Build your own garden poles

These DIY garden celestial pole have a simple design , can be made from supply you may have on hand ( or are cheap to bribe ) , and are fun to personalize . The rod in this projection are made from a serial publication of stacked 3 - 1/2 - inch substantial closure and 3 - in diameter river rock candy . I used a chop saw to trim a 4×4 forest Emily Post ( which are actually 3 - 1/2 × 3 - 1/2 inches ) into block . If you do n’t have one , you’re able to demand your lumber source to reduce them for you . Watch the telecasting above to see how to make these unique ornaments .

Decide on the garden pole design

you’re able to create whatever pattern you need on the block ( or leave them plain — wood texture can be beautiful , too ! ) . For efficiency , I did this process first , then cut my 6 - animal foot - long Grant Wood posts into blocks , but you could decorate each blockage individually . I ’ll show you how I deck my blocks in “ Block Decor ” below . Once the pulley-block are trim down , stack them in different combinations until you find a design that appeals to your taste .

Block Decor

Prep surface by lightly sandpaper with 80 - 120 gumption sandpaper . To get these stripes , I ran a strip of painter ’s tape along opposite face of the post , put on the fleeceable semi - vaporous stain on all four sides and get it dry . Then I peeled the mag tape off , mask the edge of the unspotted stripes and stain the stripes light blue .

I chose to stress the stripes with a Sir Henry Wood - combust line on each side using its vallecula peak . You could also utilise a black or dark brownpaint markerto achieve a similar face .

Prestaining save me time and after cutting the lumber into the cube , it was easy to play with the arrangement and see the final normal appear .

Carrie Topp

Once the block were cut , I stained the exposed sides light dark .

Start constructing at the bottom

These magnetic pole stand around 32 inches tall , each using seven closure along with one or two muckle of river rock . To start assembling , practise a 2 - column inch - thick hole with a 1/2 - inch drill bit in the bottom center of the base mental block . Insert a 12 - in duration of rebar in the pickle as in the pic above . This will allow you to leave the remaining 10 inch of rebar to push into the flat coat and secure the garden terminal in place .

Connect the blocks

For a more static garden pole , I connected my blocks with joggle pins . Drill two 1/2 - inch - deep holes in two corner 1 - 1/4 column inch in from the edge on the top of the base block with a 1/4 - in drill bit . The pic above shows how to use dowel plaza to transfer the location of one lot of dowel holes to the like place in the closure above it . Repeat this on each couplet of connect blocks and operate them together with the joggle pins ( a little snatch of exterior wood glue or epoxy will make it even stronger ) .

Add river rocks

I care the mixed materials tone , so I used 1/4 - inch aluminum rods to create a cage for heap river rocks within each garden perch . With a hack saw , I cut each rod 2 inches longer than the mountain was tall . See how those fit in the rod in the photo above .

Top off the garden pole

I used a cube cut at a 20 - degree slant as a decorative topper for these garden poles , but you could also practice 4×4 Charles William Post cap from the house nerve center for a finishing trace . That ’s what I love about these garden poles : Once you have the canonical process down , you may ruffle and match material to fit your style easily !

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Carrie Topp

diy-garden-poles-block-design: A pair of garden poles help define the offset steps to prevent a stumble.

diy-garden-poles-block-design: A pair of garden poles help define the offset steps to prevent a stumble.

diy-garden-poles-staining: The stripe becomes the width of the painter’s tape. Apply light blue stain between two rows of painter’s tape (inset).

diy-garden-poles-woodburn: Resting your hand on a second block gives added control while using the wood-burning tool.

diy-garden-poles-rebar: A 12-inch long rebar secures the garden pole into the ground.

diy-garden-poles-dowel-pins: A dowel center fits in the drilled hole and has a sharp point to mark the block above. Line up and press the top block down onto the points.

diy-garden-poles-river-rocks: Cut each 1/4-inch aluminum rod 2 inches longer than the height of the stack. Drill holes 1 inch deep.

diy-garden-poles-topper: Semi-transparent stain allows wood grain to show through the top and exposed sides.