That's my wall in the video. Mike is such a professional and such a good guy. I really appreciated it and it is such a fantastic job! And as a bonus, I really enjoyed the history lesson at the end. Thanks again, Mike 👍
I would not have thought “no big deal” if I saw those stones come tumbling off that wall, but Mike is positive, as always, and handles the task like a pro.
I hunted in the Berkshire mountains in Mass. A state forest I hunter in was called Bear mountain. In the woods was an old camp CCC Camps.Four chimneys are still standing today. From the 1930. You would come across steps , walls , and a foundation. Built just like the wall M Haduck fixed. One more thing old apple trees in the woods. Great job Haduck.
This is a great help. You make it look so easy. I now have a better idea of how to help my falling wall. The old timers have so much to offer. Thanks for sharing what you've learned from them.
I appreciate all your videos but I'm especially fond of the ones that you show old work and describe how the old timers did that work. Hope you had a Happy Easter Mike.
That is a project Mike! I love how you can look at any structure that involves stones, brick, cement and you can analyze and explain its origin...mason historian! And it is so interesting when you tell it! I saw an old Larry Haun video and he too spoke of (pardon my English), "asses and elbows." Take care Mike.
Mike you are the best and blessed. Keep sharing the stories of the old school ways. People are going to need them soon. Oh how soft we have grown. BTW born in 48 here.
Let me be boring and say again how much I love the channel. They are always interesting and Mike has sooo many interesting projects and issues that he tackles and the results are great. These are the best real videos on the boobtube. Thank you Mike for introducing rapid set and showing the great results. Make music.
Thanks Mike. Your videos helped me plan out my retaining wall repair project this summer. I’ve watched so many of your vids and appreciate all you put out here.
I'm really glad I found this channel! I like how he thinks. I love that he always thinks about water. Too many contractors don't factor in water, drainage, etc into their projects; moisture & water seem like afterthoughts.
Mike, me too born early 50's and worked along side the remnants of the, "GreatesT Generation" the ones that grew up in the depression and survived WW2 others that fought hard for worker's rights which i was a beneficiary w/o any of the hell they endured, as always tanks for sharing...
Glad to see people taking pride in these old walls ! Great job Mike ! I'm a Pennsylvanian living in Mex. Down here they build with Castillos and infill with unreinforced block ...it's just modern day post and beam with " Wattle and daub " !!
Great. Vid Mike , I must be about two years older than you but still go to work most days . Yeah OK , it’s often quite a short day now , but I still work . Anyway regarding what you say about listening to the old timers . I remember as a young man working with an old farm hand who had spent his early years working with horses before tractors were widely used here in England . One thing he showed me was how to set a big gate post as firm as a rock by back filling the hole just a little at a time and ramming it down really hard as you did so . It worked perfectly. No need for these bags of “postcrete” or whatever that everyone today thinks are indispensable
So, the first wall really wasn't that poorly made, it lasted 92 years! 🤔🤐 I enjoyed the video Mike, I'm almost as old as the wall and I have no mortar, but I have good drainage. Keep up the good work, we need more like you! JIM🥰
Just a joy to watch your videos Mike. I built a 2 sided dry wall around a creek bed and every Spring much of it needed to be rebuilt but the parts of the wall that were woven into the bank held up the best.Water is the retaining walls worst enemy
The neighbor knocked down a 200 year old rock house and Im salvaging the rock to build walls around my property and seeing how they built the house is amazing just like the old walls you show
Great work Mike and thanks for the history lesson. I live about an hour down the Susquehanna from you and I love to go find the old WPA walls. No stimulus back then just working for a buck. God bless!
