#8, I did something like that with a half a bunk of plywood on a construction site once. Some of them slid down a slope and into an irrigation canal, where they floated down and got caught on a grate covering a box culvert. Getting them off of it was a huge pain in the butt. It's amazing how much force the water exerted on them!
My first thought also. There were some NY & NJ a;holes (but I repeat myself) who moved here and thought it was great fun to do similar plus swerve into horse drawn vehicles. For a while anyway. Mark in PA
Yeah - that's what I was thinking. If so he needs the shit kicked out of him. Damn there's a lot of people in this world that need the shit kicked out of them.
7} I don't know what happened there but I used to have to drive thru Amish country. It really sucked. Imagine driving for miles at 5 or 10 mph with no way to pass especially with a standard.
#10I have done that and seen it done more times than I want to remember. I worked for several years at inland paperboard and packaging. We made industrial specialty corrugated boxes. Double wall, triple wall, specialty coatings. One wrong move and a stack of blanks would fan out across the floor pretty as a picture. Was a bear to restack, and you never restacked them exactly right so they would have difficulty going through the printer slotter that turned them into boxes.
#7 Shouldn't have watched "Every Which Way But Loose" in the barn last night.
ReplyDelete#3 is what happens when you have a man bun and you're not Toshiro Mifune.
ReplyDeleteDude learned a lesson that day that he will never forget.
DeleteThat's okay. His country is over populated any way. Which country? Doesn't matter. It's over populated.
Delete#8, I did something like that with a half a bunk of plywood on a construction site once. Some of them slid down a slope and into an irrigation canal, where they floated down and got caught on a grate covering a box culvert. Getting them off of it was a huge pain in the butt. It's amazing how much force the water exerted on them!
ReplyDeleteSome of these look like the highly trained construction workers that the Feds are letting into help with the housing crisis
ReplyDeleteGot that right!
Delete#7 did the cameraman honk? Why else was he filming?
ReplyDeleteMy first thought also.
DeleteThere were some NY & NJ a;holes (but I repeat myself) who moved here and thought it was great fun to do similar plus swerve into horse drawn vehicles.
For a while anyway.
Mark in PA
Yeah - that's what I was thinking. If so he needs the shit kicked out of him. Damn there's a lot of people in this world that need the shit kicked out of them.
DeleteNever really had any desire to knock bricks out of a wall with my cock.
ReplyDeleteIf you could, you would be Kamala's new assistant.
Delete#4 - When you are used to driving camels, you can assume that a Ferrari is a lot more complicated.
ReplyDelete#5 - Alcohol most definitely was involved.
#3 is why you wear boots at a construction site, instead of flip flops.
ReplyDelete#7 - No need to go to Cedar Point when ya got a ride like that!
ReplyDelete7} I don't know what happened there but I used to have to drive thru Amish country. It really sucked. Imagine driving for miles at 5 or 10 mph with no way to pass especially with a standard.
ReplyDeleteWell don't drive thru Amish country if you can't respect the Amish. It's their home.
DeleteBicyclist give you the same experience, but they do it on your roads, not theirs.
Delete#6 Murphy's Law?
ReplyDelete#10 That's going to push back the completion date.
ReplyDelete#9 He deserved that for cutting such shitty holes.
ReplyDelete#10I have done that and seen it done more times than I want to remember. I worked for several years at inland paperboard and packaging. We made industrial specialty corrugated boxes. Double wall, triple wall, specialty coatings. One wrong move and a stack of blanks would fan out across the floor pretty as a picture. Was a bear to restack, and you never restacked them exactly right so they would have difficulty going through the printer slotter that turned them into boxes.
ReplyDelete#10. Is that Chinese building code or Mexican?
ReplyDeleteNumbers 2 and 3 define “torque.”
ReplyDelete