DRY STONE TV
DRY STONE TV
  • 72
  • 1 025 916
How to Build a Dry Stone Wall Part... 0: Batter Frames
Setting out correctly can be the difference between a bad and a good day on the wall and minute changes can affect how all your stones fit in the wall. Here are my thoughts on what to consider when setting out.
Переглядів: 2 475

Відео

Dry Stone Legends Episode 2: Sean Adcock BEM
Переглядів 2,2 тис.28 днів тому
The man who wrote the book on walling.. literally. Sean was kind enough to have me along for the day on one of his mighty projects at the foot of Mt Snowdon. In this video he talks about his career, his outlook on walling and his legacy through walling literature. Check out his website for a goldmine of walling and stone related info! dry-stone.co.uk/ conservationhandbooks.com/handbook/dry-ston...
Building stone walls on a remote Scottish island!
Переглядів 1,7 тис.Місяць тому
A mammoth road trip to the Western Isles to build dry stone walls on the Isle of Lewis. We had hold ups, headaches and bad weather but with an absolute dream team of wallers we prevailed just as the cabin fever was beginning to set in.
Pately 2022
Переглядів 598Місяць тому
Pately Bridge walling competition 2022
Making the perfect Hedge!
Переглядів 1,6 тис.6 місяців тому
A quick introduction into ancient craft of hedgelaying. Firstly, what exactly is it? What trees can be laid and how to do it!
BUILDING A RETAINING WALL
Переглядів 23 тис.11 місяців тому
BUILDING A RETAINING WALL
How to dress stone: Lessons from a Master stonemason.
Переглядів 150 тис.11 місяців тому
How to dress stone: Lessons from a Master stonemason.
Megalith in Malta - quick tour
Переглядів 1,4 тис.11 місяців тому
Megalith in Malta - quick tour
Winter 2023 Channel update.
Переглядів 1 тис.Рік тому
Winter 2023 Channel update.
Building a Dry Stone Wall in the Yorkshire Dales
Переглядів 11 тис.Рік тому
Building a Dry Stone Wall in the Yorkshire Dales
Setting out a segmental arch the easy way
Переглядів 3 тис.Рік тому
Setting out a segmental arch the easy way
We Built Stone Sculptures for Best in Show at Chelsea Flower Show
Переглядів 1,9 тис.Рік тому
We Built Stone Sculptures for Best in Show at Chelsea Flower Show
Building a Stone Wall with no Tools
Переглядів 3,5 тис.Рік тому
Building a Stone Wall with no Tools
Building with lime mortar in Portugal
Переглядів 10 тис.Рік тому
Building with lime mortar in Portugal
Building a Japanese Wall in a Secret London Garden
Переглядів 6 тис.Рік тому
Building a Japanese Wall in a Secret London Garden
How to build a stone wall with Round Stone
Переглядів 54 тис.Рік тому
How to build a stone wall with Round Stone
HOW TO SPLIT STONE
Переглядів 26 тис.Рік тому
HOW TO SPLIT STONE
How to Build a Dry Stone Wall Part 3 : The Second Lift
Переглядів 54 тис.Рік тому
How to Build a Dry Stone Wall Part 3 : The Second Lift
How to build a Dry Stone Wall. Part II: The First Lift. (Trade Secrets Revealed!)
Переглядів 79 тис.Рік тому
How to build a Dry Stone Wall. Part II: The First Lift. (Trade Secrets Revealed!)
Sloping Tops. Do 'em
Переглядів 2,8 тис.Рік тому
Sloping Tops. Do 'em
We built a Dry Stone Egg!! (or cairn) . [Parental Advisory Eggsplicit Content]
Переглядів 11 тис.2 роки тому
We built a Dry Stone Egg!! (or cairn) . [Parental Advisory Eggsplicit Content]
Caribbean Adventure: Dry Stone Walling in Nevis
Переглядів 1,9 тис.2 роки тому
Caribbean Adventure: Dry Stone Walling in Nevis
How to build a Dry Stone Wall. Part 1: Laying the Foundation.
Переглядів 297 тис.2 роки тому
How to build a Dry Stone Wall. Part 1: Laying the Foundation.
Masonry Walling Basics
Переглядів 31 тис.2 роки тому
Masonry Walling Basics
Dry Stone Legends ep.1 : Bill Noble
Переглядів 2,7 тис.2 роки тому
Dry Stone Legends ep.1 : Bill Noble
How to build a Dry Stone Wall: The Basics
Переглядів 51 тис.2 роки тому
How to build a Dry Stone Wall: The Basics
Stone walling in America 🇺🇸
Переглядів 1,8 тис.2 роки тому
Stone walling in America 🇺🇸
DRY STONE BUNKER PART 1 (2021)
Переглядів 1,2 тис.2 роки тому
DRY STONE BUNKER PART 1 (2021)
ESSENTIAL TOOLS FOR DRY STONE WALLING
Переглядів 10 тис.2 роки тому
ESSENTIAL TOOLS FOR DRY STONE WALLING
Building a Dry Stone Sculpture in Japan!
Переглядів 8892 роки тому
Building a Dry Stone Sculpture in Japan!

