GardenBanter.co.uk

GardenBanter.co.uk (https://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/)
-   Gardening (https://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/gardening/)
-   -   Building a mound (https://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/gardening/78611-building-mound.html)

Cat 09-07-2004 04:02 AM

Building a mound
 
I'm in the process of turning my [long, narrow and shady] back yard
into something more interesting than tons and tons of vinca - and
I'd like to build up part of the garden into a mound about 10' long
by l2.5' tall. Is there a more efficient way than buying a ton of
dirt?

cheers!
--
================================================== ========================
"A cat spends her life conflicted between a deep, passionate and profound
desire for fish and an equally deep, passionate and profound desire to
avoid getting wet. This is the defining metaphor of my life right now."

Vox Humana 09-07-2004 04:02 AM

Building a mound
 

"Cat" wrote in message
...
I'm in the process of turning my [long, narrow and shady] back yard
into something more interesting than tons and tons of vinca - and
I'd like to build up part of the garden into a mound about 10' long
by l2.5' tall. Is there a more efficient way than buying a ton of
dirt?


No.



Sunflower 09-07-2004 04:02 AM

Building a mound
 

"Cat" wrote in message
...
I'm in the process of turning my [long, narrow and shady] back yard
into something more interesting than tons and tons of vinca - and
I'd like to build up part of the garden into a mound about 10' long
by l2.5' tall. Is there a more efficient way than buying a ton of
dirt?

cheers!
--


You're going to need more than a ton of dirt. More like 3-4 dumptruck
loads and a bobcat to move it from your driveway to your back yard. And,
that's assuming your backyard is accessible to a bobcat. If it's not, then
forget it. 44 cubic yards of material would take a whole Boy Scout Troop
all summer to move with wheelbarrows and shovels, and you'd still probably
have leftovers.

That is, assuming you meen 10 *feet* by 12 *feet* and not inches. If you
mean just raising a 10' long bed a foot, then it's probably feasable work
for a single fit person with a truck over a summer.



Phisherman 09-07-2004 02:02 PM

Building a mound
 
On Fri, 09 Jul 2004 02:02:05 GMT, (Cat)
wrote:

I'm in the process of turning my [long, narrow and shady] back yard
into something more interesting than tons and tons of vinca - and
I'd like to build up part of the garden into a mound about 10' long
by l2.5' tall. Is there a more efficient way than buying a ton of
dirt?

cheers!


If you lived next door I'd give you my dirt that I removed to build a
25 x 15 x 3.5 foot pond. It took (two men) almost two weeks to dig
out with a shovel, and not something I'd want to do in the mid-summer
heat !

Pam - gardengal 09-07-2004 03:02 PM

Building a mound
 

"Cat" wrote in message
...
I'm in the process of turning my [long, narrow and shady] back yard
into something more interesting than tons and tons of vinca - and
I'd like to build up part of the garden into a mound about 10' long
by l2.5' tall. Is there a more efficient way than buying a ton of
dirt?


A 'mound' 10 feet long by 12.5 feet tall is not a mound at all - it is an
unstable pile of soil that will not maintain those dimensions. I assume
there is a typo here and the 12.5 feet is really more like 12 inches, in
which case you have pretty reasonable dimensions for a small berm.
Generally, berms are constructed with a slope of no more than 5:1 - steeper
slopes look awkward, specially in small gardens, and will require some
additional form of stabilization to prevent erosion or sliding.. This means
that for a berm 10 feet long/wide, the maximum height you should attempt to
achieve will be 24 inches, but I have found that a slightly gentler slope is
easier to plant and maintain and looks most natural.

A very easy way to achieve this is by removing sod from an area in your
garden and laying it upside down (root side up) in the location of the berm
to the desired height A light layer - 3-4 inches - of decent soil over the
top and you will be ready to plant. If you have no sod to remove for the
base, then you are looking at bringing in a quantity of soil. Assuming the
berm will be about as wide as it is long, about 2.5 cubic yards should do
it.

This link may help:
http://www.sustland.umn.edu/implement/soil_berms.html

pam - gardengal



Cat 09-07-2004 06:02 PM

Building a mound
 
In article ,
Sunflower wrote:

"Cat" wrote in message
...
I'm in the process of turning my [long, narrow and shady] back yard
into something more interesting than tons and tons of vinca - and
I'd like to build up part of the garden into a mound about 10' long
by l2.5' tall. Is there a more efficient way than buying a ton of
dirt?


That is, assuming you meen 10 *feet* by 12 *feet* and not inches. If you
mean just raising a 10' long bed a foot, then it's probably feasable work
for a single fit person with a truck over a summer.


Eeek! My finfers got away with me! That should have been a 10 foot long
bed, raised about 2.5 feet tall, and varying from about 1 to 4 feet wide.

Er, yeah. I wasn't planning on creating amon sur in my backyard ;

cheers!
--
================================================== ========================
"A cat spends her life conflicted between a deep, passionate and profound
desire for fish and an equally deep, passionate and profound desire to
avoid getting wet. This is the defining metaphor of my life right now."

[email protected] 10-07-2004 02:03 PM

Building a mound
 
On Fri, 09 Jul 2004 02:02:05 GMT, (Cat)
wrote:

I'm in the process of turning my [long, narrow and shady] back yard
into something more interesting than tons and tons of vinca - and
I'd like to build up part of the garden into a mound about 10' long
by l2.5' tall. Is there a more efficient way than buying a ton of
dirt?


http://www.sierraazul.com/mounds.html


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 12:00 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
GardenBanter