Devin Devine, contractor based out of Blakeslee Pennsylvania, projects competed across the USA
contact devin@devineescapes.com

Yes, I still offer phone consultations

DIY hardscape/masonry/flagstone help rates:

$123.00 for one hour

$80 for a half hour

Monies are payable via Venmo, paypal  or zelle.

Short answer: both are acceptable…but how much good stone do you want to bury? Usually, I do gravel–and also bury a course/bury half a course..

A dry stone wall is built without mortar and with no concrete foundation. As such, the wall is flexible, and can adjust itself as the ground swells and settles with the seasons. However, to ensure the longevity of your wall, your going to want to minimize movement of soil, and movement of your wall. The three most common foundation types for dry stone wall are a) right on top of the bare soil b) bury a course of stone and c) gravel foundation/crushed stone.

Dry stone walls built right on top of soil

I’ve seen walls like this fail. Many of the walls that I’ve investigated that were built with no foundation whatsoever are usually property borders, made from rough field stone, often small sized material, like fist-sized stones…and it’s usually more of a mound, less of a wall. Other walls that I’ve seen are basically built “on dirt” but are well built, with at least the topsoil/sod removed, and maybe half of a course buried.

Buried course foundation

I’ve seen walls built like this last (if well-built well-hearted, plenty of through stones and solid cap stone), and I’ve re-built walls like this as well. To date, I’ve never been able to bring myself to use this method. To make this method work, you generally want to use the largest stones available, for the first course (foundational course/footers), with a lot of surface area, to spread out and distribute the weight of the stone wall. And you want to bury the entire course, maybe 4 to 6 inches of wall stone–buried.

Gravel foundation for dry stone walls

So here’s what I do:

  • Dig about 8″ down, removing all organic soil and roots, until I am building on mineral soil, clay, sand or stone.
  • use a hand tamper to compact the excavated area
  • spread out 4″ to 6″ road base type gravel. This will be crushed stone, 3/4″ in size, with quarry fines, aka 3/4″ minus, item number 6 (in New York) aka 2A modified gravel (in Pennsylvania and Delaware) or CR#6 in Maryland…..the names vary. In California they call it base rock. When I travel for work, I just go to the masonry supplier and look at their gravel in person, or verbally describe “3/4″ or 1″ angular crushed stone, with smaller bits, all the way down to stone flour”. Exact size of the aggregate may vary, I’ve used material that had 2″ chunks in there too, so long as it has smaller sizes and fines.
  • Tamp the gravel. If it’s 6 inches or thicker, I’ll do it in lifts. Lay 3″ or 4″, tamp, then 3″ more and tamp. If the material is really dry, then slightly dampen the gravel before tamping. The stone dust is like a binder….like flour. Dampen it, because you can’t tamp dry dust, it’s like getting dry flour to stick together.
  • Bury at least half of my first course, sometimes a full course. As the grade fluctuates, up to a course and a half my end up buried. Generally larger pieces are used for the first course, with more surface area.

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Larger stones are still generally selected, for the buried course

When sorting out my wall material at the beginning of the job, I’ll selected generally large stones for the half buried course. Since the course is to be buried, the foundation stones may vary in thickness, and may be less flat on on the bottom side. This course will be leveling up using gravel, stone dust or soil, so it can tolerate a bit more irregularity as compared to the corner stones, caps and through stones–which will also be larger material, set aside at the beginning of the project.

 

The gravel, we assume, provides a bit of a buffer…..it won’t hold water and then expand and heave the way a clay soil will, in cold winter months, nor will it get soft and cause the wall to sink into the earth. Even if I were to bury a full course of wall stone…..I’d still prefer to put some gravel underneath that buried course, or at least have dug down to mineral soil.

dry stone wall foundations and diagram

dry stone wall cross-section/diagram, showing approximately 6″ buried gravel and half a course of stone buried.

As you can see, the gravel foundation is wider than the base of the wall, for added stability. Same thing should ideally be done, if you’re going with the buried course option–the buried course should be wider than the base of the wall. So if the base of the wall is going to be 20″ wide, you might have a 28″ wide foundation.

Phone consultation services now available

DIY dry stone wall and Hardscape help

My rates for DIY consultations are as follows:

$80.00 for a half hour consultation

$119.00 for a full hour

Monies are payable via paypal, venmo or Zelle.

 

 

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