London Stone Paving wrote:Nice vest Luton. 10,000 posts, that's dedication
work 4 hours in the pishing rain and you too can have a vest like that steve :;):
I dunno about you blokes but i would rather work cold than warm if that makes sense
10 years ago i thought it would be pipe and slippers now,just pricing work and collecting the money
mickg wrote:I noticed that on some road works last week, they was cutting through the tarmac but using a JCB and pecker instead of a compressor and jack hammer for a small hole it was certainly over kill
i went past some mossisons utility lads yesterday, they had a taki 1.5 with a huge blast of water coming from under the bucket, road was flooded and useless utility vans everywhere with hydrants and those listening ear pieces.
went past this morning and there was a 450mm plastic water main 300mm down!!!( it was in the dip over an old bridge)
that must have been a shock and an expensive repair
Giles
Groundworks and Equestrian specialists, prestige new builds and sports pitches. High Peak, Cheshire, South Yorkshire area.
.....I worked with a guy ( a paddy ) and we had a load of shingle tipped. He said ''jesus that smells of fish''. I said ''it would do it comes from the sea, or close to it''. He looked at me as if i was stupid and told me, '' don't be silly it comes from the builders merchants.'' ??? :O :laugh: :laugh: He was serious.
Sean
My dads Irish an he goes off the head when ppl call him paddy. Seen him knock a few fellas clean out for it.
I'd imagine it would be like calling you a nonce?
the kick from the dragunov ,colt 45 and 44 magnum was unbelievable
the 3 full autos were all blanks (thank god)
I always assumed that when you fired a gun it would kick upwards
but the force is mainly against you
it was 130 euro for 190 bullets shoot em all
the instructors are all serving police firearms instructors
the rules were simple
1 do what i say
2 always point the weapon down the range
for a non forces person like me it was a good afternoon out
cheers LLL