Playing with 🕵️‍♀️ Pine 🌲 and bluestone
This is getting to be less of a walkway and more of an outdoor space. I am enjoying the challenge and the new ideas that come with it. For example, today I cut some rough pine boards and stood them on their side. It got me thinking on how I could create a platform, either for plants or for steps.
The Paul Bunyon statue
With this remaining pine log, I’d like to cut a bench. Just another idea from working out here. It would be a “one person bench”, maybe a “two”, if one sat on the others lap.
Granite, found in New Hampshire, converted by heat and pressure into metamorphic rock, becomes far more delicate, yet interesting.
An explanation of rock formation as it pertains especially to New Hampshire.
Ten thousand years ago, the last of the glaciers retreated from NH to Canada and left in its path a trail of rock debris, from metamorphic, to igneous bedrock and compacted sedimentary layers of limestone-esque hardpack.
Bedrock, metamorphic, igneous and sedimentary layers, can be quarried today in veins across Maine and New Hampshire. Quarried stone is good for steps, walkways and landings (patios).
These Portsmouth steps mix bluestone and granite, both quarried.
Irregular stone, by contrast, brings your eye over and around a piece like a good painters composition.
A mix of fieldstone boulders, concrete pavers, asphalt drive, and perennials.
In the landscape industry today, we have the opportunity to mix all materials, bought and found, quarried and recycled. Both ways benefit from having blended rocks, as it was when Ice Age glaciers last scrambled the available till throughout our fields and properties.
With that in mind, my mom showed me a good book today, filed with charcoal drawings. I appreciated the book, and the charcoal drawings simplicity.
The charcoal drawing that inspired me to design, diagram and write…using my favorite black carbon pencils.
Resourcefulness, a new response to frustration of picking up heavy things means finding something lighter.
The following garden path is an attempt to be simple, blending native materials, and to be resourceful. I used wood slices in place of stones after a “Caps for Sale,” type of epic frustration which lead me to try something outside my comfort zone.
The garden walkway at night, halfway done. The large circles are wood slices. One is Maple. The garden walkway, using flash photography. The smaller circle is Ash.
Tomorrow is Sunday, and back to work the day after that. I’ll know that striving to live simply is frustrating, and getting out of your comfort zone is the remedy, all the while embracing all of life’s materials—even snow in mid-April.
A few weeks ago, the genesis of the Wolff walkway, I proposed an approximately 10’x5’ walk from the garage to the upper house stairs. The house is circular and there are two staircases to access it—one very step stair goes to the second floor, and another goes to the first floor, and is also a few feet off the ground. The steeper, second floor stair is the one I’m laying a path from. The step at the garage is around 8” to the ground, and a there is a lot of water pooling around the step, next to the driveway.
My job is to fill in the area with pathstones, and get it to drain. A week after proposing the walkway, for a reasonable rate, and a counter offer by the client, which I accepted, and changed the specs of the walkway to make it narrower and simpler, I took a stab laying out the walkway.
Thick pathstones. Around 2-3” and they’re some kind of soft, light, blue stone.
This walkway, while I liked the mosaic, never made it to the clients house. My dad, who owns the stone and liked this layout, also threatened to stack this walkway back onto the pallet if I didn’t move it off the rear drive. So into our new garden it went. I have yet to tune it up, but it was a good way to spend our Easter. An additional silver lining to this walkway version is getting used to the process of composing a finish-quality walkway. It’s been months since I last started and finished my own flatwork, and the client is a family fiend, and so they deserve the best quality possible.
You can just see the pathstones at the start of the garden.
This week, on another job, my stonework confidence took a hit, but I learned a valuable skill to help me get this done. While laying bricks, the foreman showed me with a string that my line was out of plumb. I had been using my eye to ascertain the best line, and was very pleased with the result. Alas, the string does more to revel what the eye can not detect. The middle of my line was off a quarter inch. While I was frustrated at the time for being corrected for something so menial, I learned a valuable lesson which came in to play today.
A foreman used a string to show me exactly where these bricks were out of plum.
Today, I got a late start, but made up for it with energy and opportunism. Seizing the opportunity to recycle materials, I grabbed old granite from a past job, and reused a pile of stone dust, sand, gravel and clay as my walkway base. When I got to the job, I emptied the contents onto the plywood and path area, realized I would need almost double that amount, and went home to get some more materials. Around 12 pm, having unloaded a second load, I began laying my walkway. Starting at the garage door, I set my biggest landing stone 5” below the threshold. Using two more stones to complete the landing, the flat hoe handle ensured me the landing was generally at the right height. The rest of the walkway went in stone by stone until the homeowner, who was sitting and chatting with me, asked me to connect the walkway to the driveway and do it soon. When I did so, I realized two things; my stones were too high, and the walkway was blocking water from the driveway from passing down the hill. To fix the problem of the high walkway, I used a keystone, and to fix the water drainage, I made a swale. But to grade them both correctly to a very minute degree—I used a piece of rope tied to a rock, which is very nearly a piece of string. This swale, now bottoming at the right spot, and the keystone reset at the right height, gave me reprieve. I took lunch knowing that with some 2” stone for the swale, 3/4” round stone for the joints, and perhaps a few more flat stones, I’d be able to finish this job off right.
The walkway with rope and string.Walkway set and partially finished with 2” and 3/4” round stone.
Tomorrow, if it doesn’t snow, I will return to this job to do some fine tuning. I need to set the stones at the stair not visible in the above pictures. The dirt areas would benefit from some simple perennials — and the swale could use some grass seed. I am excited to finish a job which already has incorporated so much learning. If I get started on time or early, maybe I’ll have time to finish the mosaic in the garden using a string tied to a stake.