View Single Post
  #2   Report Post  
Old 21-05-2005, 11:39 AM
Bob Hobden
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"Tim W" wrote ..
I have an urge to attempt to pave an sort of patio area with wooden blocks.
does anyone have experience or advice?

My thoughts were to use oak blocks, end grain upwards. I think they would
have to be two or three inches thick and if they are offcuts from a green
oak sawmill sliced up to the right thickness they might be 6" x 6" or 2" x
4" across. They would be laid onto sand and wackered just like paving
blocks.

I am unsure what sort of treatment they might need: oil, preservative,
creosote? I am concerned that in dry weather they would curl up.

I believe a lot of towns at one time had timber cobbles in the streets. I
suspect they were made of blocks which were more or less cubes and I think
they needed watering in dry weather.

Used to make roads of these in the old days, much quieter with the iron
bands on the carts and horses hooves. I remember seeing a photo of trams or
was it trolley buses in Isleworth stopped because the Thames had flooded and
all the wood blocks were floating away.
Must be something on the web about it.

--
Regards
Bob
In Runnymede, 17 miles West of London