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The Field Journal
Expert advice, project spotlights, and insights for Michigan homeowners.


Why Phasing Your Backyard Project Starts Underground (And In The Mud)
Summery Building a multi-stage outdoor space requires installing the structural hardscapes—retaining walls or the patio footprint—first to eliminate mud and stabilize the property. Surviving Michiana clay requires an 11-inch excavation, non-woven geotextile fabric , and 8 inches of crushed clean stone to future-proof the surface for heavier phase-two additions. Skipping the fabric or utilizing a shallow base guarantees your phase-one patio will sink and separate before you ev

Salzman Services
4 days ago5 min read


Wood vs. Gas Fire Pits: Why "Romance" Often Loses to Reality
The Summary The Verdict: If you want a hobby, buy a wood pit; if you want a lifestyle, install gas. The Reality: 80% of wood fire pits we install sit unused after the first season because the "friction" of gathering wood, lighting it, and managing smoke outweighs the benefit on a Tuesday night. The Michiana Factor: In our damp, clay-heavy region, wood pits often become sludge collectors, whereas gas pits provide instant heat without the smoke blowing into your neighbor's w

Salzman Services
Feb 125 min read


Reclaiming the Slope: Why Your "Useless" Hill is actually Your Best Future Patio
The Verdict Slopes in Southwest Michigan are liabilities; they are dangerous to mow, they channel water toward your foundation, and they represent square footage you pay taxes on but never use. A tiered hardscape system solves the drainage crisis immediately while creating flat, usable "rooms" for fire pits or seating. However, if you build this wall without accounting for the Hydrostatic Pressure of wet clay, the freeze-thaw cycle will push it over within three winters. Th

Salzman Services
Dec 19, 20255 min read
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