My son Russ lives in a neighboring town. He had a sidewalk leading from his front door to the street that was cracking due to an oak tree in the yard. The insurance company warned that a cracked sidewalk was a liability issue, so the sidewalk had to come up. Russ rented a saw from a rental place in Lake Charles and in half a day we had the entire sidewalk chopped up and hauled to the back of his house. He filled in where the sidewalk was with topsoil and the St. Augustine grass is quickly filling it in. Russ attempted to get the town to take the big pieces of concrete to stop erosion in canals or ditches in the area, but they were not interested. So, what are we going to do?
| We poured a little sidewalk linking his old sidewalk to the driveway |
I went one afternoon before it got too hot and, using a sledgehammer, I cracked the old pieces of sidewalk into pieces that would be manageable to handle. The old sidewalk was at least four inches think. After propping the pieces up on another chunk of concrete, I was able to crack them up pretty easily.
With our recent goat barn renovation, I had a brainstorm. The goat barn sits in a low area. We didn't think things through when we built the barn there. Over the years we've hauled loads of dirt to build up the area. Unfortunately, the goat barn area was never built up - until this week! I moved several loads of clay into the barn and leveled it out. Then we moved several loads of the old sidewalk ten miles east and north to our place. I arranged them on top of the clay as best as I could so that the pieces fit as close together as I could get them.
The problem with that is the cracks between the sidewalk chunks. What to do?! Then we remembered that our neighbor had given us 20 bags of sand that he no longer needed. I poured the sand in the cracks and let the animals walk on it. As they walked and the concrete moved, the sand settled. I added more. This time the concrete is more firm. I'll need a few more pieces of the sidewalk to be put in place and then sand poured in the cracks. Then I'll spray it with water to really set in in good.
This 'recycled foundation' lifted the level of the floor by about five inches, ensuring that the goats will be high and dry. An added bonus is the concrete will help the condition of their hooves. They'll be on a firm foundation. When the town refused Russ' concrete, he made two loads to the landfill to dump the old sidewalk. I'm glad we were able to get the rest of it! Always nice to recycle something that's no longer useful into something that is useable and an upgrade.