- Mark out the area and dig the top layer of soil, trying to get the ground as flat as possible.
- Build a timber frame to size.
- Measure out 4 rows of 3 blocks to create good weight distribution and lay in place.
- Underneath each block, dig around 50mm wider than the blocks and about 150mm deep. Fill the hole with pea gravel until it’s flat.
- Place timber planks along the rows of blocks and see how level it is. Add or remove blocks where necessary. If it’s only a small difference, use shingle underneath the timber until it’s level.
- Nail your timber shed base to the timber planks to create a sturdy base for your shed.
Berriedale
Berriedale is a tiny estate village on the northern east coast of Caithness, Scotland, on the A9 roadway in between Helmsdale and also Lybster, near the boundary between Caithness as well as Sutherland. It is protected from the North Sea. The village has a parish church in the Church of Scotland. Simply southern of Berriedale, en route to the north, the A9 passes the Berriedale Braes, a high decrease in the landscape (brae is a Scots word for hillside, a borrowing of the Scottish Gaelic bràighe). The road falls steeply (13% over 1,3 kilometres) to connect a river, prior to climbing once again (13% over 1,3 kilometres), with a number of sharp bends in the roadway-- although several of the hairpin bends and also other nearby gradients have actually been relieved in the last few years. The impracticality (and expense) of linking the Berriedale Braes stopped the structure of the Inverness-Wick Far North Line along the east coastline of Caithness; instead the railway runs inland with the Flow Country. Berriedale is located at the end of the 8th phase of the coastal John o' Groats Path.