I built retaining walls for about ten years, before my body wore out and I had to switch to a desk job. We always had a hard time selling our walls because we were always the high bid, but I know of at least three jobs we didn't build that we ended up re-building several years later because the low bidder had no idea what they were doing (one 3' wall was built on 1" of play sand over soil - guess what happened to that one...). So I saw your video title and thought "yeah right, nobody builds retaining walls right any more." Happy to say you completely proved me wrong. On the odd chance the homeowner sees this, know that you got a really high quality, professional installation that will never fail, and it is worth every penny you paid.
There's often not enough money available to do a job right...but there's somehow always enough money available to do the same job over (and to do it right).
I’m currently in the process of building a block retaining wall 20ft long by 3ft tall. I’ve got my trench dug and leveled. I’ve looked online and I’m confused by the type of base gravel type I need. So do I need to put fabric on top of the dirt, then fill with gravel, then start my base block layer. Then do I keep putting gravel behind the wall or do I backfill with dirt? If anyone could help or guide me in the right direction that would be much appreciated
It was top notch. I've got a little one to do. I've got about 120' of cliff with a 100 year old house hanging over the top. As soon as I recoup from measuring the cliff on my face I'll get started. I think I'll need the use of my left hand and wrist. And my right shoulder being in the right place will prob make the job go smoother as well. If I started now I'd look like Quazi moto with a tool belt on hobbling across the cliff side.
@@crimsonghost411 From what I have learned (and am applying to my own wall building on my property), you need to have a moderately coarse "dirty" gravel compacted well directly under the first block course to be stable. I would say depending on the material that you excavated to (loose soil, clay, rocky soil, large stones) you need an appropriate depth (up to 6") of that coarse gravel, ideally with a membrane between the gravel and loose soil. The backfill needs to be the coarse 3/4" (or 5/7th) clean drainage gravel several feet in width which is quite stable and drains well preventing the freeze/thaw cycles of retained water that shoves the wall over with time.
Well, they say you learn something every day, and today I learned what separation fabric was. So thank you, because I hadn't watched your other 200 videos.
its so rewarding to see a professional contractor at work. I am a retired renovation and electrical contractor. There are so many half assed contractors out there. YOU SIR are the man to hire hands down.
He also makes a lot of money which gives him more motivation to do more better projects in the future. Not hating but with his money I would do the same wall even better 😂
there are contractors [encountered few] and there are professionals - we know where you stand taking pride in what you do. I am proud to watch this many times to learn.
2:21, I just want to point out that this IS the first video I've watched of yours. I like the method, descriptions and your editing. I'll keep watching. Thanks!
As I retired builder I have seen many projects done right and wrong. Your wall is 100% textbook perfect. Actually a little overkill which is exactly the way to build! I always did extra to be sure my projects help up forever. If I was doing retaining walls, landscaping, building a house, renovating a house it was always done right. Your one excellent example of a contractor doing the job right and taking pride in their work. Well done! Thank you!
$9,000 for new installation, and $5,000 for tear off and prep virgin to start over.... not bad, that is about what I should charge here in North Carolina, but I do recognize that your drainage outlets and over gravel behind walls it's fantastic. For now on I will install those caps at front of walls. Congratulations, it been a honor to watch your guys. God Bless you....!!!!
This guy loves his job and it shows. They will always do the best work thanks for sharing. Just tackled this project. Not easy when you're new, but we pulled it off. Thanks for the help
Nice video. I just did a small 2 foot wall. One thing I learn other than leveling, smoothing underside of block is wearing a back belt. Nothing stops work faster than a sore back. Cheers
Excellent value sir, you sharing your hands-on expertise is the most valuable asset available at this point in time. I see your technique applied at scale you demonstrated applicable to whatever size and scale necessary. I look forward to more in detail construction methods and such, please.
Excellent instructive guide . Incredible number of 'authorities ' on building retaining walls that are really just decorative facades destined to fail in no time flat .
Great job and great information!!! I am by no means handy like this but truly enjoy learning these money saving techniques! Do it right the first time and take comfort in a well done job the will last for decades to come. Awesome job!!! Keep up the great work!!!