КОМЕНТАРІ

  • @FIZZYYAM
    @FIZZYYAM День тому

    Had the same hammer for 50 years... Six new handles and 3 new heads.

  • @bhartley1024
    @bhartley1024 3 дні тому

    He's dead right about those triangular stones. You want the squeezing, wedging forces parallel to the wall. If they are perpendicular, the stones will eventually be forced out, but if they are parallel, they have no where to go (unless you are near the end of the wall).

  • @GRAY8618
    @GRAY8618 3 дні тому

    Good to see a video on walling with this type of stone, most walling videos are all flat stone! Up here in NE Scotland almost all walls are done like this video!

  • @aaronsaunders6974
    @aaronsaunders6974 5 днів тому

    sandstone is said to be one of the toughest to chisel, true?

    • @drystone-tv
      @drystone-tv 2 дні тому

      it really depends, some sandstone is terribly hard and some is very soft. This stuff was not that good to chisel but Its all we could get hold of.

  • @islandtook
    @islandtook 5 днів тому

    I wish I had rock like that where I live 😢

  • @SuperBen421
    @SuperBen421 6 днів тому

    Nice to see your production quality improve so much over the years

    • @drystone-tv
      @drystone-tv 6 днів тому

      @SuperBen421 hey thanks! That means a lot , I've got a lot to learn still but I enjoy the process! Cheers for watching.

  • @TareDuka-gl5fu
    @TareDuka-gl5fu 6 днів тому

    Minchia...... come sei veloce!!!!😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

  • @jean-lucmiduri7502
    @jean-lucmiduri7502 7 днів тому

    grazie sono italiano molto interessante ci sono calcoli matematici o sistema empirico

  • @benhiggins811
    @benhiggins811 7 днів тому

    Trying to improve my stonemasonry skills. I’m from Ireland but would love to come work for you for a few days. I’ve done a lot of dry walls with granite and some limestone. Love the videos 👍

  • @markg_ogb
    @markg_ogb 8 днів тому

    Thanks for a great video, much respect for the master

  • @BTHobbies
    @BTHobbies 9 днів тому

    Beautiful work, i'd love to see a longer video on this job if you have the footage!

  • @B-Chillz
    @B-Chillz 11 днів тому

    PLEASE figure out how to export stereo audio for us headphones fans. It's awful...

    • @drystone-tv
      @drystone-tv 10 днів тому

      @B-Chillz this is useful advice! I had absolutely no idea there was an issue, apologies

  • @NoWeedsInMyGarden
    @NoWeedsInMyGarden 11 днів тому

    DIY gardener here. Mostly interested in building some decorative walls to separate spaces. However, my choices for stones are either pay a fortune to a commercial source or use what I can find which is mostly small and poor quality. Do you have any advice concerning the smallest stones that should be used in a wall 3-4 feet high?

