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#72
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On Mon, 26 Oct 2015 21:44:07 -0400, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote: I was born the son of a sharecropper. You lucky *******. At least you had a profession you could inherit. ;-) "My family was Irish. When they came here they didn't have a cushy plantation job waiting for them" (Bill Maher) |
#73
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My summer jobs were stacking mostly 80 lb alphalfa hay bales on a wagon and into a barn from sun up to sundown. Start at 6:30am to about 9pm. 6 days a week.
Usually 80-90 degrees in the direct sun and 120+ in the barn while breathing straw and hay dust all day. |
#74
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One of my tougher jobs was struggling with 400 pound cubes of rubber....trying to drag them out from under the wings of a cargo ships hold and hook up to the winch for offloading. A number of the full time longshoreman disappeared....leaving a few of the reliable guys and a handful of us hired from the bullpen to do the work.
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#75
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On Tue, 27 Oct 2015 10:02:56 -0700 (PDT), Tim wrote:
My summer jobs were stacking mostly 80 lb alphalfa hay bales on a wagon and into a barn from sun up to sundown. Start at 6:30am to about 9pm. 6 days a week. Usually 80-90 degrees in the direct sun and 120+ in the barn while breathing straw and hay dust all day. Baling and stacking hay was often a multi-family job. I really enjoyed the dinners with two or three families, usually a huge mess of fried chichen with the goodies. Then back to work 'til the sun went down. -- Ban idiots, not guns! |
#76
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On Tue, 27 Oct 2015 12:05:39 -0700 (PDT), True North wrote:
One of my tougher jobs was struggling with 400 pound cubes of rubber....trying to drag them out from under the wings of a cargo ships hold and hook up to the winch for offloading. A number of the full time longshoreman disappeared....leaving a few of the reliable guys and a handful of us hired from the bullpen to do the work. I suppose that was good training for a janitor's job, eh? -- Ban idiots, not guns! |
#77
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John H. wrote:
On Tue, 27 Oct 2015 10:02:56 -0700 (PDT), Tim wrote: My summer jobs were stacking mostly 80 lb alphalfa hay bales on a wagon and into a barn from sun up to sundown. Start at 6:30am to about 9pm. 6 days a week. Usually 80-90 degrees in the direct sun and 120+ in the barn while breathing straw and hay dust all day. Baling and stacking hay was often a multi-family job. I really enjoyed the dinners with two or three families, usually a huge mess of fried chichen with the goodies. Then back to work 'til the sun went down. -- Ban idiots, not guns! I was pretty young when I helped my uncle hay. I drug the bales in to position on the trailer. Could not toss them up high enough. Hard work. |
#78
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On 10/27/2015 3:10 PM, John H. wrote:
On Tue, 27 Oct 2015 12:05:39 -0700 (PDT), True North wrote: One of my tougher jobs was struggling with 400 pound cubes of rubber....trying to drag them out from under the wings of a cargo ships hold and hook up to the winch for offloading. A number of the full time longshoreman disappeared....leaving a few of the reliable guys and a handful of us hired from the bullpen to do the work. I suppose that was good training for a janitor's job, eh? I think that was uncalled for. I don't know what Don did for a living but what does it matter? I realized years ago as I watched my dad in his final days and my father-in-law in his that what they held as jobs or had as titles in their lives didn't matter. What mattered is they both fed and clothed their families, paid the rent or mortgage and kept the lights on. How they accomplished it is secondary. |
#79
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On Tue, 27 Oct 2015 12:05:39 -0700 (PDT), True North
wrote: One of my tougher jobs was struggling with 400 pound cubes of rubber....trying to drag them out from under the wings of a cargo ships hold and hook up to the winch for offloading. A number of the full time longshoreman disappeared....leaving a few of the reliable guys and a handful of us hired from the bullpen to do the work. For just good old hard work, moving a computer system in the olden days was right up there. You had a room full of "boxes" (computer frames), the size of a commercial sub zero refrigerator, weighing up to half a ton or so, connected with a buttload of cables about an inch in diameter and up to 100 feet long. All of this had to be disconnected and moved around all the while you were throwing 30 pound floor tiles. Most of the time, the protective rings around the floor tile cuts were gone and the saw cuts were razor sharp. Just another little hazard to deal with. .... and they wanted it all to happen on a shift, maybe two. It was a white collar job tho, since we were still wearing suits. The biggest system frames were called "Elemax" (size), the largest thing you can get in a standard office building elevator with the trim off of the interior of the elevator and the covers off the machine. It still got ugly some time when the weight would screw up where the car stopped and it wouldn't roll off. A "Johnson Bar" was a handy tool to have. |
#80
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On Tue, 27 Oct 2015 16:32:08 -0400, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote: On 10/27/2015 3:10 PM, John H. wrote: On Tue, 27 Oct 2015 12:05:39 -0700 (PDT), True North wrote: One of my tougher jobs was struggling with 400 pound cubes of rubber....trying to drag them out from under the wings of a cargo ships hold and hook up to the winch for offloading. A number of the full time longshoreman disappeared....leaving a few of the reliable guys and a handful of us hired from the bullpen to do the work. I suppose that was good training for a janitor's job, eh? I think that was uncalled for. === Yes. There his no need to stir the pot here. It just leads to more of the same old rancor. My personal policy is not to attack anyone unless my sensibilities have been seriously insulted. |
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