My Fun Friday

   / My Fun Friday #1  

bmac

Veteran Member
Joined
May 18, 2002
Messages
1,503
Location
Newnan, GA
Tractor
NH TC29D
For those of you who followed my home construction thread, you probably remember me saying that we busted the budget on the house and had little $$ left for landscaping. We ended up with a few foundation shrubs, a little sod and a lot of seeded yard.

I had a landscape designer develop amaster plan for us that included both hardscaping and plant selection. We thought he did an excellent job (I've since learned that maybe he didn't, but that's another story), so our plan was to phase in the plan as funds permitted.

So, my lovely bride and I take the plan to our favorite garden center and order the plant material for the planting bed immediately in front of the house. Between what we picked up and had delivered, we had 3 trees and about 85 shrubs (give or take). The bulk of the stuff was delivered last Saturday AM, in the rain. Had to wait until Sunday after church to get started with the planting. Spent the entire afternoon getting the 3 trees planted. At this time, I'm really questioning our decision to get so many plants.

While I'm at work on Monday AM and Tuesday PM, my wife manages to get about 24 plants in. Nice start, but she's really hurting. Our schedule and the weather keeps us from doing anything else for the rest of the week. During this time, I come up with a great idea (or so I think).

Yesterday, I picked up a Toro Dingo with an auger attachment from a local rental yard. I knew our ground was still too soft from the rains we had to get my tractor on it, but I figured something like the Dingo would work out fine.

Wrong!!!. I bored the 1st 2 holes with the Dingo on the driveway. Like a hot knife through butter. I'm pumped. About this time, my wife has to pick up the kids from school so I'm left at home with a guy who's finishing up some things like installing doorbells and stuff. I drive the Dingo over a small sodded area and quickly sink the thing up to the axels.

Now, I've got a guy coming in about an hour to give me an estimate on some trail clearing and the other guy is there working, so I can't leave until my wife gets home. No worries, I think. As soon as she gets home, I'll go get some 3/4" plywood and then we'll winch the Dingo out of the muck and onto the plywood and we'll get back to work.

Although it took awhile to liberate the Dingo, we did and the plywood trick worked great. A little slow repositioning the plywood as we moved from one hole to the next, but it gave my son and I a nice workout and my son learned how to operate the Dingo and things were going well. For awhile. /forums/images/graemlins/frown.gif

I checked out the terrain on the other side of the house and it seems firm enough to forego the plywood. And it kind of was. I had a grade to climb and the wheels were spinning some as I tried to approach the next hole, but I was getting there. Just as it was starting to get a little dark, I made it to the location for the next hole. At this time, my brother from Florida arrived and was watching my masterful control of the Dingo. But something was different on this hole. No "hot knife through butter" feel. Strangely, the auger was somehow being drawn in toward the Ding, instead of going straight down like on the other holes.

As I attempt to raise the auger out of the hole, my brother's eyes are getting big. He sees the PVC irrigation line wrapped around the auger before I do. Then we both see the hole filling with water. By the time we located the master valve to turn the water off, the entire area is swamped.

I did manage to get the Dingo through the muck and back to the driveway without using my ATV/winch. But with daylight almost gone, I knew the Dingo work was done for the day.

18 holes dug. 50 some odd plants needing a hole. Butchered irrigation line. Severed low voltage wire going to one of the control valves. And a big family get together scheduled for today. It was quite an afternoon.

With the Dingo rental, gas and plywood, I figure I spent about $20/hole dug. Plus whatever it costs to repair the irrigation line. The PVC I can easily repair. Finding the other end of the cut wire and getting a good, water tight splice is another story.

I'm thinking that the rest of the holes will be dug by hand. And probably by day laborers.
 
   / My Fun Friday #2  
Hi Bmac,

Sounds like your getting settled in and makeing your house a home!!! Nothing like destroying things and having to fix them to give you the warm and fuzzies. /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif

I've learned that allot of the time it's faster and easier to just do something with what you have on hand and muscle through it. Renting a tool to make it easier rarely results in what we hope for or would like it to do. Your Dingo rental is a good example of how you can spend allot of time, money and energy to accomplish the same thing if you'd have just dug them by hand. /forums/images/graemlins/frown.gif /forums/images/graemlins/blush.gif /forums/images/graemlins/laugh.gif /forums/images/graemlins/smile.gif

At least you tried it and learned for youself. Now you can get serious and put your shovel to work!!! /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif

By the way, where are the pictures?????????

Eddie
 
   / My Fun Friday
  • Thread Starter
#3  
Eddie,

Once again, you are right (about me destroying things and about the dingo rental).

However, I will say this - the Dingo would have been super had ground conditions been better. If I would have used my head and waited until things dried out a little, I could have dug all my holes in an easy afternoon. Od course, who knows how many places I would have drilled through the irrigation lines. /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif

As far as digging holes the hard way, looks like that's the way the rest of them are going to be done. It'll be slower and I'll ache a little more the next day, but it'll get done.

I repaired the water line tonight. But the low voltage wires that control the valve still have to be spliced. Got any good ideas on making these splices waterproof (they are buried along side the water lines)? I picked up some shrink tubing and some grease caps today. Haven't decided for sure which would work best - I'm thinking the shrink tubes. I'm wondering if there is another option. What is your recommendation?

Re: photos. I haven't forgotten. I just want to get things settled a little bit inside , let the grass fill in a little and get the shrubs in up front before I do another photo shoot.

Good to hear from you, Eddie.
 
   / My Fun Friday #4  
Home depot and Lowes carries direct bury heat shrink tubing that when heated it melts a glue on the inside and seals real good.
 
   / My Fun Friday
  • Thread Starter
#5  
wushaw,

Thanks. I think that's what I bought. I'll double check to see if it the direct bury variety.
 
   / My Fun Friday #6  
bmac,

The heat shrink stuff is probably the best bet. I've never used it, so I don't know for sure personally.

I've had good luck with a short piece of half inch PVC. Just wire nut the wires together, put them into the PVC with the nuts on eigher end, and pump the pipe full of silicone.

This is sort of a modified, cheap version of what you use for splicing high voltage wires without buying the fancy fittings.

Good luck,
Eddie
 
   / My Fun Friday #7  
You didnt say how you were going to connect the wires(other than heat shrink) so this may be stating the obvious, but make sure you solder the wires(dont use rosin core solder, its corrosive) before heat shrinking.. Some guys think this is overkill, but I always like to make the repair better than the original wire to reassure that I dont have to do it again, especially if its underground..
 
   / My Fun Friday #8  
To repair underground wiring, my favorite method is to use a steel (not plastic) junction box. After clamping the wires on the outside of the box with metal cable clamps, I twist the bare ends of the wires together with pliers prior to using wire nuts. Then I fill the interior of the box with cheap silicone caulk, screw on the cover, and bury it. The clamps ensure the wires won't be pulled apart and pretwisting the ends provide a more secure connection than just threading on the wire nuts.
 
   / My Fun Friday
  • Thread Starter
#9  
Hi, Greg.

The fella at Home depot recommended soldering as well. I probably would have taken the lazy way and just twisted the wires. But, guess I'll take your advice and solder them. Don't want to dig them up again. /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif
 
   / My Fun Friday #10  
Hi Bmac,
I agree with the soldering suggestions above in addition to heatshrinking, siliconizing and enclosing in a box.

I think Rosin Core solder is for electrical repairs and Acid Core solder is for plumbing work. You may have to splice a short piece of wire in if you don't have enough slack to put the ends back together.

HTH

Good Luck!

-Vinnie
 

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