A Flagpole for the Hobbit House

Posted 09 April 2026

Last month I decided it was time to put up a real flagpole to display the American flag in all its glory. Being an engineer, I had to research the heck out of the subject to make sure we got something we would be proud to have in our front yard. A neighbor has a flagpole and he had gotten a flag pole kit from Admiral Flags, right here in Columbus Ohio. I also asked Grok, and he (It?) came up with the same company, so we ordered a 20′ kit from them.

Reading through the instructions on Admiral’s website, I was amazed at the amount of concrete needed for the flagpole foundation. They called for 6-8 80lb bags of quick setting concrete (480 – 640lbs!) for an 18″ diameter by 29″ deep hole – yikes! Being a septuagenarian, I wasn’t very eager to manage 80lb bags, so I decided to start with 10ea 50lb bags (500lbs) and add more if needed. The Admiral website also strongly recommended calling Ohio811 ‘call before you dig’ utility mapping service, so I did that right away. As it turned out that was one of my better moves, as my first intended location was right on top of a utility run to the house. Dodged the bullet on that one!

My planned location in our front yard is at least 150′ away from any electrical outlet and the nearest water faucet, so I had some logistics issues to work through. I needed an additional 100′ water hose, and I decided to use my backup electric generator for electric power. Here’s a short video showing the distances.

From watching some videos regarding quick setting concrete I decided to go with the 5-gallon bucket and electric drill mixing paddle route, so I loaded my brand-new Toyota Tundra pickup with 500lbs of QuickCrete, 2ea Lowes 5-gallon buckets, a cheap 100′ water hose and the mixing paddle.

I had conned a neighbor into helping, so we started digging mid-morning, and had a hole pretty much done in a couple of hours. I was amazed that the first 6-10″ was pretty rocky, but after that it was pretty easy going. Here are some photos of the hole:

Hole about 3/4 full, using 50lb QuickCrete bags and some rods to keep flagpole sleeve vertical

We had to stop at this point because my 20-year-old 1/2″ drill started smoking badly. I couldn’t really complain as I had gotten a LOT of use out of it, but it was apparently time for a new one. The next day I came back with a new 1/2″ hammer-drill and finished the foundation work. I poured concrete up to grade level so we could mow around it without having to come back and weed-whack the base.

The next step (literally) was to install the flag pole itself. My stepson was visiting from St. Louis, so helped me assemble the pole kit and set it into the sleeve.

And here is a short video of the completed flag pole with the U.S. flag proudly flying. Sure wish I had done this 20 years ago, but better late than never!

Proud to be an American!

Frank

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