Hand digging a basement addition, almost 40 years ago, just touched the buried rotten gas line with a shovel and it started leaking. Sealed the crack by rubbing a bar of soap on the crack. Good thing I was wearing my brown pants. Shut it off at the street and replaced the pipe. If you want to know how to build any type of foundation or stonework to last, watch videos from a contractor who works where there are cold winters and plenty of moisture. That combo exposes shortcuts and shoddy work every time.
This is definitely the professional version versus the homeowner version. I did a small two block flower bed retaining wall. I dug the trench and filled it with water and that gave me my level point. And I took those bamboo barbecue skewer sticks that look like really long toothpicks and put it in both sides at the water level. Then I drained the water and got some old bags of concrete that were pretty much useless because they've been sitting around too long and made a slurry and filled it up to the level of the skewers. Then I just laid in my bottom course of block on the concrete and it never moved since. I think it's not bad for not having a clue on how to do it.
I'm looking at contractors to do work here in MN and now, I at least know when they describe/explain what they will do, knowing if they are any good at what they claim to do. Awesome Video!
A comment you can throw at what looks to be the new kid: This is the first of your videos I'm watching, whether or not I get to any more of yours, or move on to similar videos from someone else, so the background explanation of each step, even if you've said the same thing in all your other videos, is useful, warranted, and highly appreciated. :)
Hopefully a helpful tip! The geogrid you are using is a uniaxial grid. It is the correct type of grid for your application, but as the name implies uniaxial grid’s strength is only in one direction. The grid is designed to be installed perpendicular to the wall face not parallel like you did in the video. It takes more time due to the cuts and overlaps, but you will not get the strength you are looking for unless it’s installed properly. I have been in the geogridand geotextile business for 7 years now so I hope you find my comment helpful and not critical! Great video!
Now this ☝️ is the way to write a helpful comment people! Thanks Brooks! 😊 Everything you said I agree with, except, this is bi directional grid. Let me find a link to the grid we used
Unigrid has ribs/slits in one direction (parallel to the roll) but as the video clearly shows they used square grid which is what makes it biaxial (squares have the same strength in both directions, simple physics).
This is what we used Brooks www.amleo.com/srw-3-series-geogrid-4-ft-x-50-ft/p/GEO-3450/?kc=amlshop20n,&mkwid=|dm&pcrid=416316781657&pkw=&pmt=&plc=&prd=GEO-3450,GEO-3450&slid=&pgrid=96761566474&ptaid=pla-325991452724&gclid=Cj0KCQjwncT1BRDhARIsAOQF9LmfZhlce2rxCnQKizS80buCthoDpX4daJZi5ORKPj4DEDq1_VmUp9gaAom1EALw_wcB
Geogrids primary function is to stabilize the material being retained, which in turn reduces the lateral force being applied to the wall. The secondary benefit would be helping to hold the face in place, but that's not what makes geogrid the super impressive product it is :) You for sure do everything right as far as utilizing it, very solid build!
@@Tusseylandscaping yessir, I've replace a whole lot of failed retaining walls from people who didn't understand the principals involved, it's a shame to see so many falling over when building it right in the first place would have solved all the problems!
@@Tusseylandscaping precisely! Except it does cost a little more, more money for drainage material, more money for geogrid and soil separation, but it's a hell of a lot cheaper than paying twice to build the same wall!
I stumbled upon this and have to say by end of video felt like having a beer with you. Lot of fun, good job and wish you all the best from Bastrop, Texas!
10 years ago I build a wall with 6×6 treated lumber. I needed to build it alone, without fancy tools and still do my day job. I've been regretting it since!
I say you get what you pay for. This guy shows how to build a retaining wall that won't fail in your lifetime. Key elements: spend lots of money to buy lots of material and find a competent person to put all those materials together correctly. Good job.
@@Tusseylandscaping It looks great! There is a lot more that goes into one of those walls than I ever knew about. Thank you for the video! Fantastic job guys!
