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patty_cakes_gw

Building a stone wall...

patty_cakes
14 years ago

My 'plan' is to build a stone wall in the backyard to section it off, and make a smaller space to create *my* take on an English garden. The #1 most important question I need answered is, do I need to cement the stones together or can I simply stack them? I just read the post where the Polymeric Sand was mentioned, and am wondering if it could work on vertically placed stones, or just on the ground. Has anyone used this product on a wall? If not, how did you do yours~~the easier the better! TIA ;o)

Comments (7)

  • laag
    14 years ago

    Polymeric sand is for flat work.

  • patty_cakes
    Original Author
    14 years ago

    So is that a flat out 'no' or have you never 'personally' tried the product for a vertical wall?

    I found an on-line site that sells the product and sent an email to get a 'why not'. ;o)

  • lazy_gardens
    14 years ago

    Pattycakes ...

    It's a "how are you going to hold the sand in the joints until you can get it wet?" question.

    Polymeric sand does not set up hard like mortar. The purpose of the polymer is to hold sand grains together with gravity helping hold them in place on a path or between rocks.

    It's not strong enough to hold up to a patio broom - you can sweep the sand right out of the joints if you sweep too vigorously.

  • patty_cakes
    Original Author
    14 years ago

    Lazygardens, now that's a whole 'nother thought.....or not! LOL

    Karin, thank you for giving such straight talk. It won't be a retaining wall, just a decorative wall....would it hold up if a dog(50lbs)were to jump on it? I won't be using boulders, just average size stone/rock. I'll probably use the flatter kind since i'll be doing it myself and need to do what's easiest for me to work with. Would it be best to start with a flat patio paver in the sand? I do have a book someplace, but it might be 20 years old and there might be newer techniques. I'm sure I could find instructions on line though. Thanks for taking the time to at least give me something to think about before tackling this project. ;o)

  • karinl
    14 years ago

    Patty, rocks haven't changed much in 20 years so a book of any age will likely do :-). The best base depends on your climate and the height of your wall, but the idea is lowering the centre of gravity so the taller the wall the wider the base needs to be and so on.

    If you go to a good landscape supply yard they should have rock of various types suitable for wall building, and one of the rocks you get will function as a base so long as it is firmly planted and the right size. A thin paver is likely not the best base since it can crack if not adequately supported.

    I've linked below to pictures posted by a forum regular. You might search up his threads by user name; the other thread has more pictures. These are walls and half; unless you have similar strapping young men lined up to help you, you won't be building them quite like this! But the same principles apply.

    Once you have decided on the kind of rock you are going to use, you can get a better handle on building method too.

    KarinL

    Here is a link that might be useful: Kaitain4's pictures

  • inkognito
    14 years ago

    If you had a truck full of rocks (any size) tipped they would settle into a rough pyramidal shape, that is wider at the bottom than the top. You could do the same with a wheelbarrow and tip one load alongside another and if you left them just like that they would settle (kind of) and you could claim it as a wall. The problem would be the amount of space this takes up and the rocks moving when a 50lb dog jumps on it.

    So the job is to build a wall that takes up less space and is stable. If you stack the stones individually with nothing to hold them together you will need more stones and a certain amount of skill in placement as it is only the positioning of the stones that holds the wall together . If you decide to go with a mortared wall (polymeric sand won't work) you need a different footing and some skill as mortar can be messy.

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