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Lights of America 9265 65 Watt Fluorescent Flood Light, White





Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Picnic Tables - How to Build a Paving Pad For Your Picnic Table

Does your picnic table reside on your lawn? Do you have to Move it every time you mow the lawn? Pretty frustrating - right? Right! A real hassle especially if the table is large! Creating a paving pad to put under your table solves this exiguous challenge and it doesn't inflict a great deal of work or expense either. And it looks fantastic! And you can say with pride that you built it yourself!

Most picnic or Bbq tables are between 5' and 10' wide at their widest point. ( Many, these days are hexagonal or octagonal and so a quadrilateral pad is the most suitable. As long as your table is no bigger than 10' across, a 10'*10' pad would be ideal. The first thing to do is locate the position that you want to have your picnic table in. Just remember that to shift it after you put the pad down is going to involve quite a bit of work. You can pick any size of paving stones any way a 2'*2' paver , being so large means you don't have to put so many down. 25 in fact, 5 each way.

Picnic Table

Purchase the 25 2" pavers, (aggregate pebbles on top looks great) and you will need 4 lengths of 2"*4" treated lumber at 10' long as well as 8 4" galvanized nails and some lumber for pegs.

Picnic Tables - How to Build a Paving Pad For Your Picnic Table

Lay out the pavers on an unused section of lawn. Leave a small gap between them to allow for sand. Now measure the distance along each side, cut the lumber at 45 degrees and nail the surrounding framework together. It will be a excellent fit. Now shift the lumber framework to the exact location that you want to place your picnic table. Make sure it is quadrilateral by measuring from projection to corner. Mark around the exterior of the frame with a spade. Shift the frame and dig out the lawn area out to a depth of 4".

Now place the frame into the area dug out. Check for square. You now need to get the whole framework level. Drive pegs into the ground inside the frame and when you have it level, nail the pegs to the frame. The frame should be level with the height of the grass.

Now you need some sand, about 1 3/4 cu yards of sand. This will raise the lowest of the dug out area by about 2". Level it off with a rake. Now you need to make a board to screen the sand to the strict level, just under 2". The board needs to sit on the frame and enlarge down 1 3/4". Keep working at it until the area is as level as possible. This will conclude how level you get the pavers. Without walking on the sand area fit all of the 25 pavers into the sand area. They will fit perfectly with a small gap in between.

You need a exiguous more sand to spread over the top of the pavers. Sweep the sand until all of the gaps are filled. Next it's time to compact the pavers. This can be done with a board and a hammer. The vibration will conclude the pavers into the sand. When this is done it may need a exiguous more sand. Keep consolidating until no more sand disappears. Sweep the area of all the sand and - hey presto, you have a excellent paving pad for your picnic table. No more shifting the table to mow the lawn!

Picnic Tables - How to Build a Paving Pad For Your Picnic Table

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