Bloody predictive text, I meant “wasn’t there any helpers around” if you don’t believe that it was @crossy2112 @snotty and Don who put me up to it
My neighbour gave me this after seeing my ladder antics. Even though I taught ladder safety, working at heights etc Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
He needs to be careful he could hit his thumb with that hammer hope you sorted your ladders out , he shouldn’t have been looking
This may also interest you @Merlin Cat These are the original instructions from my granddads Uniladda I inherited. It’s a wooden triple extender with platform. ‘The weight of the unit is just over 34lbs, so the housewife can quite easily carry it’. Presumably so she can get it in the right position to shove up the sexist gits backside! Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
i was trimming her wisteria (not a euphemism) as she was getting charged £30 a time and they were just hacking at it. but i may have overreached, had one foot on the windowsill and not had it footed. maybe.
Glad it’s not tooooooooo stiffy achey breakey today. Plenty of stretches and toe touches should help keep it manageable. It’ll be when you’re stood still today balancing on a ne foot and soldering something delicate that it’ll start playing you up, so keep moving and don’t stop still. Ozziedog,,,,,,,,always better with a happy ending innit.
My grandfather once sign wrote a painted advertisement 60 ft up the side of a building with one ladder going up to the building to the left then the second one tied to the top of the first one going back to a point 60ft above the base of the first ladder. Take care with sudden moves . Although you think you made it out O.K. after a fall you mught find a sneeze later on triggers agony ..
The safest way to use a wheelie bin is to turn it upside down with the lid open and stand on the base. That way, it can't run away from you and the base is sturdy enough to stand on.
I find standing inside a wheelie bin quite dangerous especially when your trying to fit another bin full in it