I live in a home from the late 70s. I have a lot of landscape work I need to do, among other things. I need to build some small retaining walls, mainly for aesthetics, not for drainage or erosion control. I want to level out some areas in front of the home. I live in Northwest Arkansas. The climate here is hot in the summer, wet in the spring, maybe 12" of snow over the coarse of winter.
I have around 80 cedar logs. I plan to get them milled into boards. the logs vary from 10" to 24"+ inches in diameter. They are also about 15 feet long each. I know I have a lot of wood here if I have it milled.
My question is A, can I use cedar for something I want to be low maintenance, B, what's a good size board for this type of work? I know I'll want some 4x4 and some 2x4 just because those are handy to have. Should I do 2x6, 2x8? Maybe 1x6? I have no clue here.
I have looked at some photos online and I really like the creations I have seen. I am not sure how durable cedar is, but from my understanding, it doesn't rot and lasts next to forever, as long as it isn't contacting soil? If I planned on backfilling the walls with soil, I suppose this is a no go? What if I use mulch? My in laws have a ton of it from shredding trees after the last winter storm so I have access to as much I would need. However, backfilling with mulch would prevent me from planting shrubs and flowers and such???
Sorry for being disorganized in my thoughts here. Type to them out and stay on task at work.
Thanks!
I have around 80 cedar logs. I plan to get them milled into boards. the logs vary from 10" to 24"+ inches in diameter. They are also about 15 feet long each. I know I have a lot of wood here if I have it milled.
My question is A, can I use cedar for something I want to be low maintenance, B, what's a good size board for this type of work? I know I'll want some 4x4 and some 2x4 just because those are handy to have. Should I do 2x6, 2x8? Maybe 1x6? I have no clue here.
I have looked at some photos online and I really like the creations I have seen. I am not sure how durable cedar is, but from my understanding, it doesn't rot and lasts next to forever, as long as it isn't contacting soil? If I planned on backfilling the walls with soil, I suppose this is a no go? What if I use mulch? My in laws have a ton of it from shredding trees after the last winter storm so I have access to as much I would need. However, backfilling with mulch would prevent me from planting shrubs and flowers and such???
Sorry for being disorganized in my thoughts here. Type to them out and stay on task at work.
Thanks!