That's not really true. It's more a matter of whether you have the time or not and a willingness to learn. A lot can be done by an individual with a little leverage, some good tools and innovative thinking. A lot of so-called "professionals" that are licensed and bonded will mess up these days. There are more bad ones than good ones in my experience. These guys happen to be one of those who take pride in their work and have expertise, but I can name countless contractors in our area who don't, and the worst part is that the county issues permits and approves jobs that were done criminally.
@@Tusseylandscaping Your video was very well put together. You should have a cable channel. Certainly would be better to watch than a lot of the stuff on there these days. Enjoyed the music too. Glad there are people that truly are great at what they do. Also I like the encouragement you do with the other guys, it's a good team.
That’s a great video. Thank you so much for all the information it was so helpful. I’m even willing to try to do one myself at my home. Thank you so much.
Great video. I need a wall redone. Glad I saw this, I need to save up some money for a couple of more years! I saw caulking? in the background, but I didn't catch what it was used for?
Great wall, great content, very informative. Small note, got carsick watching, so maybe don't pace as much when videoing. Thanks and I look forward to more videos!
I agree with comment above. Loved the content and tried to focus on what the guys were doing, but the fast camera movements and flash editing were preventing me from actually absorbing and retaining the information. It's edgy and exciting to edit the content like a tv ad, but it's too much for an entire video. Slow it down and take some time to explain the work at a normal pace. Keep up the great work, and I'm now a subscriber!
It's impressive how often repairing something starts with ripping it out and redoing it right. Do you ever wonder if in 50 years someone's going to looking at that wall and saying, "they didn't use a high tensile polywhatchit bracketing system..."
Nice work. Make it infinitely stronger by adding a layer of geo text every 8”. This creates Geosynthetically reinforced soil. The geo text can interleaf the concrete masonry units. It’s a bit more fussing around for a way strronger wall
Good video. Only critique I would note is the orientation of the geogrid. Normally would run the grid perpendicular to wall. Good job. Thanks for taking the time to put this together.
Thanks for this. Did you say ''2" stone base''? I have a crawlspace that has an eroding bank next to the foundation and I'd like to build a retaining wall to shore it up. This looks like a good solution.
@@Tusseylandscaping Doesn't it depend on the amount of water (surface area above wall exposed to rain and diversion of building downspouts) expected to gather behind wall and the degree of seepage allowed though the wall?
Hi I truly enjoyed your video very professional. I'm a retiree and tying to build a small three block garden wall with a curve at the end. My question is I have put down approx. 3 to 4 inches of base material, I should say I dug a trench about 10 in deep . My wall pavers are 7 inches in height. How much sand should i bring in to lay the wall stones on? and should i back fill with course stone behind the wall. Again this is just a garden wall .I live in northern Michigan, we might get 3 months of summer and about 7 months of winter. the rest is bug season. LOL
hey glad you enjoyed the video! I would do 6" of crushed stone base (compacted) and then use a smaller open aggregate stone for your setting bed, like #9's or 1b. I don't prefer to use sand. Regarding the setting bed, we make it only 1" thick
The drainage is shown in this video pretty well. Basically the drainage of a wall consists of the perf pipe behind the wall, that then comes through the face of the wall in the bottom every 20 ft. Then behind the wall you need at least 18” of clean stone drainage, (not dirt stone or stone with fines in it) that will allow the water to drain through to that pipe, and out through the face of the wall
I built retaining walls for about ten years, before my body wore out and I had to switch to a desk job. We always had a hard time selling our walls because we were always the high bid, but I know of at least three jobs we didn't build that we ended up re-building several years later because the low bidder had no idea what they were doing (one 3' wall was built on 1" of play sand over soil - guess what happened to that one...). So I saw your video title and thought "yeah right, nobody builds retaining walls right any more." Happy to say you completely proved me wrong. On the odd chance the homeowner sees this, know that you got a really high quality, professional installation that will never fail, and it is worth every penny you paid.
Thank you Dirkus! Happy to read your comment :) Thanks for watching! Cheers!
There's often not enough money available to do a job right...but there's somehow always enough money available to do the same job over (and to do it right).
