Saturday, June 29, 2013

How to Install Garden Border Stones

Flagstone Garder Border


Installing your garden border stones is easy and in most cases can be completed within one day. Border stones are used primarily to separate the grass from the garden. You can install a border level with the lawn or raised, it depends on preference.


First, using a sod cutting tool & a flat shovel, cut out a border where your stones will be sitting. Make sure all grass / sod is cut out and removed. We don’t want stray grass growing up between our stones. If your stones will be level with your lawn, dig a trench deep enough for the stones to sit. If your stones will sit above your lawn, only dig enough to remove the grass. Always level your soil with a hoe before laying the stone.


Next, lay your stones! This is as simple as setting the stones into place. Just keep stacking until the desired height is achieved. Feel free to play with the design as well just to make sure they all fit together nicely. Don’t be afraid to trim the stones with a chisel and hammer.


That’s it! Simple. Cut away the sod, dig a trench, level your soil, stack your stones.


We have a large variety of stones you can use for your next lawn project, check them out here. http://stoneandturf.com/stones/


Tumble Stone Garden Border



How to Install Garden Border Stones

Saturday, June 22, 2013

How to Lay a Flagstone Patio

Laying a Flagstone Patio can be quite the task, but the results speaks for itself. There are three main steps to creating your flagstone patio, whether it’s wet laid or dry laid.


Step 1 – Prepare the BaseHow to lay flagstone patio


This step involves digging your footing or your slab. Make sure you have a level part of the yard to work in. You may need to level the area out by cutting and moving dirt around.


Step 2 – Building Base Material


The base could be a concrete slab or crushed stone. Usually the wet lay patios use the concrete base with about 4 inches of a poured slab that will become the permanent structure where you mortar the flagstone. If it’s a dry laid patio, with granular product, then you would use crushed stone, or gravel, or a granular product that you can put in and compact it in place. This is the middle or stabilizer product on which the stone rests.


Step 3 – Laying the Stone


This is where you actually get the individual pieces out and make them fit, like a jigsaw puzzle. Your flagstone can be squares and rectangles or all different shapes. No matter which shapes you choose, make sure they all fit together in a beautiful pattern. Sometimes you may have to cut the stone to make it fit.


Cutting the stone with a chisel and hammer is easy. Just draw a line with a pencil and start scoring the stone on both sides until it breaks apart.


That’s all there is to it. Call us up to order flagstone for your next project.


This information was syndicated from the following video.




How to Lay a Flagstone Patio

Test Post from All American Stone and Turf

Test Post from All American Stone and Turf http://stoneandturf.com