Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Spiders, Snakes and Fred Sanford

I had pictures. Blogger won't post them. I am annoyed. I had such clever titles in mind. It wouldn't be the same without the pictures. I am really annoyed.

The fall colors are gorgeous an I spent the entire day outside yesterday. I stacked firewood. I rolled stumps and stacked and mowed and then I was hit with an attack of OCD and restacked the lumber pile. I carefully seperated the 2X4's from the other odd pieces of lumber and then began stacking according to length, until I realized that there were only one or two that matched. I did manage to make a much more compact stack and all the ends were even before I folded the tarp in half and secured it over my neat stack.

He who splits wood was not nearly as impressed as I thought he should be. I worked up quite a sweat restacking those boards, some of them were 16 feet long. You may be wondering why we have a stack of lumber, covered by a tarp. It was left over from some structure put together by one of the companies involved with the laying of the pipeline. I am married to Fred Sanford, that's why.

I was very agreeable to having the lumber, thinking that it could be used to construct something. I have built many a structure in my head, but, there it sits under the tarp. Not all of it. Pieces have been used for various projects. This involved grabbing a piece and shaking the pieces on top off the wanted piece, thus making the stack scattered in disarray under a giant tarp. The wood is stacked atop gravel, but weeds have popped up along the sides.

Now, we all know that I am not opposed to the pulling of weeds. This is my preferred method of eliminating the weeds. The weed eater just encourages growth by cutting it off at ground level. And that brings me to the term "weed eater". Why would you call it that? It does not consume the weeds, it simply cuts them off at ground level and encourages new growth. When weeding, you sometimes have to get a good grip on the base of the weed before pulling if you want the root to come away with the weed and eliminate more growth.

Some of these offending weeds had their origin under the tarp and I do not stick my hands under dark damp places ........ I don't like spiders and snakes (and that ain't what it takes to love me ......). Remember that song? The mind wanders. But, back to the wood pile. There is now a smaller, neater stack under half the tarp and no weeds curving from beneath. So, you can see how I would think that I deserve more praise than, "Looks good." My Fred Sanford is a man of few words.

8 comments:

Brian Miller said...

wow restacking the woodpile is dangerous stuff....all the wooly boolies like to hide there...

Travels with Emma said...

Perhaps he who splits wood should work on becoming he who gives praise. :)

Joanne Noragon said...

I'll see your woodpile and raise you a lumberyard. One went out of business about twenty years go. My brother and brother-in-law bought the lumber. And a planer and other such tools. Fortunately they stacked it neatly in two symmetrical fifteen by four by four piles; it remains the focal point of our yard.

Linda O'Connell said...

How much sugar did you eat? I don't have energy to restock my pantry.

Val said...

Good job organizing the woodpile. Wood doesn't have time to rest around here. Pallets and crates are pried apart forthwith, and turned into sheds, cabins, outhouses, and goat feeders.

My husband actively seeks discarded materials. The crown jewel was the Save A Lot sign that now makes up one wall of our barn lean-to. The store people were taking it down, off the roof at the front of the store, and they were JUST GOING TO THROW IT AWAY! I know. Can you believe it?

At least I made him put it on the side away from the house.

mamahasspoken said...

I don't do spiders and snakes either:op

joanne said...

that is a lot of work, I think Mr. Sanford should be just a bit more grateful. Oh, and thanks for the song that is running through my little head like a banshee.

Venom said...

I absolutely remember that song!
And now it's stuck in my head on a loop.
Thank you Kathy.
I think...