The beach. And the stone I got.Well I'm back from the beach vacation w/ the in-laws in Edisto, SC. Sadly I don't remember seeing a single native stone while I was there. Lots of sand though. Shells too.
In any case, the only substantial portions of rocks seen by me were organized piles of granite boulders, which they (not sure who) had put on the beach at 200 meter intervals to prevent erosion by the rip tides. The stuff had almost certainly been shipped from up north, and it had been cemented together to prevent scattering.
However, toward the end of the trip on Thursday, a storm arose, prbly the afterbirth of hurricane Fay which had by that point begun in earnest the raping of Florida. The weather was wild (not wild enough to stop me from swimming in it and getting pretty beat up), and the riptides were such that some of these granite boulders were broken off from the piles and had been worked on by the surf. I saw a piece of one washed up on the beach. It was a 30 or so lb remnant of something bigger, which I judged to be quite manageable in weight and size, and so carried it a mile back to the beach house and brought it home in order that I may incorporate it into the wall. I reckon that way I can say it's got a piece of Vermont granite in it. I reckon now I also should have brought some of those verdammte see shells for packing the core of the wall. But no matter.
Getting back.We got back last night and I began building this afternoon. I would've started earlier, but I had to travel into town to obtain my textbooks for the semester. I started about 2 pm and finished about a quarter after 7. Given that I took a couple of breaks to seek respite from the sun and its 90 degree heat, I prbly only put 4.5 solid hours of work in to lay 2 courses. In any case, the wall is now 10-12 inches above the foundation and is 3 courses tall.





Tomorrow's plan.For some inexplicable but yet
certainly sadist reason, it seems that most law professors require students to read an assignment before the first day of class. Thus, it will be quite impossible for me to dedicate a full day to the work, owing that I have class the following day. Plus it'll be Sunday and normally I wouldn't work on a Sunday, so I'll be taking it easy as well. However, I do reckon that if I put my mind to it, I can (w/o exhausting myself) do another 3 courses.
Since 2 more courses will put the wall at about 15'' height above the foundation, it will be expedient for the following course to contain the tie rocks, since the height of the wall below the coping is to be 30''. Hopefully I'm being realistic that I can get that done tomorrow.
Btw, pictures of my planter.These are two pictures of the planter I built on a whim back in late May or early June. Though I now realize that structurally speaking it isn't the best example of lasting stonework, I tend to like it anyway for its odd charm (I built it in the corner of the cistern and its steps) . It was the building of this that convinced me that I would be able to build a proper wall if I got serious about it. note: Inside the planter is a sweet basil plant, a cinnamon basil plant (what the hell can you use cinnamon basil for besides muffins?), a chives plant and a red cherry tomato plant.
