How To: DIY Landscape Stairs
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- Опубликовано: 7 сен 2024
- The easiest way to make steps or stairs on a slope of your property. These DIY Landscape Stairs were so very easy to make! Join us as we show you how to make landscape stairs or steps for your sloped land so you don’t slip.
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We also have videos on building our chicken coop.
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Easy Coops plans: easycoops.com/...
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Here are all the videos of the Chicken Coop Build Series:
*Part 1:
• Easy DIY Chicken Coop ...
**Part 2:
• Easy DIY Chicken Coop ...
***Part 3:
• Easy DIY Chicken Coop ...
****Part 4:
• Easy DIY Chicken Coop ...
*****Part 5:
• Easy DIY Chicken Coop ...
******Part 6:
• Easy DIY Chicken Coop ...
*******Part 7:
• Easy DIY Chicken Coop ...
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Hello Nick, that is really a great job building on a slope isn't easy. It turned out really nice. Jim and I watched together. I love how you did this. We should put some steps up to the little house on the hill. Seeing this is making us rethink what we want to do. I loved the way it curved. It reminded me of the steps at our local state park. thanks for showing. 💕NonnaGrace
Thanks NonnaGrace!
We also were thinking about steps on trails at our favorite parks when we built these. They were SO easy! I hope you and Jim are able to build some of your own soon. Thanks for the comment!
-Nick 😃👍
I think this is exactly what I need! Thank you for sharing!
This is the simple approach I’ve been searching for!! Thank you 🙏🏽
You’re welcome! Glad to help!!
Thank u Nick i like your idea and might tweak it a bit but i have a start
Glad to help!
Thanks will try mine today thanks for information
Thanks for the video!
Thank you. I probably won’t do the same exact thing but you gave me some ideas 💡:)
That’s what my hope was, not to provide an exact template, but inspiration! We appreciate you taking the time to leave a thoughtful comment with good feedback for us. -Nick & Danielle
Very cool steps!! Thanks for sharing this, we might need to do something like this. 😊👍💗
wow, awesome
My experience with cherry tone landscape timbers is that they rot fairly quickly.
Right you are. Needed to at least treat the cut ends. The termites are salivating.
Don’t worry, no wood lasts for very long here in AZ. The sun will get it before anything else.
would you recommend filling with gravel instead of crushed stones because I intend to build it on a steep slope and I'm worried about the rain washing away the soil or crushed stones
Yes, that would work much better if expecting lots of water all at once.
Thanks for watching!
-Nick 😃👍
One good rain...
These stairs have taken plenty of AZ monsoon rains for 3 years and are still holding up well. Thanks for the comment.
@@AZHighlandHomestead I stand corrected!
Did you use wood stain on the timbers?
Nope, they came that way from the store.
I see Nonna Grace’s comment. She’s so awesome and knowledgeable about chickens. Saw your comment on my Instagram so thought I would come and subscribe. 😊👍❤️
She sure is Pam! Thanks for stopping by and I see that you did subscribe. We appreciate it!!
-Nick & Danielle
Great job. The noises at night
Thanks!
Appreciate you adding a comment!
Have you subscribed to our channel? It would really help us out!
-Nick 😊👍
Does it matter if you start at the top and work down? Aren't steps usually built from the bottom up? What circumstances dictate which way to go? I have a sloped yard that needs this. thannks
I like to start at the bottom and work my way up. It’s easier to line it up it seems
Look up a video on “how to figure out slope”
Why did u not film the payoff in the light of the following day? 😳
The thumbnail photo shows it pretty well.
@@AZHighlandHomestead 🤣😂🤣🙄
@SevenDaysToNoon 🤔
You didn't show how you actually installed the stairs......
I explained every part though. Most of the work is using the level and small shovel to prepare the stair to be flat. Drill holes through the wood, hammer the rebar sections through the drilled holes. Let me know if you have questions, I’d be glad to help.
I have lots of hard rocks in the way of the rebar. It’s all really hard and compacted dirt and rocks and has been walked on as a path for years. How can I make sure they stay put? @@AZHighlandHomestead
Did they hold up?
They did! We have moved, but they were doing great when we checked in with the new homeowner
Cutting rebar with a reciprocating saw seems like a REALLY bad idea...
It would be better with a cut off saw or angle grinder for sure. I’ve now used the recip saw to cut it hundreds of times however and it works for me, but I have to go slow, clamp it down, and ensure my own personal safety. If you don’t feel safe doing it this way, please don’t. You are responsible for yourself.
As long as you're using a carbide blade, it should be fine. I've even seen people cut steel i-beams with a sawzall when other tools weren't available. As long as the shoe is anchored on the material you're cutting, it'll do the job safely.
At least near us in N.Cal, HD sells different sizes of rebar in cut pieces like 1', 2', etc. Maybe not as cheap, but super simple to just grab a handful and be done with it.
Too much talking man
That's the best video
What a fucked up thing to say 🤡