I’m currently in the process of building a block retaining wall 20ft long by 3ft tall. I’ve got my trench dug and leveled. I’ve looked online and I’m confused by the type of base gravel type I need. So do I need to put fabric on top of the dirt, then fill with gravel, then start my base block layer. Then do I keep putting gravel behind the wall or do I backfill with dirt? If anyone could help or guide me in the right direction that would be much appreciated
It was top notch. I've got a little one to do. I've got about 120' of cliff with a 100 year old house hanging over the top. As soon as I recoup from measuring the cliff on my face I'll get started. I think I'll need the use of my left hand and wrist. And my right shoulder being in the right place will prob make the job go smoother as well. If I started now I'd look like Quazi moto with a tool belt on hobbling across the cliff side.
@@crimsonghost411 From what I have learned (and am applying to my own wall building on my property), you need to have a moderately coarse "dirty" gravel compacted well directly under the first block course to be stable. I would say depending on the material that you excavated to (loose soil, clay, rocky soil, large stones) you need an appropriate depth (up to 6") of that coarse gravel, ideally with a membrane between the gravel and loose soil. The backfill needs to be the coarse 3/4" (or 5/7th) clean drainage gravel several feet in width which is quite stable and drains well preventing the freeze/thaw cycles of retained water that shoves the wall over with time.
Three years later and this video is still helping random folks like me. Thanks for sharing this very informative video.
Glad it helped!
Well, they say you learn something every day, and today I learned what separation fabric was. So thank you, because I hadn't watched your other 200 videos.
Thanks for watching Lee 👊 glad you found some tips
its so rewarding to see a professional contractor at work. I am a retired renovation and electrical contractor. There are so many half assed contractors out there. YOU SIR are the man to hire hands down.
He explains in articulate detail giving information others do not! Well done!
Thanks man!
Yes, he brought everything to the light. Every step.
Very impressed. I am in construction and this young guy knows what he is doing and doesn't cut corners and makes great videos.
thanks! :)
He also makes a lot of money which gives him more motivation to do more better projects in the future. Not hating but with his money I would do the same wall even better 😂
there are contractors [encountered few] and there are professionals - we know where you stand taking pride in what you do. I am proud to watch this many times to learn.
Thanks Vijaya. Glad it was useful
That is a well built wall. Great example of Professionalism.
Thanks!
i just love this guys energy and attitude, so much positivity, seems like they truly enjoy their trade.
We love our jobs!
2:21, I just want to point out that this IS the first video I've watched of yours. I like the method, descriptions and your editing. I'll keep watching. Thanks!
Thanks for watching Corey!
when you put imagination, knowledge and hard work into what you do it always looks good and works good.
Aaaamen
just third way through and I can tell this is a great vid,informative,complete,well filmed and edited with a touch of humor
As I retired builder I have seen many projects done right and wrong. Your wall is 100% textbook perfect. Actually a little overkill which is exactly the way to build! I always did extra to be sure my projects help up forever. If I was doing retaining walls, landscaping, building a house, renovating a house it was always done right. Your one excellent example of a contractor doing the job right and taking pride in their work. Well done! Thank you!
Thank you Richard! Appreciate the comment!
$9,000 for new installation, and $5,000 for tear off and prep virgin to start over.... not bad, that is about what I should charge here in North Carolina, but I do recognize that your drainage outlets and over gravel behind walls it's fantastic. For now on I will install those caps at front of walls. Congratulations, it been a honor to watch your guys. God Bless you....!!!!
Thanks allot! Cheers and good luck in your business
I think you guys need to come do my wall if you can even call it that now. Great work. True professionals.
Sure! Where are you located?
Thanks for explaining separation fabric this is the first of your videos I have watched
Great job guys...good learning experience for me and very entertaining!
Awesome! Nice hear that thanks!
WESTON YOU GUYS JUST MADE OUR LIFE EASIER lol!!! Oh my goodness that sling is clutch for so many different things!
That was a great learning experience and I did not even get my hands dirty!
Glad you enjoyed it!
