One day, Matt got curious and wanted to see what exactly was in the planter and how the wrought iron post was attached. The plan was to rebuild the planter. Well, he started digging and quickly learned that the wrought iron post was attached to ... nothing. It was buried in the topsoil. That was it.
After some discussions with the men who were working on our neighbor's much more elaborate front porch, we decided to take out the wrought iron post and replace it. Of course that meant putting in a new footing for the post. So we decided to break up the slab on the front porch (which needed to be replaced anyway) and have a new slab poured.
Once the wrought iron post and the planter were removed, this is what it looked like. Because our neighbor had a dumpster for masonry materials, we decided to break up the slab ourselves and dispose of it in the dumpster. See that yellow machine in the bottom right corner of the photo? That's the jackhammer we rented from the Home Depot. Who knew you could rent a jackhammer?
Matt quickly got the hang of the jackhammer. For better or worse, the slab broke up pretty quickly. So quick we returned it to Home Depot sooner than we thought. I did try out the jackhammer. Can't say that I was nearly as proficient as Matt.
But I did get in on the action when it came to moving stone. We actually did the job on Memorial Day (missed the races at Lime Rock for this). It was unbelievably humid. Nice workout.
1 comment:
Looks lovely and I am SOO impressed with your brute strength!
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