
That, friends and neighbors, is two pallet-loads of cement blocks. Which will serve merely as the framework for the paving-stone walkway/stairway to Landlady’s new deck.
It’s Thursday, and my back still hurts from all the deck and porch flooring I did Saturday through Tuesday. Call me unneighborly but I did not volunteer to help unload that trailer.
















































Wow, I didn’t realize that this was such an ambitious project!
Good for you for not volunteering. Wait til all the neighbors are there to share the job.
When the body says ‘No’ one should listen.
One should not wish to be taken for granted, regardless of neighborhood harmony.
Depending on just what gets done with those blocks, Bon 21-468 Heavy Duty Block Tongs with Rubber Pad Handle from Amazon is an incredibly useful tool. Not cheap – $65 or so – but when I was building a wall with several hundred 85 lb blocks a few years back they were the only thing between me, smashed fingers and needing a back transplant. Some guy at Claire’s mentioned them and I owe him several beers. IIRC, Claire bought one too.
Wish I had known about them. My fingers did eventually plump back up and stop hurting. My back has never recovered. I’ve never seen them where I live, Amazon may be the only useful source.
Zelda – I’ve never seen them anywhere but Amazon, either. The block tongs are just a larger, heavier version of brick tongs which I’ve seen – rarely – at home centers like HD and Lowes and often at *real* construction supply houses. Brick tongs will pick up 10 or 12 bricks at a time, these just one block, but if you’re putting the first course in a below-grade trench they’re indispensable, and really, really handy for the other courses until you get up to almost chest height, and even then, it’s much easier to “tong” a block to hip height first.
Home centers do have “mason’s gloves” that have mesh backs and rubber-covered padded fingers. I found them halfway through the wall project and wished I’d discovered them sooner.