This guy loves his job and it shows. They will always do the best work thanks for sharing. Just tackled this project. Not easy when you're new, but we pulled it off. Thanks for the help
Great job with super detailed step by step!! Frog at the end adds up a special touch!
Thanks a bunch! ;)
One of the best videos giving detailed explanation.
Glad it was helpful!
I've never seen wall blocks like that, they're cool.
Thanks Anthony! ;)
Not too many guys doing their retaining walls correctly these days. Good job.
Nice video. I just did a small 2 foot wall. One thing I learn other than leveling, smoothing underside of block is wearing a back belt. Nothing stops work faster than a sore back. Cheers
For sure! Good luck!
it's great to see young guys with so much talent
Thanks!
Great job that will last forever. Thanks for sharing your ideas and techniques!
You bet!
Came upon your page grew up in fulton county and played tussy in baseball for years. Great work. Job well done from Canada.
Proficiency makes confidence. Thank you very much for sharing.
You bet
WOW!!! Who knew it was SO much work and SO much technology?!?! I'm very impressed!
Thanks! 😜
Excellent value sir, you sharing your hands-on expertise is the most valuable asset available at this point in time.
I see your technique applied at scale you demonstrated applicable to whatever size and scale necessary.
I look forward to more in detail construction methods and such, please.
Thanks Johnnie!
I'm glad you mentioned why you put down separation fabric, because this was my first video lol
Awesome!
When money is no object :) Great video on what it actually takes to build a proper wall.
Thanks Brad
First vid I’ve seen of yours. Great job...nice to watch someone doing things right when showing others how to do it!
Thanks for watching! We believe in a job well done!
Man, I wish you guys were near me. Fantastic job.
We can be!
not sure why anyone would give this a thumps down he did a great job!!!!
☺🙌✌
😂 thanks for the support guys!
You guys are going to be in business for a long time...As long as the wall...
You betcha!
the wall will more than likely out live us all, you can't beat quality workmanship
? No mortor? 👀
As long as the kids working for him lol
now...that was slick indeed! great job guys! thank you for sharing!
Glad you enjoyed it!
Excellent instructive guide . Incredible number of 'authorities ' on building retaining walls that are really just decorative facades destined to fail in no time flat .
Yes, unfortunately... Thanks for the support
8:55 thanks for showing how the drain terminates! Have watched a few vids that mention the drain pipe but nothing of what to do at the end of it.
You're welcome!
Phenomenal work guys! Thank you for sharing your knowledge
Good job guys the bag for the stone.......... easy as ...... not worry about longevity for the wall well done👌👍👊
Wow you guys do incredible work. That job deserves a plaque somewhere on the face of the wall.
Thanks James! 😉
The wall came out beautifully
Thank you!
Great job and great information!!! I am by no means handy like this but truly enjoy learning these money saving techniques! Do it right the first time and take comfort in a well done job the will last for decades to come. Awesome job!!! Keep up the great work!!!
Amen!!!
I don't know much about retaining walls! The process is well done..
Thanks for watching and welcome!
Hand digging a basement addition, almost 40 years ago, just touched the buried rotten gas line with a shovel and it started leaking. Sealed the crack by rubbing a bar of soap on the crack. Good thing I was wearing my brown pants. Shut it off at the street and replaced the pipe. If you want to know how to build any type of foundation or stonework to last, watch videos from a contractor who works where there are cold winters and plenty of moisture. That combo exposes shortcuts and shoddy work every time.
Along that line of thought I assume they made the utility local One Call?
Yeah we always call in to the utility to come mark things out
Great looking wall! Well done!
Thank you! Cheers!
Great video, great info, thanks for taking the time to make it.
You bet James
Very informative. This video is what I've been searching for.
Glad it helped! Good luck!
You guy's did an excellent job on that retaining wall!! I see you had a few nuts commenting that don't know what there talking about!
Thanks John! What can I say..? 🤷♂️ Some in every crowd
Thanks for explaining. This is the first video of yours I've seen.
Thanks for watching Jonathan!
