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Along the side of my property is a retaining wall dropping about 750mm to my neighbour's property. A fence stands on top of this with the 75mm posts on my half (the fence is mine on the deed plan) recessed into slots in the wall.
These posts are not secure, they may well be rotten and don't appear to be fixed into anything substantial under the gravel.
My plan is to redo the whole fence, starting with the posts, but I'm at a bit of a loss as to how best to fix them. I'd like the posts not to encroach on the path anymore than they already do to maintain space for a mini digger when we redo the garden properly. It's a relatively sheltered spot, between two houses, so I'm not hugely concerned about wind, and the prevailing wind blows from the side of the wall, so I'm not too concerned about it pushing the wall down.
My major concerns are:
Getting enough concrete around the post, considering it's recessed into the wall. I could easily end up with only 1/4 the pretty actually encased in concrete.
Water getting trapped in-between the wall and the post (which might have accelerated their demise to this point).
Having to do this jobs every again: if I ever bother to upgrade the path from the crappy concrete slabs there at the moment it'll only become harder to get another rotten post out.
To that end I'm thinking of getting the existing posts out and replacing them with these concrete-in post shoes. They are nearly as long as a post would be (2400 post/1800 fence/600 in-ground) and will allow at least an inch of concrete on each side of the post (which should bond to the wall bricks too).
Any thoughts or experience on this plan? I was originally looking at bolt-down post shoes fixed on top of the wall but after some light reading I realise that's a pretty bad idea.
Sorry for the essay. I tend to overthink these things!
These posts are not secure, they may well be rotten and don't appear to be fixed into anything substantial under the gravel.
My plan is to redo the whole fence, starting with the posts, but I'm at a bit of a loss as to how best to fix them. I'd like the posts not to encroach on the path anymore than they already do to maintain space for a mini digger when we redo the garden properly. It's a relatively sheltered spot, between two houses, so I'm not hugely concerned about wind, and the prevailing wind blows from the side of the wall, so I'm not too concerned about it pushing the wall down.
My major concerns are:
Getting enough concrete around the post, considering it's recessed into the wall. I could easily end up with only 1/4 the pretty actually encased in concrete.
Water getting trapped in-between the wall and the post (which might have accelerated their demise to this point).
Having to do this jobs every again: if I ever bother to upgrade the path from the crappy concrete slabs there at the moment it'll only become harder to get another rotten post out.
To that end I'm thinking of getting the existing posts out and replacing them with these concrete-in post shoes. They are nearly as long as a post would be (2400 post/1800 fence/600 in-ground) and will allow at least an inch of concrete on each side of the post (which should bond to the wall bricks too).
Any thoughts or experience on this plan? I was originally looking at bolt-down post shoes fixed on top of the wall but after some light reading I realise that's a pretty bad idea.
Sorry for the essay. I tend to overthink these things!
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