I'm always amazed at how interesting these videos are. What I learned here is how deep these walls all. The depth is one of the reasons they've lasted as long as they have. The cap stones, and concrete plinths. That's added weight. As frost and water swell the soil and push against all that rock, all that weight on top pushes down to hold it in place. I hadn't considered that before. What's also valuable information is how after 80-90 years that rubble behind the wall can still drain. I put in a long ABS drain with my dad in our backyard back around 1970. We used pea gravel so the water could 'filter' through and then up into the drain holes along the pipe. My dad said eventually enough silt would get into that gravel to block the flow of water. In this video I'm seeing that rubble and maybe that pea gravel is good for at least 100 years. It'd be interesting to figure out if frost heave tore into those walls or just water swelling the soil. Along mountain ridges where there'd been glaciers on both sides all the rocks on the ridge are loose. Called an arete. There's a lot of them always called sawtooth, jagged ridge, or in Japanese dikiretto. They've been frost shattered, but not yet moved by the glacier. The ones I've climbed along in japan, Glacier National Park and Scotland, have been there for 10,000 years. Every rock is loose but not really going anywhere - so you can hang on to them. In the winter water fills the cracks, freezes, expands, shifting everything, but when the thaw comes puts them back down in the same place. It's like a retaining wall where every rock fits and any rocks that are going to fall out did so over the past 10,000 years.
Great job Mike. My problem is I over think things. I would dig out the back... install pipes... install gravel...get out the Laser...next thing you know...I'm not finishing the job. Way to get it done!
Thank you for showing another great video and lesson. Closer to my concern is that the house I in was built with a three tiered retaining wall. It was built with the city signing off on it but does scare me. They say it was engineered but I take what you say as gold because I agree about the 3 types of retaining walls they make. I hope it continues to hold and not move beyond what it has and appreciate your words and knowledge Mike as always, thank you.
Great job, Mike. I was really interested in how little cement you used and instead relied on choking everything in. It makes a lot of sense and also saves $ on using more cement than necessary. Once again, the mud trick comes in handy. I’m using the mud trick on repointing stonework at an old farm my friend is renovating and it works great. Thanks for sharing your experience and keep up the great work. From the comments it looks like some viewers watch your videos to learn masonry techniques and other viewers watch just for entertainment and I think everybody learns something worthwhile.
Love the way you do things; also appreciate the Bible verses at the end of your videos-very inspirational-always puts a smile on my face :-) God bless you Mike Haduck!
I never forget how you said walls are the worst kind of job a mason can take, its heavy and they dont work. Me, I was saying ut oh! at the 1 min mark when they all fell.,, heavy work Mike..slow and steady so you can keep sharing with us a long time.
Mike your the best! My sister has a wall similar to this in Northern Bergen County in New Jersey and I repaired it basically the way you did but the one thing I did not do was use the mud in the joints. I will be doing that with the next couple days
Hi Mike!! I've learned so much from your videos and really appreciate the guidance that you offer to make just about any job a reality for the novice. I recently acquired a home that has a TON of old sandstone from an old foundation. The previous owner used it to make accent barriers around the front of the house and driveway. I want to use the large blocks of sandstone to build up a three-sided loafing shed. I live in southern Colorado and the climate here is relatively dry (high desert). What would be the best type of cement to use to bind the sandstone bricks together? Thanks!!
Mike i envy you working with them old boys, i grew going what we call RSL's each day with my grandparents, i think its called the returned service league i was always surrounded by WW1,WW2, Korea, Vietnam veterans they all mentored me , im about 15 years younger than you.
Wow, that was a solid workout! I realised I've learned a thing ore two, after years watching your videos. Because I troubleshoot and looking for reasons for the issue at hand, before you mention it. Apparently I've learned. No, I am not writing that to brag about me . Obviously, it's yet another compliment directed to the King of Masonry. Retaining wall, mud trick, old and new school. What more could you ask for in a video? Thank you. Have a great day Sir.
Imagine Mike having to "Turn-To" to get a wadge, instead of this free-funds so to say... at the cost of tax payers... I can only hear the crying if a young person had to build one of those retaining walls.... Thanks for another fine job on that repair of the retaining wall. God Bless Brother.... Ernie
Looks good! It's amazing to think how long some of those old walls built during the Depression Era have held up, particularly in a place like Pennsylvania with the freeze-thaw cycles you mention.
Hi Mike, I noticed that the last wall you showed had the soil quite a ways lower than the wall. That’s what I was imagining when you were saying about how you want the soil over the top of the wall. That wall was the opposite, and I was wondering if the reason it hadn’t fallen down was because of the big opening area with no wall to the right of that wall? Did that big opening prevent that collapse by it relieving the pressure?