This is definitely the professional version versus the homeowner version. I did a small two block flower bed retaining wall. I dug the trench and filled it with water and that gave me my level point. And I took those bamboo barbecue skewer sticks that look like really long toothpicks and put it in both sides at the water level. Then I drained the water and got some old bags of concrete that were pretty much useless because they've been sitting around too long and made a slurry and filled it up to the level of the skewers. Then I just laid in my bottom course of block on the concrete and it never moved since. I think it's not bad for not having a clue on how to do it.
A get it done attitude will get you a long way!
Man that's a freakin great idea, the laws of mutha nature are the ultimate. 😃
Wow, just found your video. Watched the whole thing! Great work guys!!!
Glad you enjoyed it!
They did a great job.
Thanks Daniel!
Thanks for explaining the separation fabric! 😎
Most defintiely! :)
I'm looking at contractors to do work here in MN and now, I at least know when they describe/explain what they will do, knowing if they are any good at what they claim to do. Awesome Video!
Hey John, glad this video helped you get a better understanding! Good luck on your project 🙌
Nice job. Great explanation of what and why you are building it that way. Stay safe...
Thanks 👍
First class job!
Thanks Peter!
A comment you can throw at what looks to be the new kid: This is the first of your videos I'm watching, whether or not I get to any more of yours, or move on to similar videos from someone else, so the background explanation of each step, even if you've said the same thing in all your other videos, is useful, warranted, and highly appreciated. :)
Thanks for watching and hope you come back!
Hopefully a helpful tip! The geogrid you are using is a uniaxial grid. It is the correct type of grid for your application, but as the name implies uniaxial grid’s strength is only in one direction. The grid is designed to be installed perpendicular to the wall face not parallel like you did in the video. It takes more time due to the cuts and overlaps, but you will not get the strength you are looking for unless it’s installed properly.
I have been in the geogridand geotextile business for 7 years now so I hope you find my comment helpful and not critical! Great video!
Now this ☝️ is the way to write a helpful comment people! Thanks Brooks! 😊 Everything you said I agree with, except, this is bi directional grid. Let me find a link to the grid we used
Unigrid has ribs/slits in one direction (parallel to the roll) but as the video clearly shows they used square grid which is what makes it biaxial (squares have the same strength in both directions, simple physics).
Yes, this. ☝️ Thanks Tom!
This is what we used Brooks
www.amleo.com/srw-3-series-geogrid-4-ft-x-50-ft/p/GEO-3450/?kc=amlshop20n,&mkwid=|dm&pcrid=416316781657&pkw=&pmt=&plc=&prd=GEO-3450,GEO-3450&slid=&pgrid=96761566474&ptaid=pla-325991452724&gclid=Cj0KCQjwncT1BRDhARIsAOQF9LmfZhlce2rxCnQKizS80buCthoDpX4daJZi5ORKPj4DEDq1_VmUp9gaAom1EALw_wcB
Tussey Landscaping Awesome! Glad to hear it!
I can tell you guy's are true professionals
Thanks Kyle!
Geogrids primary function is to stabilize the material being retained, which in turn reduces the lateral force being applied to the wall. The secondary benefit would be helping to hold the face in place, but that's not what makes geogrid the super impressive product it is :) You for sure do everything right as far as utilizing it, very solid build!
Thank you Tom! Yep, you're correct. So much misinformation out there on walls, glad to see this spot on comment 🙌💪
@@Tusseylandscaping yessir, I've replace a whole lot of failed retaining walls from people who didn't understand the principals involved, it's a shame to see so many falling over when building it right in the first place would have solved all the problems!
And not been any harder to do than what the worked to install it incorrectly!
@@Tusseylandscaping precisely! Except it does cost a little more, more money for drainage material, more money for geogrid and soil separation, but it's a hell of a lot cheaper than paying twice to build the same wall!
100% truth!
I stumbled upon this and have to say by end of video felt like having a beer with you. Lot of fun, good job and wish you all the best from Bastrop, Texas!
10 years ago I build a wall with 6×6 treated lumber. I needed to build it alone, without fancy tools and still do my day job. I've been regretting it since!
The sad truth 🥺
Dig out behind it and install some proper drainage....???