  • @mainstonecarving
    @mainstonecarving 12 днів тому

    yes mate! more of this! its great!

    • @drystone-tv
      @drystone-tv 11 днів тому

      Nice one tom! Looking forward to the colab!

  • @speakupriseup4549
    @speakupriseup4549 13 днів тому

    Stonemasons shouldn't work with logs

  • @warwickpadmore4644
    @warwickpadmore4644 13 днів тому

    What was the purpose of the rebar? Was there a string attached to it to measure the decreasing diameter of each course as you built the structure?

  • @richardmiddleton2504
    @richardmiddleton2504 13 днів тому

    That is Very Cool,Great Job Merry Christmas DryStone!!!

  • @Ndnlover
    @Ndnlover 15 днів тому

    Somebody please play ball with the dog..

  • @Orange_tickle7261
    @Orange_tickle7261 15 днів тому

    Super helpful video, love the niche info and hard to find information, I've been wanting to make some batter frames but have struggled to find the density of info in this video than in multiple books. thanks!

  • @ericb4821
    @ericb4821 16 днів тому

    Just started a walling job at my home and struggling over many of the things you raised. Much appreciated the many nuggets of good information you presented!

    • @danielmcgarrityphotography9552
      @danielmcgarrityphotography9552 8 днів тому

      seriously, same thing here, putting 40 tons of stone into a short, but long and slightly sloping retaining wall.

  • @MattLaMarche
    @MattLaMarche 16 днів тому

    Incredible work. Would your crew take a trip to the USA for a week?

    • @drystone-tv
      @drystone-tv 16 днів тому

      @@MattLaMarche Absolutely ! Where are you based?

  • @PrivateAccoun
    @PrivateAccoun 16 днів тому

    Appreciate the detailed lesson

  • @warwickpadmore4644
    @warwickpadmore4644 16 днів тому

    That the size of hearting should be “generally” proportional to the decreasing width of the wall is an excellent point. Following a visit to Northern England in May, and taking a dry stone wall workshop in July, I built my first dry stone wall this autumn in Montreal with a Level II waller. What the experience taught me is that walling is such a peacefully contemplative and meditative exercise. Thanks for the content!

  • @frozenbiker
    @frozenbiker 16 днів тому

    The greatest disadvantage with using old fashioned wooden frames is that you cannot use them in a gap as the bottom crossmember stops you building the foundations. Good Vid.

  • @JEB94-z7g
    @JEB94-z7g 16 днів тому

    Need to send you a picture of our frame. I got it passed on to myself be the old boy I used to work with it’s made of angle iron stands a 4’6” high. has a bar across where the middle troughs go & a bar for the top troughs go. We have continuous trough bands up here. There’s also an additional bar half way across the top of the frame that we gage the top stones on. The bars are bolted so the frame can be pushed to alter the batter for say a retaining wall or if it’s on a hill side. Works brilliantly for us. The old boy said after a life time of shite he made it perfect! 😂

  • @masterserge
    @masterserge 16 днів тому

    Using the metal frame that you have, add another bar to the bottom, drill holes in the top and bottom bars every inch or half inch, then use hoist ring swivels to connect the bars to the legs. Now you have a fully adjustable frame. Add a third leg to the center of the top bar and you no longer need to pound the frame into the ground. Might be a little pricey to make if you only use it once but if you use it constantly then it should be fine.

  • @harryminaker6037
    @harryminaker6037 16 днів тому

    Harry here in Toronto. I took my first job as a professional stone mason's assistant at age 69. This channel was an important learning source that made this achievement possible. Thanks for your focus and great information.

    • @drystone-tv
      @drystone-tv 16 днів тому

      @harryminaker6037 that is truly fantastic to hear! I did a little job with a mason in Toronto once, he's called Menno you might know of him!?

  • @denisconor648
    @denisconor648 16 днів тому

    Great stuff thanks for this .