Mike, I can't tell you how much I appreciate your videos. I have learned so much in the last couple years and am so grateful. Had a question: there's walls like the one towards the end of the videos with big, square and rectangle stones that some how fit together perfectly.. are the stones rough sawn to a certain height and length to fit or is it all field work? I have a hunch it's in the field, and if that's the case, these early masons had incredible talent and skill! Thanks again and looking forward to the next video!
i think my retaining wall for my basement stairs are being cracked at the seams between cement blocks by freeze thaw cycles but at least it is not moving out I am thinking of just cleaning out cracks and putting in some of that hydraulic patching cement got any other ideas to keep wall from cracking along cement block horizontal seams?
Hi Greg, most of those old walls are all cracked, as long as it is not buldging out they are usually fine, in my opinion, i just keep patching them,, thanks mike
I have a retaining wall that was parged with concrete around 20 years ago and pieces are starting to fall off. I want to parge the whole wall (front and top) so that it matches parging on my porch. The surface is smooth and I’d like to know if I can just clean it and go over the whole wall.
Awesome video. Retaining walls are big where I live. I was told they put drain tile, gravel, and a drainage pipe behind the wall in addition to weeping holes at the front. I was told the idea is to keep the soil back, but let the water flow through. Is it like that where you are, Mike? Is drainage pipe used for insurance?
I drive past that wall a lot near the end of the video was a bummer to see it falling down as it is a beautiful wall. Haven’t been past it in a little while though, I wonder if they ever ended up fixing it
Hi Steven, it depends on what you are doing and the job, but I did it in certain circumstances, I did a video also called" matching cement joints and relaying brick" thanks mike
This might have been your best wall repair yet. What a great job! I think they're going to call you back in the future for other parts of it. p.s. Please don't get run over by a car!
That's my wall in the video. Mike is such a professional and such a good guy. I really appreciated it and it is such a fantastic job! And as a bonus, I really enjoyed the history lesson at the end. Thanks again, Mike 👍
You can’t put thanks in the wallet
Thanks Terry, Mike
@@spartakmayakovski4797 Terry obviously hired Mike and paid him. Don't be cynical.
@@davidkrause6861 I know just making sure
I would not have thought “no big deal” if I saw those stones come tumbling off that wall, but Mike is positive, as always, and handles the task like a pro.
Thanks , Mike
"No big deal" love Mike.
He makes us all feel like we can do it.
Yup. Looked like a big deal to me. A very big deal.
I hunted in the Berkshire mountains in Mass. A state forest I hunter in was called Bear mountain. In the woods was an old camp CCC Camps.Four chimneys are still standing today. From the 1930. You would come across steps , walls , and a foundation. Built just like the wall M Haduck fixed. One more thing old apple trees in the woods. Great job Haduck.
Thanks, Mike
Mike, I'm 84. Your video reminded ome and my dad 70 years ago. Hetaught some or your ideas and techniques. Thanks a bunch....😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅
Thanks George, I appreciate hearing that, thanks Mike
Glad you're still around, you feel like an old friend. Keep up the good work. Love your videos.
Thanks Gary, Mike
I wish more of my generation was like you Mike.
Thanks for the kind words, Mike
This is a great help. You make it look so easy. I now have a better idea of how to help my falling wall. The old timers have so much to offer. Thanks for sharing what you've learned from them.
Thanks Mrs, check out my retaining wall installation videos they have a lot to offer on stone walls, thanks Mike
I appreciate all your videos but I'm especially fond of the ones that you show old work and describe how the old timers did that work.
Hope you had a Happy Easter Mike.
Thanks ,happy Easter, Mike
The Prince of Portland!!!
Thanks Brother
Thanks E, Mike
I’d be lost without these videos Mike. Learn something new every video! Thanks!
Thanks Julio, Mike
Old School masonry is long-lasting! SKILLED LABOR is amazing and remarkable.
Thanks Tod, Mike
Spek-tak-u-lar, Mike! Watching you is like therapy, for free!
Thanks James, Mike
These are one of my favorite videos you do. I know I tell you every time but the repair ones are fun to watch.
