Somebody’s getting ready for something serious…


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.

About Joel

You shouldn't ask these questions of a paranoid recluse, you know.
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7 Responses to Somebody’s getting ready for something serious…

  1. Ben says:

    Wow, I didn’t realize that this was such an ambitious project!

  2. Good for you for not volunteering. Wait til all the neighbors are there to share the job.

  3. Judy says:

    When the body says ‘No’ one should listen.

  4. Kentucky says:

    One should not wish to be taken for granted, regardless of neighborhood harmony.

  5. Norman says:

    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.

  6. Zelda says:

    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.

  7. Norman says:

    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.

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