- Joined:
- Aug 20, 2012
- Posts:
- 11,607
- Liked Posts:
- 9,052
- Location:
- Colorado
@DC shit man, I don't think it looks that bad at all. Kinda depends on your situation and how long you plan on being there, but if you don't want to drop the coin or have the time, leave it.
The more I look at these pics, the more backyard character I see tbh. You could easily keep them and just plant like an overgrown flower garden on each terrace. If you hate the wood, since it’s terraced already and level I don’t think it would be to difficult to pull it out and replace with landscaping blocks.
Also, do your kids jump their bikes off that shit? I would have been all over that as a youth
If I had to work that hard to get them out I would have to burn those *******.Word to the wise on chopping up the ties- Have your sharpener ready.
There is no rhyme or reason to the hardware in there, and between that and the dirt in the crevasses I am chewing through chains like mad.
I get a few cuts on the ties till things start to slow down, then move to the softer wood on the trees, then sit my ass down and start filing away.
I am almost to the point of taking a prybar and an angle grinder to the spikes holding them together and dragging them all whole in to the woods and leaving them to rot.
If I had to work that hard to get them out I would have to burn those *******.
Flathead or Phillips?I am actually running a concurrent project during the clearing process- inspired by @DC .
His railroad tie pics, although ratty, are in spectacular shape compared to the fallen retaining wall i have out front.
I am alternating between clearing trees for the coop and chopping up and removing the fallen wall below.
There is supposedly a brick walkway under all of that... railroad ties, leaves, and about a 2 inch layer of soil and 20 years of broken down vegetation.
View attachment 10997
Flathead or Phillips?
You do you and I'll go make us some lemonade.
Started a new project this weekend.. gonna build a chicken coop.
Clearing out the area between the 2 oaks with the orange tape around them all the way back to the hickory in the center.
Gonna build a little 8x6 building with half a dozen nesting boxes and a little yard for them.
Cool project and space for the coop. Make sure it's very protected from critters. Lots of them will be after the chickens. Coyote, fox, raccoon, hawks...
The coons are what worry me.
I have a decent tree canopy and enough shrews and shit running around to keep the hawks off of them.
Coyotes are near, but I frequently walk my dogs around the barb wire perimeter and we all mark the territory...lmao.
The coons are gonna be a problem though.
I am gonna do a fenced yard encompassing the whole patch, but I fear no matter what I put up top the coons are gonna get in.
I am banking on the open area around me and the dog scent to keep them at bay, but I expect I will lose some at some point.
When you run your wire for your walls, just trench out a foot or so down/wide, run your wire, down below ground level and out, then throw one of those railroad ties in there on each side to hold it all together and cover with dirt.
two birds with one stone and hopefully no racoons or yotes bother you.