  • @S23K
    @S23K 16 днів тому

    Great info here! Would love to see more like this

  • @JosipRadnik1
    @JosipRadnik1 16 днів тому

    Rhubarb says: stopp blabbering about boring stones and pass that stick - now will you! 😄

    • @drystone-tv
      @drystone-tv 16 днів тому

      @JosipRadnik1 haha! She said a lot more in the out takes too. She was very cross about the whole situation.

    • @JosipRadnik1
      @JosipRadnik1 16 днів тому

      @@drystone-tv Don't tell me - I've got such a fluffy four legged barky lady too. Just about the same size as yours but with a fatter bum (she's 12 now) and with a different colour pattern (your dog's fur is really gorgeous btw). She's actually my mom's dog but since we live door to door she has decided a while ago that I can take care of her and hold her leash while she goes for walkies just as well. Recently she's entered my workplace and has programmed half of the staff to keep a stash of cookies stored in their desk which she's checking and collecting twice a week. 🙄

    • @drystone-tv
      @drystone-tv 16 днів тому

      @JosipRadnik1 give these dogs an inch and they'll take a mile! Rhubarb has only recently discovered human food and has instantly become a professional beggar!

  • @tommyfox4444444
    @tommyfox4444444 16 днів тому

    Like the little sculptures on the desk as well

    • @drystone-tv
      @drystone-tv 16 днів тому

      @tommyfox4444444 carved by my grandad 40 or 50 years ago probably!

  • @tommyfox4444444
    @tommyfox4444444 16 днів тому

    Great video!

  • @twestgard2
    @twestgard2 16 днів тому

    I’m all here for niche, information heavy! ETA: do another one on mortar, and another one on using fill in the middle.

    • @drystone-tv
      @drystone-tv 16 днів тому

      I've been thinking about doing one on fill for a while. Watch this space!

  • @davehall6053
    @davehall6053 16 днів тому

    Very interesting video, and good to think about the fundamentals rather than just sticking to a fixed set of rules

    • @drystone-tv
      @drystone-tv 16 днів тому

      @davehall6053 rules are OK to a point aren't they but it's one thing to memorise the rule and another to understand what it really means.

  • @EssubW
    @EssubW 16 днів тому

    Thanks! This kind of fundamental knowledge is really useful for us hobbyists / beginners. Good stuff as always!

    • @drystone-tv
      @drystone-tv 16 днів тому

      @EssubW this is the stuff that takes bloody ages to figure out on your own! Well it took me ages anyway. ! Thanks for watching

  • @VeraTUSHINGHAM
    @VeraTUSHINGHAM 16 днів тому

    Extremely useful as not covered on training courses

    • @drystone-tv
      @drystone-tv 16 днів тому

      @VeraTUSHINGHAM thanks! Where have you done courses before?

  • @dhb572
    @dhb572 16 днів тому

    Good information, very well explained. Thanks

  • @blumminummer
    @blumminummer 17 днів тому

    Great tips 👌 Keep em coming 😊

    • @drystone-tv
      @drystone-tv 16 днів тому

      @blumminummer great username. That's what my dad's cousin says all the time! Plenty more vids on the way

  • @daveylad2
    @daveylad2 17 днів тому

    Thank you for sharing your knowledge, love your craftsmanship. Looking forward to part 1 Rhubarb, Rhubarb, Rhubarb ❤

    • @drystone-tv
      @drystone-tv 16 днів тому

      @daveylad2 part one is out already hah, I've added this one as a prologue . I'll get more rhubarb in the next video though!

  • @Rockall57
    @Rockall57 17 днів тому

    It's great someone is doing this..keep at it.. taught many many young lads to dyke...from the 1980's onwards..we bought a 4 tonne Mitsubishi MS04M a life and back saver.. Rebar is the best plus they spring, thin, the line can be inside or outside, ideal for curves, use zip ties to connect... never ever use a wooden frame... The batter is directly related to the type of stone to be used as you mentioned. Minimum top width 300mm foundations 600mm x 1000mm high plus copes....any wall under that is decorative, garden walling so must use weak 8:1 mix mortar with the filling stone.. One important point that few understand.. always us the heaviest, largest stone for coping..thisnweight is critical to keep a field, hill, mountain wall together to 100's of years.. Built walls from Loch Fyne to Shetland ....😂... always with an excavator to make the lads life easier... Great channel..

