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Mickwhitt

What did you do today?

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Sparky

Dropped a big-un today (if 60+ feet is big?)… cut up, hauled outa the woods and already picked up and hauled away. Also cut up a tree that came down 6 weeks ago in a wind storm. 

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nylyon

Bet you wished you kept that splitter now huh? 🫤

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Sparky
1 hour ago, nylyon said:

Bet you wished you kept that splitter now huh? 🫤

LOL! Nope, I give it all away so the end user can do the splitting 

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adsm08

Today I remembered that I hate ladders.

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ebinmaine
3 minutes ago, adsm08 said:

Today I remembered that I hate ladders.

 

Yep

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8ntruck

Ran another tank and a half of gas through the leaf blower blowing the rest of the leaves off of the lake front property.  Too windy to burn today.  Tomorrow is supposed to be calmer.

 

Got a pile of leaves about 4' tall and 40' long.  My inner 8, 9, 10 year old says that would be great fun to jump into.  The current almost 70 year old inner me replied 'DON'T YOU DARE DO THAT'!

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adsm08
36 minutes ago, ebinmaine said:

 

Yep

 

I am not afraid of heights. I am not a fan of ladders.

 

This is making hanging shop lights 14 ft off the ground a little challenging.

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cleat
7 minutes ago, adsm08 said:

 

I am not afraid of heights. I am not a fan of ladders.

 

This is making hanging shop lights 14 ft off the ground a little challenging.

I do not necessarily hate ladders but I do realize that they are very dangerous even when used correctly.  Many jobsites actually ban them for liability. 

 

I have and use several ranging from a 6' step ladder to a 40' extension ladder but I do all I can to either limit the use or try and use other means.

 

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ebinmaine
12 minutes ago, adsm08 said:

 

I am not afraid of heights. I am not a fan of ladders.

 

This is making hanging shop lights 14 ft off the ground a little challenging.

 

Just now, cleat said:

I do not necessarily hate ladders but I do realize that they are very dangerous even when used correctly.  Many jobsites actually ban them for liability. 

 

I have and use several ranging from a 6' step ladder to a 40' extension ladder but I do all I can to either limit the use or try and use other means.

 

 

 

 

Same here.  

 

I don't really mind being on a good steady ladder except when looking UP... like ceiling work. 

 

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adsm08
41 minutes ago, ebinmaine said:

 

 

 

 

Same here.  

 

I don't really mind being on a good steady ladder except when looking UP... like ceiling work. 

 

 

43 minutes ago, cleat said:

I do not necessarily hate ladders but I do realize that they are very dangerous even when used correctly.  Many jobsites actually ban them for liability. 

 

I have and use several ranging from a 6' step ladder to a 40' extension ladder but I do all I can to either limit the use or try and use other means.

 

 

 

No, I hate them. I haven't been above about 7' on one in many years. I used to have to go up about 15ish feet to service a projector regularly, but I had an A-frame ladder to use for that. The one I have now only goes about 10' in A-frame configuration.

 

 

I was hoping to have a few lights up before the floor got poured. That is not going to happen now. On the up side a guy I work with has a scissor lift that I may be able to borrow after the floor is in.

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Handy Don
1 hour ago, 8ntruck said:

My inner 8, 9, 10 year old says that would be great fun to jump into.  The current almost 70 year old inner me replied--MAKE A TUNNEL INSTEAD!

 

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ebinmaine
18 minutes ago, adsm08 said:

scissor lift

 

This is the way

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Razorback

I picked up an 8' pickup bed full of 16"-20" Oak rounds that were FREE from a local neighbor. I need to go back and get 3 or 4 more to clean up what they had. 

Sure made my 1995 F250 ride nice coming home!

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Edited by Razorback
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cleat
2 hours ago, adsm08 said:

I was hoping to have a few lights up before the floor got poured. That is not going to happen now. On the up side a guy I work with has a scissor lift that I may be able to borrow after the floor is in.

 

Yep, man lift, scissor lift etc are all better choices than ladders.

 

Hell, even good solid scaffolding is better.

 

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Beap52

I've taken a few spills off of ladders over the years.  First one was in 1970 at trade school when my step ladder sank into the soft dirt and ended up knocking the teacher off of his ladder as well. The last time I fell of a ladder was about three years ago, shortly before I decided to retire after fifty years.  I was shooting  nails into a 2x4 plate on the ceiling of a room I was dividing for a customer.  Working by myself,  I shot a 16d nail and sometimes a nail gun will shoot two nails and making a bigger recoil.  I was stretched a little to far and fell backwards landing with my tenderloin hitting a corner of a cement block on the floor.  (A couple of inches over and I would have landed on my backbone.)  I completed the jobs I had agreed to do for folks and unloaded the tools out of my work truck.

 

Last week, cleaning fence rows at the farm, the last tree was a cedar that had grown into the woven wire fence.  It leaned towards the neighbor's farm so I boarded the grapple on the front of the tractor then my brother lifted me as  high as it would go and I hooked a chain onto the tree and the grapple so he could keep a pull upon it and prevent it from mashing the fence or falling the wrong way.   It was all my 16" bar on chainsaw would do to reach through the tree.  I notched it, and cut from the backside above the fence.  As it started to drop I began my exit and the tree rolled with a limb knocking me to the ground.  It snatched my stocking cap off of my head but left ear muffs on.   I crawled out from under the tree with only a few scratches on my left shoulder and a sore knee.  I didn't tell my wife until I got home a couple of days later--she wasn't happy I waited so long but I was over most of the soreness and that resulted in not being grilled so much whereas she could see me walking.  I told her that most folks would have considered themselves being knocked down by a falling tree.  Not me. I'd like to think the tree bounced off of me. :rolleyes:

 

Below is the pond dam once we cleared it of brush and overhanging limbs.  Now we can drive across it without brushing the woody growth along the fence. 

pond dam.jpg

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