Thanks ,I appreciate it, Mike
That is a project Mike! I love how you can look at any structure that involves stones, brick, cement and you can analyze and explain its origin...mason historian! And it is so interesting when you tell it! I saw an old Larry Haun video and he too spoke of (pardon my English), "asses and elbows." Take care Mike.
Thanks Juliet, Mike
Mike another great video,no big deal,pack and stack
Thanks Mitch, Mike
Thank you Mike for teaching old school skills!
Thanks yougo, Mike
Thank you Mike
Thanks Anthony, Mike
Mike you are the best and blessed. Keep sharing the stories of the old school ways. People are going to need them soon. Oh how soft we have grown. BTW born in 48 here.
Hi Kathleen, I guess we seen a lot of things change, thanks Mike
Let me be boring and say again how much I love the channel. They are always interesting and Mike has sooo many interesting projects and issues that he tackles and the results are great. These are the best real videos on the boobtube. Thank you Mike for introducing rapid set and showing the great results. Make music.
Thanks Thor,. Mike
Wow! I did not expect that avalanche.
Thanks Gypsy, actually I didn't either. Lol, Mike
Great video mike. I love the WPA nostalgia..I see works by that program as well as the WPA emblem they'd put in the sidewalks
Thanks Dave, Mike
Good video, as always. I do enjoy them. You educate your viewers so well.
Thanks Rhonda, Mike
Watching that wall come down is mighty satisfying. LOL.
Thanks Remy, Mike
Thank you Mike 🌺🌺🌺
Thanks Eman, Mike
Thanks Mike. Your videos helped me plan out my retaining wall repair project this summer. I’ve watched so many of your vids and appreciate all you put out here.
Thanks Adam, Mike
always enjoy the history and human perspectives. Guess no gym visit that day. thanx
Thanks old man. Went home and laid in bed, lol, Mike
I'm really glad I found this channel! I like how he thinks. I love that he always thinks about water. Too many contractors don't factor in water, drainage, etc into their projects; moisture & water seem like afterthoughts.
Thanks, Mike
Mike, me too born early 50's and worked along side the remnants of the, "GreatesT Generation" the ones that grew up in the depression and survived WW2 others that fought hard for worker's rights which i was a beneficiary w/o any of the hell they endured, as always tanks for sharing...
Thanks Tom, Mike
Glad to see people taking pride in these old walls ! Great job Mike ! I'm a Pennsylvanian living in Mex. Down here they build with Castillos and infill with unreinforced block ...it's just modern day post and beam with " Wattle and daub " !!
Thanks Todd, Mike
I am a mason by trade, but i really enjoy these videos. Always good to watch how others do things 👍
Thanks vr, I appreciate hearing that from a professional, thanks Mike
Thanks Mike you inspired me to build my own retaing wall in my backyard. Large blue stone. Thanks for all the knowledge. It came out beautiful
Thanks Matt, Mike
Great. Vid Mike , I must be about two years older than you but still go to work most days . Yeah OK , it’s often quite a short day now , but I still work . Anyway regarding what you say about listening to the old timers . I remember as a young man working with an old farm hand who had spent his early years working with horses before tractors were widely used here in England . One thing he showed me was how to set a big gate post as firm as a rock by back filling the hole just a little at a time and ramming it down really hard as you did so . It worked perfectly. No need for these bags of “postcrete” or whatever that everyone today thinks are indispensable
Thanks barker, I agree, Mike
Nice work mike mate
Thanks mac, I appreciate it, Mike
rock solid tips ...🙏
Thanks TRT, Mike
So, the first wall really wasn't that poorly made, it lasted 92 years! 🤔🤐
I enjoyed the video Mike, I'm almost as old as the wall and I have no mortar, but I have good drainage.
Keep up the good work, we need more like you!
JIM🥰
Thanks Jim, I appreciate it, Mike
Another great video Mike! "Ain't no big deal"
Thanks James, Mike
Thanks for taking the time to make this video.
I have a similar problem, you helped me understand how to fix it up.
Thanks Jeff, Mike
I love your old stone retaining wall videos. Keep it up Mike, don't retire !
Thanks , Mike
I never thought fixing a wall like that would be as easy as it appeared. I believe I could do that rather easily.👍👍
Thanks Dan, I am sure you could, thanks Mike
Im from wilkes barre, I've been patching up for years and you taught me many good ways. thanks for the vids they are great.
