If you look at the post on the pond preservation you'll see we're mixing on site with a mixer. It's nothing but a thing.
I have a custom bucket I've made that holds a third plus of yard for my skid steer. It moves the concrete quickly.
Yesterday in a couple of hours we mixed, placed and rough finished five yards.
Again, nothing but a thing.
Well, it was a hundred and one and the youngest one feeding the mixer is fifty seven, me.
You can rent a nine cubic foot mixer at your tool rental source. You can have your material suppller deliver to you "remix". Remix is when they take concrete sand and rock (I use three quarter) and remix it with the front end loader before putting it into the truck.
With remix you don't have to put in one sand then one gravel, then one sand, then one gravel, etc.
With a nine cubic foot mixer the formula I've used forever, well, forty years, is ten gallons of water, one bag of portland cement. We throw in the bag whole and aim for a mixing blade. I will admit those ninety four pound bags do get a little heftier feeling as the day wears on.
Then we add aggregrate, sand and gravel, until the mix is right for us. If I want it richer I add less water or more portland.
A couple of tips I've found out the hard way.
1. Put in the water and a couple of shovel fulls of aggregrate first and then the portland. The aggregrate sorta kinda helps with the declumping of the portland.
2. Start with the barrel of the mixer almost level when putting in the water and portland. You don't have to lift the stuff as far and more importantly, you're taking full advantage of the action of the mixing paddles.
Then as the material starts to splash out bring the barrel up.
3. The most common mistakes I see made by newbies helping me out is not working the barrel up in stages and using the paddles to full advantage. They set it up at a steep angle and then we have wet stuff on top and we have to dig out a cluster of crap at the bottom. Dirty word and butt chewing generator if there ever was one.
The other thing is the testosterone gets going and two boys of whatever age will be doing one upmanshipping filling the mixer. Then it don't get mixed well.
So set a pace and just do it. When you've got a mixer full and it's right you'll have three six cubic foot contractor's wheelbarrows as full as you want for moving some distance.
The motorized Georgia buggies work great. But if you're going to use them with the mixer then you have to dig a ramp to get them under the mixer. The mixer naturally dumps into a wheelbarrow. But all the Georgia buggies I've used have too high a sides.
With a full load the trail to the site must be relatively smooth and accessible for the Georgia buggies. They will get stuck and they can wear you out. I once used them to put sixty some yards four hundred feet from the trucks. You learn to turn the handles opposite of the direction you want to go. And you learn to hold on with a death grip. Because if you don't and a bump grabs the steering wheels you will think you're going to die.
If you have a quick attach FEL then you might find a concrete dispensing bucket at a rental yard. They're not made like mine, but then few things are. /forums/images/graemlins/blush.gif