These DOD pics? Seemed to have blocked out the tomato farm in the background
Amazing what wind can do. I remember my mom telling me she had seen straw pushed through a telephone pole by a tornado when she was growing up in tornado alley in IL.
Holy canoli. I can't believe that still pulled it forward. Would it have helped you think to. Have the concrete shape be square and not pointed like that? How much further back could you dig? What if for the line anchor you went back another 20' or so, dug a big ass hole poured a big ass ball of concrete, and buried it and attached to that? I can't imagine that would move. A big ass dead weight buried in the ground, no way, no how, not once, not nevaForgot to post pics of the sail. I blocked out houses and all that for a little privacy.
The blue part is what was patched where the sail ripped from a random tornado that came through our properties.
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These are the two pads I put in to help the pole hold stay in place. The galvenized pole is ten foot in the ground and filled with concrete and the sail still pulled it forward. We then added the guy wire to the back but that eventually started to pull out despite how far into the ground we got it.
The pad around the pole is 1500# worth of concrete and the pad at the back is around 1200# of concrete. I didn't get a great finish on top because I don't really care how it looks at the back plus my concrete trowels walked off (I just found them the other day)
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Do NOT use foam in Texas. I can't say it enough. It's too hot and humid here for foam. It'll trap moisture behind the foam which will rot out the house in 20 years. I HIGHLY recommend using natural cellulose insulation, especially when they can pack it in.If my attic was empty I'd spend the coin to foam the roof. @balakay @Silverback
It all depends on the soil beneath your slab. It might level it out for a year or two but then sink down because the ground underneath isn't compacted enough.Since your obviously not redoing the pole, what if you had someone inject that expanding foam in there they normally inject under driveways to level them with? That should help stabilize it I would think. @Anathollo

Do NOT use foam in Texas. I can't say it enough. It's too hot and humid here for foam. It'll trap moisture behind the foam which will rot out the house in 20 years. I HIGHLY recommend using natural cellulose insulation, especially when they can pack it in.
It's awesome sound deadining material and insulation.
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I pointed the front slab because it matched the curve of the garden edging in front of it (put the dirt and edging back after I pulled the forms out). I can't mess with my mom's garden or shrink it in size. Gardening is one of her hobbies.Holy canoli. I can't believe that still pulled it forward. Would it have helped you think to. Have the concrete shape be square and not pointed like that? How much further back could you dig? What if for the line anchor you went back another 20' or so, dug a big ass hole poured a big ass ball of concrete, and buried it and attached to that? I can't imagine that would move. A big ass dead weight buried in the ground, no way, no how, not once, not neva
but it should hold fine. The pole didn't even move when I hooked the sail up to it. Yep, I spent $10k fixing the stucco walls of a $5 million dollar mansion. Within a couple of months, new cracks started forming in new areas of the propertyOr a home with those fake stucco exterior walls.
Luckily I had pictures to show the owner that it wasn't the same cracks we had fixed already. He sold the property a couple of years later because (and this is a direct quote from him)- "this house is going to bankrupt me" which is hilarious because he's a mega millionaire.Seems like every where around me here in DFW got rain this last week but us. Pretty crispy around here with Temps over 100 all week. Water well has been getting a work out latelyEverything is so green at the house, we must of got significant rainfall while we gone. I was worried how dry everything was before we left and being gone over the 4th cause there were numerous brush fires everyday.
Seems like every where around me here in DFW got rain this last week but us. Pretty crispy around here with Temps over 100 all week. Water well has been getting a work out lately
I'm 28 miles SE of Sant Ant.
Before we left town everything was brown, stupid hot 100+ & dry & daily brush fires burning.
I kept my sprinklers on a lot before we left, to keep my main yard green in case there was a brush fire in area, well last months water bill was $627, I was expecting it to be $400...
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Holy canoli. I thought our $100 water Bill was high.I'm 28 miles SE of Sant Ant.
Before we left town everything was brown, stupid hot 100+ & dry & daily brush fires burning.
I kept my sprinklers on a lot before we left, to keep my main yard green in case there was a brush fire in area, well last months water bill was $627, I was expecting it to be $400...
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Holy canoli. I thought our $100 water Bill was high.
If I didn't have free water on my property I can't imagine what my water bill would be to keep this whole acre green.

I'm 28 miles SE of Sant Ant.
Before we left town everything was brown, stupid hot 100+ & dry & daily brush fires burning.
I kept my sprinklers on a lot before we left, to keep my main yard green in case there was a brush fire in area, well last months water bill was $627, I was expecting it to be $400...
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Yikes! in 14 years Ive never paid more than $80 a quarter for water. One of the benefits of having one of the largest aquifers in the country under your house.
Blue is our aquifer, the Kirkwood-Cohansey. Takes up more than 50% of our state. Also why we actually have a state forest. State stole the land from a wealthy guy who bought it to sell clean water to Philly. At least they named it after him after they robbed him.
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