Thanks pajohn, I appreciate hearing that, Mike
Mike I’ve seen probably 100 of you videos and this is my favorite one. I appreciate the work you do and that you share your knowledge. Thanks.
Thanks Lucas, Mike
Excellent video Mike - thanks for sharing -
Thanks Jack, Mike
Just a joy to watch your videos Mike. I built a 2 sided dry wall around a creek bed and every Spring much of it needed to be rebuilt but the parts of the wall that were woven into the bank held up the best.Water is the retaining walls worst enemy
Hi Michael, I hear you, Mike
Very interesting, thanks for putting this together and posting it.
Thanks Dan, Mike
The neighbor knocked down a 200 year old rock house and Im salvaging the rock to build walls around my property and seeing how they built the house is amazing just like the old walls you show
Thanks 13mm, Mike
Great work Mike and thanks for the history lesson. I live about an hour down the Susquehanna from you and I love to go find the old WPA walls. No stimulus back then just working for a buck. God bless!
Thanks Chris, God bless also, Mike
I just wanted to let you know that you have given me the courage to do my own repairs. It's not as big a deal I was making it. Thanks
Thanks Fay, I am sure you will do fine, Mike
I'm always amazed at how interesting these videos are. What I learned here is how deep these walls all. The depth is one of the reasons they've lasted as long as they have. The cap stones, and concrete plinths. That's added weight. As frost and water swell the soil and push against all that rock, all that weight on top pushes down to hold it in place. I hadn't considered that before.
What's also valuable information is how after 80-90 years that rubble behind the wall can still drain. I put in a long ABS drain with my dad in our backyard back around 1970. We used pea gravel so the water could 'filter' through and then up into the drain holes along the pipe. My dad said eventually enough silt would get into that gravel to block the flow of water. In this video I'm seeing that rubble and maybe that pea gravel is good for at least 100 years.
It'd be interesting to figure out if frost heave tore into those walls or just water swelling the soil.
Along mountain ridges where there'd been glaciers on both sides all the rocks on the ridge are loose. Called an arete. There's a lot of them always called sawtooth, jagged ridge, or in Japanese dikiretto. They've been frost shattered, but not yet moved by the glacier. The ones I've climbed along in japan, Glacier National Park and Scotland, have been there for 10,000 years. Every rock is loose but not really going anywhere - so you can hang on to them. In the winter water fills the cracks, freezes, expands, shifting everything, but when the thaw comes puts them back down in the same place. It's like a retaining wall where every rock fits and any rocks that are going to fall out did so over the past 10,000 years.
Thanks Will, sounds interesting, i always notice the old walls,, Mike
Great job Mike. My problem is I over think things. I would dig out the back... install pipes... install gravel...get out the Laser...next thing you know...I'm not finishing the job. Way to get it done!
Thanks Gibson, Mike
Thank you for showing another great video and lesson. Closer to my concern is that the house I in was built with a three tiered retaining wall. It was built with the city signing off on it but does scare me. They say it was engineered but I take what you say as gold because I agree about the 3 types of retaining walls they make. I hope it continues to hold and not move beyond what it has and appreciate your words and knowledge Mike as always, thank you.
Thanks Ken, I bet you never got a guarantee from the city, very true, thanks Mike
Another A+ video, Mike. Thank you for sharing your knowledge!
Thanks Nicholas, Mike
Nice job Mike. Thanks for showing how simple this can be. I will do the front of my house this spring. No big deal!
Thanks John, I am sure you will do fine, thanks Mike
No big deal, truly words of wisdom.
Thanks Tyler, Mike
Mike, looks awesome great job.
Thanks Mike, Mike
5:07 mike manhandles stones. Makes it look easy.
Thanks,Mike
Awesome video mike
Thanks Zack, Mike
Love all your videos, but this one in particular is awesome!
Thanks cla,Mike
Great job, Mike. I was really interested in how little cement you used and instead relied on choking everything in. It makes a lot of sense and also saves $ on using more cement than necessary. Once again, the mud trick comes in handy. I’m using the mud trick on repointing stonework at an old farm my friend is renovating and it works great. Thanks for sharing your experience and keep up the great work. From the comments it looks like some viewers watch your videos to learn masonry techniques and other viewers watch just for entertainment and I think everybody learns something worthwhile.
