I'm ready for the warMkay............
Well...that probably took a year off your life.
You would have to pay a gen z er $1000 and a bag of weed to do that same amount of work nowadays and it would take 3 days to complete, some wood would still be left outside and they would be complaining it was too hot or too cold. All this after a 2 month search for a worker.
Mkay............
Well...that probably took a year off your life.
Then the load would be too heavy for the truck to load up, also the customer doesn't have the ability to store that much wood. Thanks for watchingThat's cheating. You didn't stack it neatly in the bin. You can fit more in it if it was stacked in an orderly fashion. Fun video though!
Spot on!You would have to pay a gen z er $1000 and a bag of weed to do that same amount of work nowadays and it would take 3 days to complete, some wood would still be left outside and they would be complaining it was too hot or too cold. All this after a 2 month search for a worker.
If you can do firewood, you can do anythingActually, it probably ADDED years to his life. Exercise is like that.
I used to pick up wood at a firewood processor's place, and met one of his regulars. 72 years old, and he split & stacked 10 cords (all hardwoods) every year, by hand, by himself.
He looked 50. A very FIT 50.
That's the second possibilityI strongly disagree!
I don't think you'd get one to agree to do it.
LolReminds me of the saying "I love work...I can stand here all day to watch it"
The GEN Z in our house is still in high school. Honor roll, student newspaper writer, dance class and works part time. She pumps her own gas and knows how to check the oil dip stick. Okay, she still steals my oil but the shed door is always open to family and friends.You would have to pay a gen z er $1000 and a bag of weed to do that same amount of work nowadays and it would take 3 days to complete, some wood would still be left outside and they would be complaining it was too hot or too cold. All this after a 2 month search for a worker.
My Gen z er went into the military (Navy) and is a hard worker and looking toward the future, but i think thats an exception now based on my experiences with Gen Z. I have a business that SHOULD be relying on gen Z for labor and learning and working up through the trades but the ones that answer construction ads just are not cut out for "work" . Too soft mentally and soft physically.The GEN Z in our house is still in high school. Honor roll, student newspaper writer, dance class and works part time. She pumps her own gas and knows how to check the oil dip stick. Okay, she still steals my oil but the shed door is always open to family and friends.
Like her "millennial" aunts she shows the potential to do well but, I doubt she will ever toss firewood.
I would never toss that much wood. I can afford to pay to have someone do it and it also puts more cash into their pocket. Support your local farmer is more than a bumper sticker for me.