rod
Retired 23 years
Spending a nice warm evening sitting on my new deck and enjoying my fire pit.
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OK---that one on the left is a fox or dog and the one on the right is a moose but what is that thing in the center---a dancing turtle?
Spending a nice warm evening sitting on my new deck and enjoying my fire pit.
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Spending a nice warm evening sitting on my new deck and enjoying my fire pit.
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Hey ... I got a fire pit just like that! Same cut-outs.
Enjoy mine too!
That would bring more water IN to the driveway as the street is higher.Wouldn't it be easier to put two or three large drain basins and run pipe out to the street at an angle to the flow? That won't help the snow problem but would alleviate the water issue.
I found out the hard way that the legs on mine are too short. The bottom of the pit wasnt high enough off of my wooden deck and the radiant heat actually burned the wood beneath it. I just rebuilt my deck last weekend, so when I put the firepit back on it I elevated it by placing 2 bricks under each leg to keep enough airspace between the pit and the deck to prevent a repeat.
I found out the hard way that the legs on mine are too short. The bottom of the pit wasnt high enough off of my wooden deck and the radiant heat actually burned the wood beneath it. I just rebuilt my deck last weekend, so when I put the firepit back on it I elevated it by placing 2 bricks under each leg to keep enough airspace between the pit and the deck to prevent a repeat.
Mine sits on concrete but I'll keep that in mind if I decide to put on the deck.
Thanks for the heads up.
You could fill the bottom of the fire pit with sand.I found out the hard way that the legs on mine are too short. The bottom of the pit wasnt high enough off of my wooden deck and the radiant heat actually burned the wood beneath it. I just rebuilt my deck last weekend, so when I put the firepit back on it I elevated it by placing 2 bricks under each leg to keep enough airspace between the pit and the deck to prevent a repeat.
Wouldn't it be easier to put two or three large drain basins and run pipe out to the street at an angle to the flow? That won't help the snow problem but would alleviate the water issue.
I don't know how your municipality works but where I live you can't landscape your yard so that your personal water flows into the township ditch-street- right of way or whatever. If that is the natural drainage so be it but you can't alter the land to change the flow. I would think pumping water out of a pipe into the street would be frowned upon.
I think what Lifer meant is to run the pipes not in to the street itself but in to the pipe(s) below the street.
Sounds expensive over,catch basin,repave? jeez
Yeah, but you'd get sick of pushing 6" of water out of your driveway anytime it rains....
It's a problem that needs to be fixed, and it can only enhance the value of the house!
Also, we don't plan on moving anytime soon, so we are putting a lot of money into the house right now. We've done 2 large projects (roof and chimney), have 4 in progress right now (Driveway, back doors, garage door, and wall a/c unit).
And one more I want to do in the fall.
You moved to this house why?
Lol, yup that's my Fall project!Don't forget about insulating the attic, and did you ever find your gutters & downspouts?