TwoMarksHand said:
ABATTBQ11 said:
Aggietaco said:
Looks good! Hopefully you threw some #3 bars in there before the pour.
This. Hope you got some steel in that to prevent cracking. Concrete has no tensile strength, so any future ground movement has the potential to snap anything without reinforcement like a toothpick.
Well maybe I ****ed this whole thing up then. I didn't put any rebar in the middle. I figured it not being load bearing (on top), and not too deep in the ground that I would be fine.
I will update in a year or so if it cracks and crumbles to *****
You should be fine with all the control joints you scribed across the pour. Any cracking should start at one of those. When you lay your rocks or bricks, don't lay a rock or brick directly across one of the joints, and don't butt up two pieces with a nice mortar joint directly on top of a joint. A little gap in the rocks between each section makes a crack in your poured concrete base at that point much less noticeable and, also important, provides a convenient way for excess water to drain - don't want to create a lake between the rock work and the house slab. This is where "dry laid" rock works well, where some mortar is used to stick everything together, but not so much that it is oozing out across all the forward facing joints that you then have to work and smooth like you would have to do with normal brick work. Dry laid looks good, and if something cracks in your dry laid mortar it's also not noticeable.
I also didn't see any trees, which is good, because tree roots will definitely screw things up over time. It's a flower bed, so it will probably be well watered, which will also help control any cracking from soil movement.