About 24k???
What a beautiful retaining wall! Wow!
We agree!
Yep! Beautiful job.. Well done boys!
Thanks Mike!
GOOD job...you have ALL the necessary toys...!!
You know it! Key word: necessary 😅
I say you get what you pay for. This guy shows how to build a retaining wall that won't fail in your lifetime. Key elements: spend lots of money to buy lots of material and find a competent person to put all those materials together correctly. Good job.
You got it man!
SUPERB! Makes me understand that I will NOT attempt this myself or it will look bad and not last. I am no longer in my 30s, 40s or 50s!
So the first step in building a good retaining wall is realizing that it's too big a job to do on your own, and that's why there are professionals.
Exactly! This ☝️☝️☝️☝️
@@Tusseylandscaping It looks great! There is a lot more that goes into one of those walls than I ever knew about. Thank you for the video! Fantastic job guys!
Hardly, I just underpinned my house and built a 50sqM basement, I work in TV.
That's not really true. It's more a matter of whether you have the time or not and a willingness to learn. A lot can be done by an individual with a little leverage, some good tools and innovative thinking. A lot of so-called "professionals" that are licensed and bonded will mess up these days. There are more bad ones than good ones in my experience. These guys happen to be one of those who take pride in their work and have expertise, but I can name countless contractors in our area who don't, and the worst part is that the county issues permits and approves jobs that were done criminally.
Definitely learned a little more...even though I've never had a wall fail..but always nice to learn something new..
Thanks for watching scooter!
Best how to video that I've seen! Where are you based out of? WELL DONE...
Thank you thank you! 😌
Hollidaysburg PA
ROCK ON!!!
Wish you guys were in MA! Learning a lot! Willl put it all to use next Spring!
Good luck!
Great video. Here in Florida all that rock would cost a medium fortune. Keep up the right way. Look forward to your other vids.
Thanks so much! Yeah, we kind of take the stone for granted up here. Right in the Allegheny mountains, so it's plentiful
@@Tusseylandscaping Your video was very well put together. You should have a cable channel. Certainly would be better to watch than a lot of the stuff on there these days. Enjoyed the music too. Glad there are people that truly are great at what they do. Also I like the encouragement you do with the other guys, it's a good team.
Thanks a lot Florida. Appreciate it. We're just doing our thing, doing our best, and having fun doing it :)
You could definitely buy a 10 acre farm here in Brazil with the cost of this tiny wall.
Masakit yn tlga.ang tyan m dba msakit?pero npachck m ung ihi mo?sa sigarilyo dn kc nkkuha sakit ndi lng dn s kinakain.bka lagi png maalat kain nyo.
That’s a great video. Thank you so much for all the information it was so helpful. I’m even willing to try to do one myself at my home. Thank you so much.
Nice Job guys!!!
Thanks Dwayne!
Thanks for the time and effort in making this video!
You bet!
Honestly, with your video editing I feel like I’m borderline watching a program on HGTV
Thanks for the compliment Seth!
WoW. Beautiful work
Thanks!
Great video. I need a wall redone. Glad I saw this, I need to save up some money for a couple of more years!
I saw caulking? in the background, but I didn't catch what it was used for?
Glueing...
yep, in places where we couldnt use the black clips (curved part of the wall and the cap stone) we glued them instead.
What a great video. I absolutely love your channel, I came for the Ponds, and have been hooked ever since. Thanks for sharing!
Thanks Mike! Glad you are enjoying the videos! Love making them ;)
I’m curious what a wall like that costs. I can only imagine. It’s beautiful and will be there for generations with that design and craftsmanship.
Thanks Craig! It was 14k
Tussey Landscaping
That’s less than I thought for all that work, material and equipment.
What is the length and height of this wall
@@olivernassry4055 it's approx 45' long and about 52" tall
@@Tusseylandscaping Is that 14k WITH material? if not, how much was the material in addition?
Very nice work that will undoubtedly last a lifetime
Thanks my friend!
Great wall, great content, very informative. Small note, got carsick watching, so maybe don't pace as much when videoing. Thanks and I look forward to more videos!
