5/21/2009 3:34 AM
Email this article Print this article  

Dirt is not dirt cheap


This article has been read 1495 times.

I spent months lifting life-sized Lincoln logs, building a backyard barrier.

Made from more than 60 eight-foot-long railroad ties, the 6-by-30-foot retainer replaced a fallen wall of stone.

The stones used to build the old wall were from a time when men were men and many had hernias. Island slaves long ago rolled these stones to make this wall. Archeologists have wondered for years how they managed to lift them. After two pots of my wife's coffee, I found the answer.

Caffeine.




Rate This Story:
1 the lowest - 5 the highest
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
Current rating:
Not since my days of concert going had I experienced such heavy Stones. Now, as I limp from bed each morning, my back reminds me of what fun it all was. With the weighty hand-cut blocks removed, I cobbled together, row by row, the great railroad tie wall of Amwell.

I love the smell of creosote in the morning.

It smells like ... landscaping.

Once the retainer was finished, the chain saw and sledgehammer put away, it was time to back fill. I ordered a truckload of 2B limestone to be delivered.

After paying the dump truck driver almost 200 bucks, I realized that never before had I paid so much for so little.

Two hundred dollars for a truckload of gravel?!

The price of gravel was quickly overshadowed by the cost of dirt.

What I needed to complete my landscaping project was, roughly, a triaxle truck's worth of fill dirt - not anything special, mind you - just dirt. I wasn't looking for topsoil. I did not want to order potting soil. I didn't need a manicured mushroom and manure mulch mix.

I was looking for plain, ordinary, cheap American dirt - the kind that's in the ground.

When the first dirt broker quoted me a delivered price of $400, I scoffed and hung up. When the next landscape delivery outlet quoted me a price of $520, I scoffed and hung up. When the third stone and gravel dealer told me his price was $480, I called the first place back and spoke in a fake voice.

Four hundred dollars for a truckload of dirt?!

Many would wonder why, when you own a farm, would you pay for dirt?

It's a good question.

The answer is simple. My tractor is too small, and my brain is too dumb. Instead of buying the affordable but new, smaller machine, I should have gone with a bigger, used tractor, one capable of lifting heavy loads, like gravel and dirt.

Instead of dropping out of college to play guitars and spin records, I should have stayed in school and gotten that degree in business.

That way, instead of being the man paying, I could be the man selling.

I've heard the argument, truck drivers of America. The price of diesel fuel went through the roof and never found its way back down to Earth. You don't set the prices. You just haul the dirt.

Dirt? Not dirt cheap.

To hear Scott Paulsen's column, visit www.observer-reporter.com. He can be heard each weekday afternoon from 3-7 p.m. on 1250 ESPN Radio.




Home



1 comments

Dirt Free : 5/23/2009
HaPpY bIrThDaY!!!!!

Long Time Reader
All comments will be reviewed by administrators and posted to their respective articles within 24 hours. Comments deemed inappropriate will not be posted.
Subject:
Body:
Poster:
captcha ac405f91fa4c4af299e08e07f1f43c16
Enter text seen above:








Marketplace
Classifieds
Jobs
Cars
Real Estate
Rate card
Photo Store
News
Local
Obituaries
Police Beat
Business
State
Nation
World
Communities
Washington County
Greene County
South Hills
Sports
Headlines
Blogs
Columns
Opinion
Editorials
Letters
Submit Letter
Blogs
Columns
Forum
Lifestyle
Entertainment
Engagements
Weddings
Anniversaries
Births
Calendar
Announcement Forms
Service
Subscribe
Temp. stop delivery
About Us
Contact Us
Terms of Service
Facebook | Twitter
Newsletter
This page is best viewed using Firefox.
Spreadfirefox Affiliate Button
© 2009 Observer Publishing Company. All rights reserved.
This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.