My garden project this weekend was to take a couple of course of brick off the top of a small retaining wall, patch and repair.

Of course, I hit it wit a hammer and the whole thing moved so it's pretty much all had to come down.

There was no footing at all and the blocks had been piled on top of each other, rather than bonded. It had failed at the vertical joints.

Surely it's harder to build like this, rather than just doing it properly in the first place. #DIY #Dickheads

Turning this into a #WorkshopBuild thread.
A couple more course added to the wall.

Asian-inspired garden - Portland stone with campanula, acer, pine, azalea planting. #gardening

Hopefully shade-tolerant varieties, as these will be behind the workshop.

Brickwork and pad-stones done.

3m x 3m #recycled wood frame built for the base of the workshop. #woodwork #DIY

Painted the render and tidied up a bit. #DIY
Now that Summer's out the way, back on the workshop build. Fixing joists this weekend. Sub floor to go on next.
#woodwork yesterday. Ripping recycled boards down to useable framing timber. First time on the table saw and I still have all my fingers! Thanks to @peterdroberts for the encouragement. And my wife for the assist. 😁
#DIY #Workshop build update. Lots of #woodwork done on my post-Summer week off. #Recycling

First test roof truss on. Seems to work. 👍

Now just to build the next 7.

Last update - a warning. Make sure you don't put your step ladder on a bit of wood that's holding your shed up. Always check where you're stepping.

Thankfully, the build had got to a point where is was largely superfluous but my weight on it snapped the support, the stepladder went from under me and I fell the 3 feet to the deck. I've got some cracking bruises but very lucky I wasn't more seriously hurt. 😬

@BonehouseWasps yikes! Glad you're in one piece
@peterdroberts Thank you. All that worry over the table saw (which I've grown in confidence in using) and I nearly cripple myself on a humble step ladder. Definitely a lesson learned. 😊

@BonehouseWasps Hate to say I told you so... :P https://eldritch.cafe/@peterdroberts/111017952446461522

But yeah tools don't get less dangerous when you get more experienced. I feel like most injuries are stupid little things from complacency rather than the intricacies of advanced tools

peter (@[email protected])

@[email protected] volunteering at the hackspace I'm largely worried about what the most likely thing *other* people will get injured on; and for me that's grinders because people don't know about wheels bursting and grinders can do a huge number of jobs but are the wrong tool for most of them. People tend to have a healthy respect for machine tools but the tools that are easy to use but hard to use *right* are the ones that worry me.

Eldritch Café
@peterdroberts Ha! You certainly did. 😊 Complacency is exactly what this was, too.

@BonehouseWasps the hackspace questions we get people to ask before any job are:

"Am I distracted?"
"Am I in a rush?"
"Am I tired?"
"Am I sure?*"

*...I'm doing something sensible/am using the right tool etc.

@BonehouseWasps And then the other thing I tell people is to visualize the job before they do it so they can think if something will get in the way or they're missing a piece of equipment etc.
@peterdroberts I'm going to bookmark this and my first workshop project is going to be to find a nice piece of wood and burn this into it with a soldering iron to hang on the wall.
@BonehouseWasps Someone in the hackspace linked to this website and it's wonderful. https://technologystudent.com/equip1/equipex1.htm
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