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Luther
 
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Default Gypsum? Sheetrock questions

Hello, I am doing a little remodeling to my house and yard and I
thought of a question about sheetrock. I think that the sheetrock that
I'm using is made out of gypsum??, and I'm just wondering, if I'm
wrong, what sheetrock is made out of. I need some extra dirt to use as
fill in my yard for my project out there and I was wondering if it
would be possible and alright for the earth if I broke down the
sheetrock, took the paper off, and used the sheetrock rubble as fill in
the ground as a method of "disposing" of it.

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RicodJour
 
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Default Gypsum? Sheetrock questions

Luther wrote:
Hello, I am doing a little remodeling to my house and yard and I
thought of a question about sheetrock. I think that the sheetrock that
I'm using is made out of gypsum??, and I'm just wondering, if I'm
wrong, what sheetrock is made out of. I need some extra dirt to use as
fill in my yard for my project out there and I was wondering if it
would be possible and alright for the earth if I broke down the
sheetrock, took the paper off, and used the sheetrock rubble as fill in
the ground as a method of "disposing" of it.


Gypsum is a naturally occurring mineral - hydrated calcium sulfate.
I've never heard of using gypsum for gardening purposes, not being much
of a gardener (okay, I kill plants! Happy, now?! Anyway, after a
quick search:
http://www.claytonontheweb.com/home-...m-sulfate.html
So it does seem to have a potentially beneficial effect on plants. I
would guess it would be like vitamins, though - too much would be bad.
If you stripped the paper and kept the gypsum in a bag you could get
use it as fertilizer and dispose of it that way.

R

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Default Gypsum? Sheetrock questions

Heck , just break it up in fairly small pieces, leave paper on it, fill
in the hole and cover it a bit with top soil and water it down and
forget about it. It will biodegrade in time and eventually you'll never
know you put it there.
Jack (an old timer of 89)

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Darrell Dorsey
 
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Default Gypsum? Sheetrock questions


"RicodJour" wrote in message
oups.com...
Luther wrote:
Hello, I am doing a little remodeling to my house and yard and I
thought of a question about sheetrock. I think that the sheetrock that
I'm using is made out of gypsum??, and I'm just wondering, if I'm
wrong, what sheetrock is made out of. I need some extra dirt to use as
fill in my yard for my project out there and I was wondering if it
would be possible and alright for the earth if I broke down the
sheetrock, took the paper off, and used the sheetrock rubble as fill in
the ground as a method of "disposing" of it.


Gypsum is a naturally occurring mineral - hydrated calcium sulfate.
I've never heard of using gypsum for gardening purposes, not being much
of a gardener (okay, I kill plants! Happy, now?! Anyway, after a
quick search:
http://www.claytonontheweb.com/home-...m-sulfate.html
So it does seem to have a potentially beneficial effect on plants. I
would guess it would be like vitamins, though - too much would be bad.
If you stripped the paper and kept the gypsum in a bag you could get
use it as fertilizer and dispose of it that way.


Gypsum is comminly used to help break up clay soils. I used bags of it at
my old house when making flower beds. I tilled in gypsum into the soil.

As posted, why not just bury the pieces with the paper. The track builders
do it all the time.

Darrell


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