- 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.
Munlochy
Munlochy is a tiny remote town, lying at the head of Munlochy Bay (Ob Survey Lochaidh), in the Black Isle in Ross and Cromarty, in northern Scotland. There are few very early documents of a negotiation, yet it promises that Munlochy increased in the 1760s as a result of quarry workers drawing out rock nearby to construct Fort George on the far side of the Moray Firth. Munlochy rests at the top of the tidal inlet of Munlochy Bay, that is itself an opening of the Moray Firth.