pete 1st Class Member canton ohio
 Foreman Posts:197
Send Message
 | | 07/10/2008 6:57 AM |
| | I need any suggestions on how to keep the cement/burlap soaked cloth from sliding off the chicken wire. In other words i need to get the cloth to stay in place on the side of the wall till it hardens.The chicken wire is completely vertical. hope the pictures give a better description. |


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pete 1st Class Member canton ohio
 Foreman Posts:197
Send Message
 | | 07/10/2008 7:04 AM |
| | Ok not good pictures but the chicken wire also is under the grinder bridge where you see green vegatation. That is were i heed help in how to apply the burlap soaked mixture to the c wire and get to stay in place. Thanks for any ideas. | | | |
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cjwalas 1st Class Member Santa Barbara, California
 Foreman Posts:128
 Send Message
 | | 07/10/2008 7:23 AM |
| We wired it to the chicken wire in selected positions. It may take a fair amount of this if you have undercuts. Chris | |
 Chris Walas - Rogue County Rwy Santa Barbra, California ( click here to visit the Rogue County Rwy ) | |
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Jerry Barnes 1st Class Member Lexington, NE
 Engineer Posts:1132
 Send Message
 | | 07/10/2008 9:19 AM |
| | Pete, I'd use baling wire. Jerry | | Life is too short to take seriously. | |
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Joe McGarry 1st Class Member Galt, CA
 Brakeman Posts:90
 Send Message
 | | 07/10/2008 10:08 AM |
| Sounds like a 3-man operation. Make up some u shaped wires to tie the burlap to the chicken wire. One guy hold it in place one pokes the clips through the burlap another on the other side twist the wires to hold 'em in place.
Wondering if that fence is rigid enough to support the amount of cement you are going to put on it?
Hope you will post pix of finished project
Best wishes,
Joe | | | |
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pete 1st Class Member canton ohio
 Foreman Posts:197
Send Message
 | | 07/10/2008 5:05 PM |
| | If you look at the fence there already is chicken wire in front of the fence you can not see it in the photo.If you go to poll booth, page two on this form you will see some of the work that my wife and myself have done so far what you will see is chicken wire covered with burlap that has been soaked in cement and spread over the chicken wire this is just the base coat.Chris i have seen pictures on this site of work that you have done all of it is grear looking. | | | |
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pete 1st Class Member canton ohio
 Foreman Posts:197
Send Message
 | | 07/10/2008 5:20 PM |
| | GRRR make that great looking. My typing and speling is not that good. | | | |
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astrayelmgod 1st Class Member Ventura CA
 Foreman Posts:117
Send Message
 | | 07/10/2008 8:07 PM |
| If it's vertical or undercut, you need to tie it on with wire. Working by myself, I had a stretch where I wired the burlap on dry, then painted the cement on later with a cheap paint brush. If you have a lot of surface relief detail, you will have to put wires every couple of inches. It worked OK, but it took forever[\b], and I had to paint the cement on from both sides. Luckily, both sides were reachable.
If it's really steep, but not quite vertical, and no undercuts, you can soak the cement first, as normal, then use your fingers to cram the burlap through the holes in the netting. This works best if the pieces of burlap are on the small side, about 6 inches square. You'll have so much crammed into the burlap that it will take several times as much burlap as any other method, but it's way faster than wiring. Wear rubber gloves for this, the cement is very hard on your skin. Of course, you should be wearing rubber gloves anyway. | | | |
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tj-lee 1st Class Member Central California
 Foreman Posts:126
 Send Message
 | | 07/11/2008 6:46 PM |
| Pete,
I've had some good results from old fashioned wooden clothespins. Mind you I was not working on anything more than vertical and had to toss the pins once removed.
Best, TJ | | http://sites.google.com/site/garden-railroad/ | |
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pete 1st Class Member canton ohio
 Foreman Posts:197
Send Message
 | | 07/11/2008 6:59 PM |
| | TJ thanks for the clothes pin idea that just mite work. My wife and myself will give it a try monday.Will let you know how it turns out. Thanks for all the replies and ideas. | | | |
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kormsen
in the middle of the westparaguayan semi desert
 Conductor Posts:591
 Send Message
 | | 07/12/2008 5:03 AM |
| everything, what i used to do is mentioned. clothes pins. working with small, long pieces, pushing the upper end throug the holes. save: at overhangs simply put the burlap from the inside and add more cement from the outside later. | |
construction site - keep off! | |
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barnmichael 1st Class Member NRH (Ft Worth), TX
 Foreman Posts:101
 Send Message
 | | 07/14/2008 8:15 PM |
| Instead of chicken wire, use mesh lath. This is the stuff put on walls that are going to be stuccoed or covered with concrete or rock. There is also various sizes of hardware cloth, a finer grid of wire. With mesh lath, you can use thick mortar and put it on without the burlap. You can form it with pieces of wood and a large rubber mallet. | | Michael | |
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