I haven't been on here in a long time, but wanted to share.
I have been wanting to do a wood shed for a long time. On my property, deep in the woods, were the remains of some old telephone poles. I always thought it would be neat to use some of the poles for a woodshed and finally got around to cutting them and using my Bobcat to haul them out of the woods. I dug holes with a manual post hole digger and a pry bar (to soften up the dirt) and concreted them into the ground.
It cost about $280 to put this together and I did a metal roof. The dimensions are 20' X 8'(it is about 8 ft high in the front, 7 ft in the back) but will probably only store about 5' of wood to allow for the overhang and rain or snow blowing in. For now I put rubber roofing material on the ground to keep the mud off my shoes and put some pallets on top. Will leave an opening to walk through to get to wood on the far side. (there is some gravel under the rubber) I figure just putting on the ground is a lot cheaper than putting in a floor and sturdier, I can replace pallets at any time. Also, I figure if water puddles I will put some holes in the rubber to let it drain.
I put 2 X8's treated for the header, then 2 X4's every 2 feet for joists, attached with hurricane straps, then 2X4X10's for the purlins and then the metal roofing material you can get at the box stores. No plywood (it can be expensive now).
I have been wanting to do a wood shed for a long time. On my property, deep in the woods, were the remains of some old telephone poles. I always thought it would be neat to use some of the poles for a woodshed and finally got around to cutting them and using my Bobcat to haul them out of the woods. I dug holes with a manual post hole digger and a pry bar (to soften up the dirt) and concreted them into the ground.
It cost about $280 to put this together and I did a metal roof. The dimensions are 20' X 8'(it is about 8 ft high in the front, 7 ft in the back) but will probably only store about 5' of wood to allow for the overhang and rain or snow blowing in. For now I put rubber roofing material on the ground to keep the mud off my shoes and put some pallets on top. Will leave an opening to walk through to get to wood on the far side. (there is some gravel under the rubber) I figure just putting on the ground is a lot cheaper than putting in a floor and sturdier, I can replace pallets at any time. Also, I figure if water puddles I will put some holes in the rubber to let it drain.
I put 2 X8's treated for the header, then 2 X4's every 2 feet for joists, attached with hurricane straps, then 2X4X10's for the purlins and then the metal roofing material you can get at the box stores. No plywood (it can be expensive now).
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