I bought a case of these. I stacked them side by side, one course high, on my garden's lower edge and filled them with rocks (from my garden). What I ended up with was an affordable, easy to repurpose, clean lined, weatherproof Gabion wall. Turned out pretty cool. If you need to build a small-ish Gabion wall, these will do just fine. We shoveled dirt into the tote, then shook it around. The rocks that were too big stayed in the tote. The dirt sifted out. Repeat until tote is full of rocks. Or - Use one tote for your rock sorter, and pour the rocks into the other totes that are already lined up to form your wall. When you're sick of looking at them 10 years from now, pull them up, pour the rocks out on your driveway/neighbors yard/drainfield and your done. Use the totes for something else. Plus, as you find rocks in your garden dirt, just toss them on the top of the bins. As they settle over the years, you can expect to add a good layer or two of additional rocks right on top. You get a nice, exposed rectangular shaped rock wall, rather than the classic ever-expanding rock wall pile look. If they're completely full, pour a bag or two of sand or fine gravel over them to help pack them down. Then you can stand on them like steps, they keep the dirt from washing down the hill, and you could plant sedums, moss or other sandy loving plants right on top of them. Or keep one as a mini zen rock/sand garden. Mine hold back a constantly marching Mint/Mojito garden, and keeps the end of a foot path from breaking lose and sliding down a hill into my first terraced garden bed. I wrapped landscape fabric up the front (that is burried - the 'dirt wall' side), and when the mint hits it, it goes no further. Mint holds the sandy dirt together and doesn't take over my entire property, bins and rocks make the wall, I use the steps to avoid trampling my other plants and everybody gets Mojitos. Win/win/win.