  • @obamagate4887
    @obamagate4887 17 днів тому

    👍

  • @footshotstube
    @footshotstube 17 днів тому

    i Kno IM. spent about 6yrs in BTCV too. Great time learned all the old des , ran holidays , never got a bloody paid job tho

  • @djk0125
    @djk0125 18 днів тому

    God, I love a beautiful rock wall. You've done fantastic work! I think I would've loved to build rock walls because I like to work alone/independently or maybe at most with one other person. I like to do skilled work with my hands in or outdoors (as I did before retiring). I might try to make a small wall project in my garden. I do some artwork nowadays & I'm always making multimedia art which inevitably includes a rock wall somewhere in the piece. Thanks for this video. 🩷

  • @keeksputels1851
    @keeksputels1851 19 днів тому

    It aint dieing till im gone atleast 💪⚒️

    • @drystone-tv
      @drystone-tv 19 днів тому

      This thing will be there for 1000 years. The mass is insane some of the walls are 3m thick!

  • @davidbarnes241
    @davidbarnes241 19 днів тому

    The brook back in my native Derbyshire has been polluted over the years, the Hunt was one of the offenders, spewing out crap from their abattoir. The farm next door was also a major polluter, not to mention the outflows from the various septic systems. Lost count the number of times I’ve been sick from the water there. Finally it’s showing signs of improvement, but there’s very little life to expand from. Locals used to get upset with me snitching on them, but what’s right is right 👌 Stunning craftsmanship 🫡🫡🫡

    • @drystone-tv
      @drystone-tv 19 днів тому

      Maybe we'll get there one day, it's just been such an easy problem to ignore. On the bright side my dad says the rivers round where I live are a lot better now than they used to be.

  • @davidbarnes241
    @davidbarnes241 19 днів тому

    Proper man’s work 👍

    • @drystone-tv
      @drystone-tv 19 днів тому

      @@davidbarnes241 real graft

  • @johnnyyip5691
    @johnnyyip5691 19 днів тому

    Master!

  • @grahammason8263
    @grahammason8263 20 днів тому

    "Bonjour !" (Oh alreight then..."Ey up !"). As a West Riding of Yorkshire-man, of some seventy Summers, sitting here in Central France, on a cold December night, whilst suppin' a brew, I thought I'd watch a couple of videos of proper stonemasonry, and I wasn't disappointed !!! Not only was it a very informative presentation of technique, from a man who so obviously knows his trade, but knows how to express himself fluently (of course, with those "warm" rounded vowels of a dialect that is, and will remain, dear to my heart). Good on thee lad, and Thank you! In the 1960s I did my 3-year art studies (1-year of sculpture, which included stone carving, I continued with it for a while afterwards), then a couple of jobs of stone-cutting/masonry, until "Life" changed direction, but the feel of holding a stone "punch" and a well-balanced hammer still rings in my memories. Even my family name has its origins in the "trade" ! You can probably guess it. Thank you again. Best Wishes to you and to those following in your stone chippings.

  • @florinmarginean4540
    @florinmarginean4540 20 днів тому

    Hi. Is there a specific incline angle from bottom to the top that you have to follow? Thanks!

    • @drystone-tv
      @drystone-tv 20 днів тому

      @@florinmarginean4540 I've got a video coming out tomorrow on that very subject!

  • @florinmarginean4540
    @florinmarginean4540 20 днів тому

    Hi. So there is no need to bury the stones underground in laying the foundation? Thanks!

    • @drystone-tv
      @drystone-tv 20 днів тому

      Not necessarily no. You just need to dig the soft ground off the top and find something more solid to build off either subsoil or clay or stony ground.