A lot of the wholesalers and suppliers have training and events this month. Through the winter really. My favorite is the lighting and irrigation place. Homemade chili and bbq. A couple others do fish fries and oyster roasts.
I think these are great. Although after talking to a few guys there, I think they should have a class on how to go from removing the grass to installing the base.
@@LawnscapesAmerica Absolutely. And installing with a pitch. I designed one years ago that had a 20’ radius with massive slabs and a knee wall. So it had to all slope to the center to a drain or it would flood in heavier rains. The stone size made it tricky for them at the radius point. But the cool thing is we took a large concrete saw and cut slits into the center stone so there was no grate in the center.
We would often leave the pipe gap as well. It’s most often not going to change enough to matter on large material. On small block we’d use a granite powder. Easy to level out and keep moving.
I thought those 2 were going to get into a heated argument over it. I agree, we used to leave the pipe gap. The ginger guy arguing is a solo hardscaper. Nice guy, I just didn’t agree with some of his methods he told us about during the break
Cool man, thanks for sharing Virgil
Hey Ken, I hope all is well. Thank you for watching
@@KenMrKLC Kenneth!!!
A lot of the wholesalers and suppliers have training and events this month. Through the winter really. My favorite is the lighting and irrigation place. Homemade chili and bbq. A couple others do fish fries and oyster roasts.
I think these are great. Although after talking to a few guys there, I think they should have a class on how to go from removing the grass to installing the base.
@@LawnscapesAmerica Absolutely. And installing with a pitch. I designed one years ago that had a 20’ radius with massive slabs and a knee wall. So it had to all slope to the center to a drain or it would flood in heavier rains. The stone size made it tricky for them at the radius point. But the cool thing is we took a large concrete saw and cut slits into the center stone so there was no grate in the center.
We would often leave the pipe gap as well. It’s most often not going to change enough to matter on large material. On small block we’d use a granite powder. Easy to level out and keep moving.
I thought those 2 were going to get into a heated argument over it. I agree, we used to leave the pipe gap. The ginger guy arguing is a solo hardscaper. Nice guy, I just didn’t agree with some of his methods he told us about during the break
@ Yeah he seemed aggressive and “I’m better”.
Certainly times are changing materials selection for new looks
Yup Neil. Thank you for watching
Are you disagreeing because of the spanish accent or because you're a big nincampoot? 12:10
Huh ? I don’t personally know who that gentleman is that said he was disagreeing with him .