Thanks Bill, I appreciate it, Mike
Great video mike!
Thanks Anthony, Mike
Love the way you do things; also appreciate the Bible verses at the end of your videos-very inspirational-always puts a smile on my face :-) God bless you Mike Haduck!
Thanks Bonnie, I appreciate hearing that, God bless you also, Mike
“No stimulus checks, you had to work for it”.
You nailed it Mike.
We could benefit greatly by returning to that type of Government policy.
Thanks again jeff, Mike
I never forget how you said walls are the worst kind of job a mason can take, its heavy and they dont work. Me, I was saying ut oh! at the 1 min mark when they all fell.,, heavy work Mike..slow and steady so you can keep sharing with us a long time.
Thanks R, Mike
Mike your the best! My sister has a wall similar to this in Northern Bergen County in New Jersey and I repaired it basically the way you did but the one thing I did not do was use the mud in the joints. I will be doing that with the next couple days
Thanks John, I am glad it helped, Mike
Nice job, I thought the wall coming down when you pull the first stone, that was my first impression.
Thanks Juan, Mike
Another great job Mike! Thanks!
Thanks, Mike
Hi Mike!! I've learned so much from your videos and really appreciate the guidance that you offer to make just about any job a reality for the novice. I recently acquired a home that has a TON of old sandstone from an old foundation. The previous owner used it to make accent barriers around the front of the house and driveway. I want to use the large blocks of sandstone to build up a three-sided loafing shed. I live in southern Colorado and the climate here is relatively dry (high desert). What would be the best type of cement to use to bind the sandstone bricks together? Thanks!!
Hi Frank, I can't answer that unless I seen it for myself, I would ask some of the locals thanks Mike
those birds singing in the background too singing praises
Thanks Thor, lol, Mike
Great video Mike. I enjoyed the history lesson as well, I like hearing how it was done back then from someone who knows. Best wishes to you.
Thanks Bryan, I appreciate it, Mike
Mike i envy you working with them old boys, i grew going what we call RSL's each day with my grandparents, i think its called the returned service league i was always surrounded by WW1,WW2, Korea, Vietnam veterans they all mentored me , im about 15 years younger than you.
Thanks closer, yep, that was a whole different generation, it's sad to loose them, thanks Mike
I’ve seen some amazing WPA stone work here in Minnesota.
Thanks John, I believe it, Mike
Wow, that was a solid workout!
I realised I've learned a thing ore two, after years watching your videos. Because I troubleshoot and looking for reasons for the issue at hand, before you mention it. Apparently I've learned.
No, I am not writing that to brag about me . Obviously, it's yet another compliment directed to the King of Masonry.
Retaining wall, mud trick, old and new school. What more could you ask for in a video?
Thank you.
Have a great day Sir.
Thanks Richard, I appreciate the kind word, Mike
No big deal!!! Thanks Mike!!
Thanks, Mike
Imagine Mike having to "Turn-To" to get a wadge, instead of this free-funds so to say... at the cost of tax payers... I can only hear the crying if a young person had to build one of those retaining walls.... Thanks for another fine job on that repair of the retaining wall. God Bless Brother.... Ernie
Thanks Ernie, Mike
0:58 Came down so easily. Scary to think what would happen if a kid was messing around with it. Nice repair.
Thanks WCSD, Mike
Excelente video 👍 👏 saludos desde chile 👊 👌🏻 👏
Thanks Viana, Mike
Great job that's old school
Thanks Darrell, Mike
Looks good! It's amazing to think how long some of those old walls built during the Depression Era have held up, particularly in a place like Pennsylvania with the freeze-thaw cycles you mention.
Thanks Joe, I agree, Mike
Hi Mike, I noticed that the last wall you showed had the soil quite a ways lower than the wall. That’s what I was imagining when you were saying about how you want the soil over the top of the wall. That wall was the opposite, and I was wondering if the reason it hadn’t fallen down was because of the big opening area with no wall to the right of that wall? Did that big opening prevent that collapse by it relieving the pressure?
