ChatterBank3 mins ago
Shed
5 Answers
I have a shed overgrown with climbing plants outside and inside, so i never go in it, (spiders etc). The concrete base that it stands on looks quite pebbly not smooth like normal concrete, and I have noticed this year that all along this base holes are appearing a bit like mouse holes. I pushed a large pebble in one of these holes and it looks as if it has been pushed aside. Is this likely to be some sort of animal or a crumbling of the base itself, it is quite a worry. Janet
PS this shed was in the garden when we bought the bungalow and has not been entered for at least 10 years!!
PS this shed was in the garden when we bought the bungalow and has not been entered for at least 10 years!!
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.You sure it's concrete?! Sounds like could be a compacted dry/weak mix or compacted MOT or Ballast. Sheds don't need much to keep them up tho. You could restore the base in a few mixes by replacing a side at a time, a few inches deep with a new mix of ballast (from a bag) and a bit of cement. 5 or 6 to 1 (ballast to cement) is ample for that job.
snakes burrow.....keep out & leave to funnel webs
http://www.oceanwideimages.com/categories.asp? cID=350
http://www.oceanwideimages.com/categories.asp? cID=350
Ha ha actually mad maggot you have said what I was afraid of. . The trouble is there is a beautiful clematis which has obviously been there for years its stems are almost like tree trunks, and its lovely. The shed itself also looks in good condition, but I think proabably you are right. Who would I go to if I decide to have it demolished - a gardener, a builder or a rat catcher!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Janet