shallowbridge.com shallowbridge.com
   Site Home >> About Us >> Privacy >> Terms of Service >> Add Your Link >> Submit Article
Search:   
Add Url
 

Society & Communities

Estate & Realty

Self Enhancement

Home & Garden

Art & Creative

Medical Care

Shopping Online

Lifestyle & Fashion

Sports

Jobs & Careers

Events & News

Music & Entertainment

Policies & Law

Academics & Learning

Food & Recipe

Online & Board Games

Hygiene & Health

Companies & Business

Automobiles

Finance & Banking

Children & Teens

Travel & Vacation

Research & Science

Software & Networking


 

Site Home –› Home & Garden –› Gardening & Horticulture
 

Outdoor Fireplace Landscaping

 

Anyone can work successfully with masonry materials for outdoor fireplace landscaping and have fun doing it. It's true that a good size job can involve considerable labor, but with good planning the joband the labor --can be stretched out over a period of time. A large concrete slab can be gridded (designed with a pattern of headers) so that the concrete can be mixed and poured in comparatively small batches that won't tax your patience or your strength. With brick and block faying you can stop any time and pick up again when you're refreshed.

The flexibility of masonry materials adds considerably to the fun of working with them; you can be imaginative and creative when tackling outdoor fireplace landscaping. A concrete slab does not have to be a hot prairie playground; the surface is not limited to "smooth" or "rough"; the color is not limited to cement gray. Brick and masonry units, thanks to new developments, are no longer prosaic, uninspiring building materials.

The truth about an amateur project is that the results can be every bit as good as a job done by a professional. Both in appearance and structurally, the job you do can rate A-l on the building inspector's card. There will be a difference in time due to the fact that the pro can work faster, but the amateur need not worry about .speedthe end result is more important than the time needed to accomplish it. The mixture for concrete, actually an artificial stone, consists of a blend of fine and coarse aggregates, each piece of which is completely surrounded and held to its mates by hardened Portland cement paste. A chemical reaction, which occurs ideally due to favorable temperatures and the presence of moisture while curing, causes the paste to harden. The water to cement ratio is probably the most important factor as far as the strength of mix is concerned. Too much water will result in a thin, diluted cement-paste that will be weak and porous when it hardens. It will not bond the aggregates nor will it be watertight. The correct water-cement paste, and this is important, produces a mix with maximum strength which is necessary for outdoor fireplace landscaping. The amateur will often use more water than necessary because it makes a more fluid mix that flows easily into the forms. Such a project may look O.K. to begin with (although there will probably be finishing problems due to excess moisture), but it will eventually be discovered to lack strength and durability.

Author: Ethan Boton
 
Author Bio:
Ethan Boton is an expert on this subject. Ethan has written several articles in the past on this topic.
This article can be searched using: horticulture jobs, horticulture therapy, horticulture supplies, gardening, container gardening
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
How To Treat Compressed Air
 
Wall Decor Project: Easy Inexpensive Closet Flowers
 
The Emergence of the Snow Blower
 
Platform Beds
 
Hibiscus Plants
 
Feel Good Tips!!
 
13 Don'ts on Child Safety
 
Creative Knitting - Yarns to Dye For!
 
Fathers Day Gift Baskets
 
The Best Baby Gift Ever is Just a Click Away
 
 
 
Site Home >> Privacy >> Terms of Service  
Copyright © www.shallowbridge.com - All Rights Reserved Worldwide.