Hi Joe, I would say that had a lot to do with it and what kind of ground was behind it, thanks Mike
Wow really enjoyed your video. Now I am going to look really hard when I walk pass a stone wall
Thanks Ed, Mike
Like it is said, ‘If walls could only talk’.
Thanks Ron, very true, Mike
Thanks Mike
Thanks John, Mike
Great video Mike,love the history stuff
Thanks William, Mike
Hey Mike. If you were to build a new retaining wall now (against your better judgement), what method would you use?
Hi Phil, I did that video " retaining walls , yes or no? I think I said it all there, thanks Mike
Always good videos! Very informative!
Thanks, Mike
Mike, I can't tell you how much I appreciate your videos. I have learned so much in the last couple years and am so grateful. Had a question: there's walls like the one towards the end of the videos with big, square and rectangle stones that some how fit together perfectly.. are the stones rough sawn to a certain height and length to fit or is it all field work? I have a hunch it's in the field, and if that's the case, these early masons had incredible talent and skill!
Thanks again and looking forward to the next video!
They would save the best stones for top and ends, lots of talent, thanks Mike
I have learned alot from your videos. I hope u make some new ones soon.
Hi kait,, Mike
When you get a minute, there is a wall south of here that needs to be finished.
Thanks Mark, Mike
More about how they built buildings such as the old churches.
Hi Jacob, I got that series called, " rockfacing and shaping stone " Mike haduck, I do a lot there, thanks Mike
i think my retaining wall for my basement stairs are being cracked at the seams between cement blocks by freeze thaw cycles but at least it is not moving out I am thinking of just cleaning out cracks and putting in some of that hydraulic patching cement got any other ideas to keep wall from cracking along cement block horizontal seams?
Hi Greg, most of those old walls are all cracked, as long as it is not buldging out they are usually fine, in my opinion, i just keep patching them,, thanks mike
Mike it seems like the red bag Quikrete is one of your favorites to use?
Hi Jake, it is, it drys fast and I could continue on, thanks Mike
I have a retaining wall that was parged with concrete around 20 years ago and pieces are starting to fall off. I want to parge the whole wall (front and top) so that it matches parging on my porch. The surface is smooth and I’d like to know if I can just clean it and go over the whole wall.
Hi Cyna, I got a whole playlist called " foundation repair" Mike haduck. You will see all my techniques there, thanks mike
@@MikeHaduck Thank you!
@ 7:20 Could that rock had been laid flat? Tie the wall in? Thx Mike, all the Best!
Hi Henry, I guess I had to make it all fit, but I tied it together good, thanks Mike
Love your videos. Sorry if I missed it, but why did you use concrete mix instead or mortar? I know it was fast setting...
Hi Jamie, mostly because it's fast setting, and to me Portland is better for a outside wall like that. Thanks mike
Awesome video. Retaining walls are big where I live. I was told they put drain tile, gravel, and a drainage pipe behind the wall in addition to weeping holes at the front. I was told the idea is to keep the soil back, but let the water flow through. Is it like that where you are, Mike? Is drainage pipe used for insurance?
Hi David, it don't hurt, thanks Mike
I drive past that wall a lot near the end of the video was a bummer to see it falling down as it is a beautiful wall. Haven’t been past it in a little while though, I wonder if they ever ended up fixing it
Hi, I don't know my my back says that I hope someone else does, lol, Mike
@@MikeHaduck lol I hear ya there
Those WPA walls also kept debris off the road and improve the scenery.
Thanks Paul, Mike
I assume you can mud paint trick with new mortar when doing brick work?
Hi Steven, it depends on what you are doing and the job, but I did it in certain circumstances, I did a video also called" matching cement joints and relaying brick" thanks mike
Mike I watch your videos amazing, Masonry Picasso
Thanks al, I appreciate the kind words, Mike
This might have been your best wall repair yet. What a great job! I think they're going to call you back in the future for other parts of it. p.s. Please don't get run over by a car!
Thanks Brian, I hope not, Mike
Just like new lol. Those were some heavy stones it looked like.
Thanks Sue, yep I can't take any more jobs like that, it's too heavy, Mike
@@MikeHaduck I could pretty much tell....