Posted to alt.home.repair
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Now, honestly ..........
On Sep 28, 5:27*pm, Nate Nagel wrote:
wrote:
aemeijers wrote:
David Nebenzahl wrote:
On 9/28/2009 2:04 PM SteveB spake thus:
How many of you use a five gallon plastic bucket for a ladder?
Me.
I know it's not such a good idea, and I cringe when I see someone
else do it, from being a safety professional and suffering from the
hypervigilance of PTSD. And yet, I just did it, and with little
reservation. I have seen people "walk" these remarkable distances,
and use them quite adroitly. I also have heard tales of woe and steel
pins and screws. And yet, if I need to do something straight up, and
all I need is a foot or two, I grab a bucket, because I can never
find the damn ladder.
Plastic buckets sometimes break when you step on them. I know this.
I've had it happen to me.
But I *still* sometimes grab one when I need to get up about a foot
or so ...
I'll second the steel pins and screws stories. 2 coworkers of mine, in
seperate incidents, trashed themselves pretty badly with stupid falls
doing household repairs with improper ladder rigging. One is back up
and running, although he limps a little, can forecast the weather, and
has to carry a letter for airport security. The other guy, well, he is
sorta back to work, uses a cane now, but he ain't ever gonna be right.
I was already getting a little more paranoid with advancing age, but
now I double-check everything before I leave ground level.
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aem sends...
Don't ignore ground level - slippery floors, lighting, look out for
blind drivers backing out of parking spaces. *Fortunately, my daughter
is a sales rep for human hardware - if I ever break a bone, I will have
an "in" with select orthopedic surgeons and, perhaps, a discount on the
hardware. *Knock on wood. *Had nasty, painful tendonitis in each
shoulder, separately. *Took anti-inflammatories until they made my
stomach hurt. *Decided I could go another 10 years without my family doc
- switched to hot showers with stretching exercises (alone ) *So far,
for the past 35 years, ice packs and/or heating pads have cured all that
has ailed me.
In my kitchen I have a small folding 2-step stepstool. *SWMBO is
vertically challenged compared to Yours Truly, you see, therefore
sometimes I put things on a shelf that I can reach but she can't.
Handiest little thing ever, use it a lot for other uses, e.g. waxing the
top of a pickup truck camper shell etc. *(why are Fords so damn tall,
anyway?)
nate
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replace "roosters" with "cox" to reply.http://members.cox.net/njnagel- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -
Same here. I rehabbed and added an addition to my house before I
wised up and bought one of those stepstools. First time I used it I
realized I should have bought one 20 years earlier. Now I am debating
buying a second one to keep in the garage/shop.
Harry K
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