Thanks! 😁 Yeah, trying to do better with that 😬
Shouldn't be watching this vid while driving anyway- even if your Tesla was on autopilot.
I agree with comment above. Loved the content and tried to focus on what the guys were doing, but the fast camera movements and flash editing were preventing me from actually absorbing and retaining the information. It's edgy and exciting to edit the content like a tv ad, but it's too much for an entire video. Slow it down and take some time to explain the work at a normal pace. Keep up the great work, and I'm now a subscriber!
Awesome Mark man you did the right thing awesome beautiful work New York thank you
Thanks Riza
It's impressive how often repairing something starts with ripping it out and redoing it right. Do you ever wonder if in 50 years someone's going to looking at that wall and saying, "they didn't use a high tensile polywhatchit bracketing system..."
Truth! Unfortunately that's the case... The goal is to keep people from making those mistakes in the first place
Ha ha yeah I know right! They'll be like man this was in the stone age! 😂
I need a link to the polywatchits. I’m trying to future proof my little wall.
🤣🤣🤣👍
The wall will be 50 yrs old and won't owe them nothing.
What beautiful work.
Nice work. Make it infinitely stronger by adding a layer of geo text every 8”. This creates Geosynthetically reinforced soil. The geo text can interleaf the concrete masonry units. It’s a bit more fussing around for a way strronger wall
For sure! We didn't do geo grid on every course, I think that would've been a bit overkill 😜
Good video. Only critique I would note is the orientation of the geogrid. Normally would run the grid perpendicular to wall. Good job. Thanks for taking the time to put this together.
Way to pay attention to detail! This grid is actually bi-directional, so it has equal strength both ways
That Geo grid is not bi directional. It should have been cut to the proper lengths, not rolled out.
Great job and i am a stone mason
Thanks John! Cheers from worker to worker 🙌🥂
Thanks for this. Did you say ''2" stone base''? I have a crawlspace that has an eroding bank next to the foundation and I'd like to build a retaining wall to shore it up. This looks like a good solution.
This video makes me wonder if the 7’ retaining wall in my backyard was done properly or not. It looks ok, but I don’t see drainage points.
Ouch! Hope you're good!
@@Tusseylandscaping Doesn't it depend on the amount of water (surface area above wall exposed to rain and diversion of building downspouts) expected to gather behind wall and the degree of seepage allowed though the wall?
Thanks for explaining the separation fabric.
You’re welcome 😊
Well done👍
Thanks Kev 🤝
Gorgeous! Well-done.
Thank you! Cheers!
Hi I truly enjoyed your video very professional. I'm a retiree and tying to build a small three block garden wall with a curve at the end. My question is I have put down approx. 3 to 4 inches of base material, I should say I dug a trench about 10 in deep . My wall pavers are 7 inches in height. How much sand should i bring in to lay the wall stones on? and should i back fill with course stone behind the wall. Again this is just a garden wall .I live in northern Michigan, we might get 3 months of summer and about 7 months of winter. the rest is bug season. LOL
hey glad you enjoyed the video! I would do 6" of crushed stone base (compacted) and then use a smaller open aggregate stone for your setting bed, like #9's or 1b. I don't prefer to use sand. Regarding the setting bed, we make it only 1" thick
There is a biblical tale or proverb about a house built on stone, as opposed to one built on sand, I do believe the one built on sand is the no no.
I’m doing a retaining wall for the first time and really don’t know how to do the drainage. Was looking for tips. Thanks hope you respond
The drainage is shown in this video pretty well. Basically the drainage of a wall consists of the perf pipe behind the wall, that then comes through the face of the wall in the bottom every 20 ft. Then behind the wall you need at least 18” of clean stone drainage, (not dirt stone or stone with fines in it) that will allow the water to drain through to that pipe, and out through the face of the wall
GREAT JOB BY YOU TWO GUYS.....AM IMPRESSED. AM FROM CHANDIGARH, INDIA.
Thanks! 😁 Thanks for watching!
Great install, and great video!
Thanks! 👍