- How to build a shed base out of paving slabs
- Mix sand and cement together to make mortar or use a pre-mixed one
- Use a trowel to lay mortar for 1 slab at a time on the sub-base and lift a damp-sided slab onto the mortar, using a piece of timber and club hammer to tap the slab into position carefully. Continue to lay the first row of slabs
- Make equally-sized spacers in all the joints in the slabs to ensure they’re the same size, checking it’s level as you go along
- Next lay slabs along the two adjacent outer edges, filling in the central area row by row
- Leave the mortar to set according to the instructions or for at least 48 hours before filling in the joints with mortar or paving grout
- Building a shed base from concrete
- Create a wooden frame around your shed base area (also called formwork) to stop the concrete from spreading
- Mix pre-mixed concrete with water or use 1 part cement to 5 parts ballast
- Wet the sub-base using a watering can with a rose on the end
- Pour the concrete onto the framed base starting in one corner
- Push the blade of a shovel up and down in the edges of the concrete to get rid of air bubbles
- Use a rake to spread the concrete, leaving it around 18mm higher than the top of the frame. Work in sections of around 1-1.m2
- Compact the concrete using a straight piece of timber that’s longer than the width of the base. Move the timber along the site, hitting it along at about half of its thickness at a time until the surface is evenly ridged
- Remove excess concrete and level the surface by sliding the timber back and forwards from the edge that you started. Fill in any depressions and repeat until even
- Run an edging trowel along the frame to round off exposed edges of the concrete and prevent chipping
- Cover the concrete with a plastic sheet raised on wooden supports to allow slow drying. Weigh it down with bricks
- Once the concrete is set, you can install your shed and remove the wooden frame with a crowbar
Rhosgoch
Rhosgoch is a tiny town in the north of the island of Anglesey, Wales, about 3.5 miles (5.6 kilometres) to the south-west of Amlwch. A brief range to the west of the town is the pond Llyn Hafodol and also a mile to the south is Anglesey's largest body of water the storage tank Llyn Alaw (Water Lily Lake). The village once had a station on the Anglesey Central Railway. Although the tracks still exist, no train has actually worked on them given that 1993. Likewise connected to the train, was a brief south-west dealing with spur that brought about an oil terminal. This was connected to a floating dock in the sea off of Amlwch, where super-tankers could dock in all tides and feed oil using Rhosgoch and also a pipe to Stanlow oil refinery. This procedure lasted for 16 years between 1974 as well as 1990. The first twister of the record-breaking 1981 UK tornado outbreak, an F1/T2 tornado, touched down near Rhosgoch at around 10:19 local time on 23 November 1981.