Tororider
Veteran Member
You will be surprised how quickly the much gets used. We chipped up twenty yards plus and it was gone within a couple months. Especially if you use it for paths through your woods.
I'm now thinking about running the two water pipes and two 1" conduits for low voltage and electric. You guys raise some good points. If I run a conduit for future electrical, then if I never need power to the garden I will not have gone to the expense of running a 200 ft cable. Also, if I did have a problem with the electrical wire, I could pull out the old cable and run a new one without the major headache of digging another trench.Electric and low voltage sound like great ideas. I asked the grading contractor to give me an estimate for running two 1" PVC water lines, a 1" conduit for potential low voltage, and an underground rated power cable. I just need to decide whether to put a 10/2 (120V) or 10/3 (240V) cable. A 10 AWG cable should give me about 15 Amps for a 220 foot cable based on the online cable size calculators. I need to check out how much 220 ft of wire will cost. I imagine we may need an electric fence around the garden to keep the deer out.
Thanks for the input,
Obed
On your PVC gutter drain pipes with clean-outs, you might want to think about spray painted them to reduce the visual impact. I did that with mine. Put a big piece of cardboard to protect the house and spray the pipe with some color that is close to the background color of the house/brick (cement in my case).
The first pix is a close-up. The gravel settled a bit so you can see the difference between the natural white PVC and the painted on this background. Second pix is a "normal people view" and not having that white blob of pipe there helps a lot.
It looks marginal close up, but from "normal" viewing distance it makes quite a difference. And I suppose if you really hated it, you could spray paint it back to white :laughing:.
Pete
On your PVC gutter drain pipes with clean-outs, you might want to think about spray painted them to reduce the visual impact. I did that with mine. Put a big piece of cardboard to protect the house and spray the pipe with some color that is close to the background color of the house/brick (cement in my case).
The first pix is a close-up. The gravel settled a bit so you can see the difference between the natural white PVC and the painted on this background. Second pix is a "normal people view" and not having that white blob of pipe there helps a lot.
It looks marginal close up, but from "normal" viewing distance it makes quite a difference. And I suppose if you really hated it, you could spray paint it back to white :laughing:.
Pete
Pete,eepete said:On your PVC gutter drain pipes with clean-outs, you might want to think about spray painted them to reduce the visual impact.
Pete