So I have a country property, around the house is cleared - just dirt. Its in area that gets a lot of weathering.... So over the years the weatherboards have rotten quite badly... Time to upgrade and replace.
I am thinking of pulling the weatherboard off, replacing the cladding with vertical James Hardie Oblique cladding - as i really want to modernise the look of the house.... It being a cement sheet base type product I think its perfect for aBushfire Atack Level.
So the house is on stumps which has weatherboards currently around 60cm or more from the ground level - I really want my cladding to go all the way to the ground. Its a bush area - I have found snakes / rodents / foxes / all sorts of animals living under the house, and in the past had wiring chewed etc. So wanting to prevent rodent / animal entry as much as possible.
Yes I understand the need for airflow - I can do that in other ways with grills / even solar fans / to get airflow having fine mesh to stop the uninvited guests.
Hence I originally thought, cement sheet type product - I could take the cladding all the way to the ground. Unfortunately after reading the instalation documention and specification - no it needs to be 140mm or something similar from above ground. I think mainly because of airflow.. . but not wanting to get rising damp on this anyway... Water already runs away from the house there would be very little pooling - but it does get massive rain at times.
Any suggestions on what to do...
- I could run around with a concrete edge to ensure the ground is slightly higher along the part of where the cladding comes down and meets this instead of ground, and prevent any run of water / pooling of water... But I dont want to be laying lots of concrete runs...
- I could place something like a hardwood sleeper on the ground and have cladding butt against that...
Any other ideas - some PVC edging ?