the house. Does anybody know where I can get this type of
stone (Fake or real) and a name of someone to do the job if I decided
to do the the job myself.
Bart Lasky
|
641.38 | | VLNVAX::HEDERSTEDT | T.B.S. | Tue Aug 23 1988 11:04 | 10 |
|
i am not sure of the stone that you need but I have seen "Field
Stone" for sale at different places in the last few weeks.I have
seen the stone for sale by the pallet load in Fitchberg and in
Linwood and Uxbridge. It is in the True Value stores and some of
the building supply outlets.
Wayne
ps. How are ya doing Bart!!
|
641.39 | | BEING::WEISS | Trade freedom for security-lose both | Mon Aug 29 1988 10:18 | 6 |
| By far the cheapest source for stone that I have seen in the Boston area is
Precourt Inc in Sudbury Ma. When I went to look into buying some bluestone,
Corriveau-Routhier (a LARGE masonry supplier in so. NH) quoted about $4 a sq
ft, Precourt quoted about $2.
Paul
|
641.22 | Anybody want free smaller rocks? | TALLIS::KOCH | Kevin Koch LTN1-2/H09 DTN226-6274 | Tue May 01 1990 16:49 | 4 |
| To reopen this note, I have the opposite problem. Every time I
prepare a bed for shrubs, flowers, garden, or new lawn, I pick out a lot
of rocks, from pencil eraser through football size. Any ideas on how to
get rid of these? Does anybody want them?
|
641.23 | i'll take if you deliver
| BTOVT::DANCONA | | Thu May 03 1990 12:55 | 5 |
| hi there !!!
i'll take your rocks .. if you deliver them to north hero vermont...
tony
|
641.40 | Fieldstone Dock Repair | GOLF::HWALSH | | Fri Apr 09 1993 13:58 | 17 |
| Hello. Is anyone familiar with the procedure for rebuilding a
fieldstone dock? The fieldstone, which is level to, or slightly
below water level, sits on top of a concrete base. Unfortunately
outermost section of the fieldstone has separated completely from
the other stones. (It is in the lake at this point).
Can the original stones be re-used? Do you have to build a form
to keep the water away from the cement when curing or is some
kind of hydraulic cement used? Too much for a rookie to do?
Any know of a good stone mason in the Maynard area, and roughly
what it would cost to have a 10' X 5' dock repaired or rebuilt?
Also, there is fieldstone retaining wall in similar condition.
Thanks in advance for the help.
Henry DTN 234-4283 GOLF::HWALSH
|
641.41 | One suggestion | KALI::MORGAN | | Fri Apr 09 1993 14:06 | 7 |
| Re: .0
I don't have any answers to your questions other than suggesting you
call George Shaw (Maynard), who is one of the better stone masons around.
Steve
|
641.42 | Underwater is OK | MLTVAX::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dog face) | Thu Apr 15 1993 02:34 | 19 |
| I can answer only two of your questions.
There's absolutely no reason not to reuse the existing stones unless
they've been "contaminated" with oil or something.
and
Any normal Portland cement based product (Concrete or mortar) will
cure quite well under water provided it it is left in an unperturbed
environment for the first 12 hours (or less). This assumes you are
working with materials which lack bonding deficiencies (e.g. oil
film). The curing of Portland cement based products is chemical and
not dependent on surfacial air to "dry". The necessary air for the
curing process is entrained in the product as it is mixed and setting.
I think. :^)
-Jack
|
641.43 | | JUPITR::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Thu Apr 15 1993 09:10 | 6 |
| RE: .2
Correct...except that portland cement doesn't need air trapped in it.
The reaction doesn't use air.
Marc H.
|
641.44 | Why the "air entraining" spec? | MLTVAX::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dog face) | Thu Apr 15 1993 23:02 | 7 |
| re: .3, Marc
You're probably right. Can you shed any light on why Portland cement
Type II (if I recall correctly) is labeled "Air entraining"? (I may
have the wrong Type number.)
-Jack
|
641.45 | | JUPITR::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Fri Apr 16 1993 09:53 | 15 |
| RE: .4
My guess is that the air is used to give the correct density to the
final product. Also, maybe to help in the through mixing of the
sand and stone with the cement. The air curing is needed for a
strictly lime cement. There, the lime is first mixed mixed with water
to form slaked lime. Then, the slaked lime hardens with CO2 to form
cement.
CaO + H2O = CaOH CaOH + C02= CaCO3
O.K.....the reactions aren't balanced...but...you get the idea.
Marc H.
|
641.46 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Fri Apr 16 1993 11:21 | 4 |
| Air-entrained concrete is much more resistant to freeze-thaw cycles. I
doubt it has any significance for underwater use.
Steve
|
641.47 | | JUPITR::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Fri Apr 16 1993 15:27 | 5 |
| RE: .6
That makes sense.
Marc H.
|
641.48 | Actually set under water? | SNOC02::WATTS | | Sun Apr 18 1993 22:13 | 12 |
| Air entrained concrete also flows better, and one can use a higher
strength concrete (less water in the mix) but still adequately fill
difficult spaces. Depending on the particular air entraining agent, the
air bubbles may or may not vibrate out as the concrete is compacted
into place.
As I understood it, it doesn't matter if cement/concrete gets wet once
it has its initial set, but it won't actually set under water - just keeps
washing away from the surface?
regards,
Michael Watts.
|
641.24 | Finally, maybe... | XK120::SHURSKY | If you're not lead dog, the view never changes. | Wed Apr 21 1993 11:28 | 21 |
| Well, I started this note string in 1988. I haven't gotten the wall done
yet. I have been informed by a higher power (my wife) that this year is
the year of the wall (and strained back).
