Friday 1 September 2017

Building a car space

We bought a block with no off-street parking 36 years ago.
As we get older carting goods up or down doesn't get easier.
There have been falls and Chris recently had a leg fracture from
one.

Parking inspectors want to book us for parking in front of our
property. There is nowhere else to park anywhere reasonably
closer.

So with the very generous work of Mike and Bec we are aiming
for 3 - 4 car spaces.

 From a long neglected jungle of weeds and exotic trees and shrubs like Privet, 
and an old Jacarandah, to a more cleared space. Weeds like Fishbone Fern,
and Asparagus Fern, some succulents, and Agapanthus too. The Agapanthus
finding new homes and lots of free firewood. 

 A sloping site which needs retaining and raising the level closer 
to the verge height, with a slight incline. 

 Revealing sometimes overgrown items like the water meter.
Deciding if we need to move the meter. 

 Stumps of sizeable Privet and the old Jacarandah which wasn't
too healthy, and over the power lines, and cars. 

 3 old Camellia shrubs are happier, seeing the light of day again 
and flourish and bloom in appreciation.

 Building on bedrock, and careful to see that we don't impact
on the root system of 3 mighty Blackbutt Trees. 

 A high pile of free delivered fill and large sandstone blocks. More historic, 
hand hewn sandstone blocks were relocated by trailer from friend's of 
Mike's family in The Blue Mountains.  

 The fill is a good mix of clay and crushed sandstone.

 We get a handy loan of a cement mixer from Gordon, and his concrete saws. 

 Bec and Mike do the hard yakka, lifting, rolling, and hoisting stones 
with the aid of ropes, pulleys and Mike's 4WD. 

 Levelling the wall with minimal cement. A large weeping wall takes shape.
It is backed up and plugged with smaller rubble. The fill is raked in and compacts nicely. 

With the aid of mattock, steel tooth rakes and shovels, the fill mound 
gradually lessens and the retained area rises. 


The wall grows.

 So half way now, and maybe only one more course of stone. A path is left between properties to access the gas meter and not impact on next door's carport and it's brick basement storage. 

 Essential refreshments, my job to supply as I can't work as physically hard
as the young. I can plug the back of the block wall and rake in fill. 

 Mike rakes over the fill at day's end, planning to test the space by bringing on George,
his large 4WD Jackaroo. It is a good test, there is just the right length off street,
and there is minimal depression of the fill which shows it to be quite stable.