In Germany bricklaying is considered to be one of the traditional trades.
The art to bricklaying is to use bricks with clean faces and to plumb and level in a straight line from end to end.
In bricklaying a large strong steel trowel is used for spreading mortar and chopping bricks to shape.
The trowel is like an extension of the bricklayers arm and rarely put down whilst bricklaying.
It is not unusual for a number of bricklaying gangs to work on different sections of a building job.
In the UK a bricklaying labourer may earn up to £16,000 a year.
Bricklaying is a true craft and art form. It is also one of the oldest trades throughout the world.
A good indication of quality bricklaying is to look at the outside of a completed wall and check the verticality of the perps.
Bricklaying: The laying of rectangular pieces of baked clay called bricks one after another, layer upon layer until a desired height is reached. A composition of lime and sand called mortar is spread between each layer which hardens and bonds the bricks together to form a solid mass.
It’s unfortunate that the novice homesteader will often make the assumption that bricklaying is easy.