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#1
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Drooping greenhouse
About 20 years old, we have a cedar greenhouse where the soil has crept up
on one side over the lowest board and it is rotting, causing the whole structure to lean over slightly. Is there any way of resolving this? I can only think of propping up the ridge with a pole and a couple of acrojacks to bring it back and take the weight off the bottom whilst remedial action is applied. |
#2
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Drooping greenhouse
gareth G4SDW GQRP #3339 wrote:
About 20 years old, we have a cedar greenhouse where the soil has crept up on one side over the lowest board and it is rotting, causing the whole structure to lean over slightly. Is there any way of resolving this? I can only think of propping up the ridge with a pole and a couple of acrojacks to bring it back and take the weight off the bottom whilst remedial action is applied. I'd suggest posting in uk.d-i-y for this sort of hardware thing. A very active group full of knowledgeable people. |
#3
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Drooping greenhouse
On Thu, 3 Mar 2016 09:09:14 -0000, "gareth G4SDW GQRP #3339"
wrote: About 20 years old, we have a cedar greenhouse where the soil has crept up on one side over the lowest board and it is rotting, causing the whole structure to lean over slightly. Is there any way of resolving this? I can only think of propping up the ridge with a pole and a couple of acrojacks to bring it back and take the weight off the bottom whilst remedial action is applied. It sounds like your greenhouse foundations are on soft ground and one side has sunk faster than the other. I had a DIY greenhouse like that but I've now got one with a partial concrete base. Steve -- Neural Network Software for Windows http://www.npsnn.com |
#4
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Drooping greenhouse
"Chris Hogg" wrote in message
... On Thu, 3 Mar 2016 09:09:14 -0000, "gareth G4SDW GQRP #3339" wrote: About 20 years old, we have a cedar greenhouse where the soil has crept up on one side over the lowest board and it is rotting, causing the whole structure to lean over slightly. Is there any way of resolving this? I can only think of propping up the ridge with a pole and a couple of acrojacks to bring it back and take the weight off the bottom whilst remedial action is applied. Are you sure it's not just settled on that side due to soft foundations? Not when the old wood comes away in handfuls if you do so much as to breathe on it :-) |
#5
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Drooping greenhouse
Stephen Wolstenholme wrote:
On Thu, 3 Mar 2016 09:09:14 -0000, "gareth G4SDW GQRP #3339" wrote: About 20 years old, we have a cedar greenhouse where the soil has crept up on one side over the lowest board and it is rotting, causing the whole structure to lean over slightly. Is there any way of resolving this? I can only think of propping up the ridge with a pole and a couple of acrojacks to bring it back and take the weight off the bottom whilst remedial action is applied. It sounds like your greenhouse foundations are on soft ground and one side has sunk faster than the other. I had a DIY greenhouse like that but I've now got one with a partial concrete base. No, the wood has rotted away, I had one like this years ago, pulled it down eventually and rebuilt it on a 3 course brick wall. The bottom wooden rail rotted away on this too... |
#6
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Drooping greenhouse
On 03/03/2016 15:56, gareth G4SDW GQRP #3339 wrote:
"Chris Hogg" wrote in message ... On Thu, 3 Mar 2016 09:09:14 -0000, "gareth G4SDW GQRP #3339" wrote: About 20 years old, we have a cedar greenhouse where the soil has crept up on one side over the lowest board and it is rotting, causing the whole structure to lean over slightly. Is there any way of resolving this? I can only think of propping up the ridge with a pole and a couple of acrojacks to bring it back and take the weight off the bottom whilst remedial action is applied. Are you sure it's not just settled on that side due to soft foundations? Not when the old wood comes away in handfuls if you do so much as to breathe on it :-) Surely the glass would not allow it to subside so it must be the foundations? -- Charlie Pridham, Gardening in Cornwall www.roselandhouse.co.uk National collections of Clematis viticella & Lapageria rosea |
#7
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Drooping greenhouse
"Charlie Pridham" wrote in message
... On 03/03/2016 15:56, gareth G4SDW GQRP #3339 wrote: "Chris Hogg" wrote in message ... On Thu, 3 Mar 2016 09:09:14 -0000, "gareth G4SDW GQRP #3339" wrote: About 20 years old, we have a cedar greenhouse where the soil has crept up on one side over the lowest board and it is rotting, causing the whole structure to lean over slightly. Is there any way of resolving this? I can only think of propping up the ridge with a pole and a couple of acrojacks to bring it back and take the weight off the bottom whilst remedial action is applied. Are you sure it's not just settled on that side due to soft foundations? Not when the old wood comes away in handfuls if you do so much as to breathe on it :-) Surely the glass would not allow it to subside so it must be the foundations? Not sure what you mean, but as one side subsides due to the rotting wooden base, then the distortion of the frame on that side causes the glass to crack and then the resultant distortion on the rest of the structure causes further panes to crack. _HOWEVER_ having just picked up the anniversary edition of Gardener's World, and seen the insertion from the www.greenhousepeople.com inside, we've decided to cut our losses and order an aluminium (aluminum for any Yanks reading this :-) ) replacement from their double discount offers. .. |
#8
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Drooping greenhouse
"gareth G4SDW GQRP #3339" wrote:
inside, we've decided to cut our losses and order an aluminium (aluminum for any Yanks reading Not my fault if you Brits use alternate spellings, and the aluminum frame would make a dandy counterpoise! -- Gary Woods O- K2AHC Public keys at home.earthlink.net/~garygarlic, or get 0x1D64A93D via keyserver fingerprint = E2 6F 50 93 7B C7 F3 CA 1F 8B 3C C0 B0 28 68 0B |
#9
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Drooping greenhouse
In message , Gary Woods
writes "gareth G4SDW GQRP #3339" wrote: inside, we've decided to cut our losses and order an aluminium (aluminum for any Yanks reading Not my fault if you Brits use alternate spellings, and the aluminum frame would make a dandy counterpoise! We don't use 'alternate' spellings (swapping between one spelling and another). Ours are 'alternative' (ie 'not the way you spell it'). -- Ian |
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