stone retaining walls now let's take a look at

stone retaining walls as everyone knows

04/19/2006

It’s cool that I came upon this topic, stone retaining walls, for one of my assignments. Like many of us in colonial and rural America, I have a penchant for because I have fond memories of old stone walls. Granted, those that are used in more urban or suburban areas nowadays for sound barriers and flood buffers are prefabricated, simulated, and anything but the kind I refer to here, though they are useful, economically sound, and ecologically apt.

Thanks for visiting and finding my article. What follows is information that I have pulled together from many different sources. I hope you find it both interesting and helpful.

I remember, though, the stone retaining walls we used as crude land border markers. They were amalgamations of local rocks and stones found near the property at the time the walls were getting built. We were kids—hundreds of years after the walls were built—and would walk along, balance on, sit atop, or occasionally dismantle these wonderful stone retaining walls. The moss on the rocks was deep green, dark, moist. Because many were made without grout, spackle, or bonding of any kind, the rocks were shaped differently and fit with the adjacent rocks to make a neat stack or row; when we overturned a rock, instead of artificial glue, we found bugs and worms and even small garden snakes, those delightful creatures that prefer the dark and dank over the direct sunlight. Such creatures, along with the musty, rich soil smells, sent us into a focused reverie of imagined earlier ages: the beetles with their armadillo cases, the centipedes, the pinch bugs and stink bugs all contributed to what we thought was an ancient microcosm belong to the fossilized from now on.

We also helped build such walls, lugging choice stones, watching dads and uncles negotiate the bends and twists and fits of each rock in conjunction with the previous and the one to come. We stayed on task for hours, from dusk till buggy dawn, then looked back at our progress as we hit the hay for a quick night’s rest, only to rise early enough to continue the construction the next day i'll be the first to admit.

After a few decades, I had forgotten about stone retaining walls, save when I went home to visit or went on a trip on a superhighway where those new models threaten to make our outside world into an inside product. But a few months ago, my then roommate was considering some amateur landscaping, and asked me what I thought of a stone wall and whether I was familiar with them. Do I? Am I? Did I? I got out the old photo albums, the New England coffee table pictoral books, the tourist pamphlets…and not only showed my friend the originals but went back into memory mode, walking down dirt roads, hiking along the power lines, and building, climbing, and enjoying the old stone walls that are, for the most part, still intact in any event.

I'm hoping that you found all of this interesting and helpful. The information you just read was pulled from many different resources

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