We have been looking at rocks and even considering buying them. I thought
I would give you all one last chance to get rid of yours.
So...
If you have a stone wall on your property that has flat rocks in it and want
to get rid of them give me a call or email. If it looks feasible to rent a
truck and pick them up, I will.
One area I have seen walls with flat rocks is in Lunenburg. I also hear that
they exist out in Barre, Ma. I am in No. Andover where the walls are made of
granite cobbles. These are not acceptable. I want flat rocks.
Stan
DTN 227-4304
Home (508) 794-9283
|
641.25 | | FREBRD::POEGEL | Garry Poegel | Wed Apr 21 1993 14:32 | 11 |
|
>><<< Note 2140.24 by XK120::SHURSKY "If you're not lead dog, the view never changes." >>>
>> -< Finally, maybe... >-
A neighbor of mine got a bunch of fairly regular rectangular shaped rocks
from the Nashua, NH RT 3 construction site.
There's still plenty of rocks since they started blasting again. Supplies
and selection will vary dayly....
Garry
|
641.26 | Wall Pickers Inc.. | ELWOOD::DYMON | | Fri Apr 23 1993 08:25 | 8 |
|
......you may not find to many stone walls left in Barre.
You might just want to call a stone contractor and have them
drop off a load. You might just save more that time and money
this way....
JD
|
641.27 | Plenty left. | REFINE::MCDONALD | shh! | Fri Apr 23 1993 08:56 | 14 |
|
I was just out in Barre to visit my in-laws. Along the way my
wife and I were talking about how the town must be criss-crossed
by a few hundred miles of stone walls.
We're looking to build some more stone walls, too... but my
rock supply doesn't look like enough to fill my plans. We decided
that if some of our Barre acquaintances wanted to make some serious
money they could sell off their walls. The thing that amazes me out
there isn't just the quantity of piled stone walls... but the quantity
of very old flat-stone walls.
- Mac
|
641.28 | | RANGER::PESENTI | And the winner is.... | Fri Apr 23 1993 09:37 | 1 |
| Some of those stone walls might be boundary markers.
|
641.29 | Dry stone walls protected by law | SEESAW::PILANT | L. Mark Pilant, VMS Engineering | Fri Apr 23 1993 11:07 | 7 |
| I also remember hearing somewhere (maybe "This Old House") that some types of
dry stone walls are protected by law; at least in New Hampshire. That may
explain where there are so many of one type around but not any others.
I would tread carefully when looking to acquire stones from a dry stone wall.
- Mark
|
641.30 | a rock garden ! | ICS::STUART | | Fri Apr 23 1993 13:18 | 8 |
|
There is a farmer on West Townsend Rd. on the Townsend/Lunenburg
line that has hundreds of stones in his fields that would propably
be more than happy to have someone take away ! They look to be
perfect size for building a wall.
Randy
|
641.31 | not 1 stone unturned | ELWOOD::DYMON | | Fri Apr 23 1993 13:22 | 10 |
|
re:mac
The only problem with "all thoes walls" in Barre is that
most of them mark off land and the others need an act of
congress to get removed. There was one farmer who nearly
got run out of town for putting a few extra gateways into
is field.... I"m growing them in my field...:)
|
641.32 | Before power tools... | JUNCO::CASSIDY | | Mon Apr 26 1993 00:46 | 15 |
| I read an article that stated that many stone walls were
not built for boundaries. The walls were often a convenient
method of moving the rocks out the way so farmers could plow
their fields.
The author believes that clearcutting chunks of forests to
open up fields for farming lowered the frost line. This, in
turn, increased the efflorescence (?) of rocks being pushed to
the surface. Every spring, these colonial era farmers would
head out to their fields to find more rocks! (Where DO they
COME from?!?)
Ironic if so many of these protected walls were once a cause
of frustration, anger, and were in actuality, a waste product.
Tim
|
641.33 | They just grows | SMURF::WALTERS | | Mon Apr 26 1993 10:36 | 22 |
|
> (Where DO they COME from?!?)
The explanantion given for my local geology back home is a
combination of several effects: water action on the baserock
causing it to flake off the mother rock. This is enhanced by
the freeze/thaw cycle. Then a combination of the frequent micro
earthquakes that NE gets. Then frost heaves and finally a process
called solifluction that pushes the rocks up once they get their
head above the surface. There's probably even more to it.
Most of the round rocks that many of the walls are built of are shaped
by glaciers, (or old riverbed) and the rounded shape is better at
working its way up, apparently. Ploughing will accelerate the process
greatly, hence the nice crop of stones that farmers could raise around
here.
Regards,
Colin
|
641.34 | | ASIMOV::CHALTAS | Eat, Drink and Beat Larry | Tue Apr 27 1993 11:30 | 2 |
| I have seen a property deed in New Hampshire that referenced stone
walls as part of the description of the boundries.
|
641.35 | | VERGA::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome PKO3-1/D30 | Tue Apr 27 1993 15:17 | 4 |
| re: .35
Yes, indeed. I once lived in a house that had some 26 acres of
weirdly-shaped land, all bounded by stone walls, and over and
over the deed specified "...as the wall now stands."
|
641.36 | Besides all of that, | MPGS::MASSICOTTE | | Wed Apr 28 1993 10:47 | 6 |
|
If the walls are aside a designated wetland, or alongside a designated
"scenic route", don't mess with them unless it's on your property
and permits have been obtained.
Fred
|