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22nd April 06, 06:01 AM
#1
This guy should just wear a kilt
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22nd April 06, 08:40 AM
#2
Only here in the Bay Area would you see something like that....
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22nd April 06, 09:49 AM
#3
He told officers he stripped before crawling under the client's house to do electrical work because he didn't want to soil his clothes, police said.
Would you go into the crawl space under a house in a kilt? I wouldn't. I wouldn't do it naked either though, too many black widows in places like that!
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22nd April 06, 10:27 AM
#4
I just read that article about an hour ago and thought exactly the same thing. I still smile that this is the 4th time he's been caught working around other people's houses in the buff. It's still not as good as the story on CNN with the guy who lived after putting 12 nails in his head with a nail gun.
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22nd April 06, 06:15 PM
#5
In my opinion, work like that is what clothes are really made for. Coveralls do the trick just fine for that.
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22nd April 06, 10:45 PM
#6
Originally Posted by Iolaus
Would you go into the crawl space under a house in a kilt? I wouldn't. I wouldn't do it naked either though, too many black widows in places like that!
Iolaus, dont tell me you are a fraid of a tinsey winsey widdle spider... first heights , now spiders... that alpha male image i had of you is so shot to hell now....
KIDDING!!!
as a major fan of going au naturale as much as possible i kinda agree with him but when it comes to crawling around in confined spaces i woudl be a bit too worried about getting bits caught where they shouldnt be to be doing it bare....
and lets not forget splinters
Last edited by UmAnOnion; 22nd April 06 at 10:48 PM.
ITS A KILT, G** D*** IT!
WARNING: I RUN WITH SCISSORS
“I asked Mom if I was a gifted child… she said they certainly wouldn’t have paid for me."
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22nd April 06, 11:22 PM
#7
I was working under a multi-unit duplex complex once, re-plumbing the place, when I looked up at the bottom of the floorboards in the light of the flashlight to realize that an egg sack must have just hatched; there were little black spiders everywhere! I taped off all the vents and tossed four bombs in, and left for a long lunch.
Yeah, I've got a few "pets" around the house, that I pretty much just leave alone for insect control (or because it doesn't hurt to have them around - why bother them), but I've a healthy respect for something that can crawl under my collar and kill me!
But as much as I respect the Black Widow, it's the Brown recluse that worries me the most; the affects of their venom can be like an attack of a flesh-eating bacteria!
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23rd April 06, 03:34 AM
#8
Iolaus,
I worked in a manufacturing plant in NC for several years. One day someone brought in a new set of wood pallets and when he cut off the plastic out came a whole army of baby brown recluse spiders. They were all over and we were out to get all of them for about 3 hours. I don't think anyone ever found "mom" in the pallets but they also got put back outside in a hurry.
I also had copperheads in the yard and saw water mocassins on the golf courses. I'm sure you've had your share of runins with rattlesnakes and scorpions in the desert. I played golf in Tuscon early one morning in March and since I was the first on the course they warned me about how the rattlers like to lay on the warmer cart paths in the mornings and nights instead of the cooler sand. I kept my eyes open and didn't spend too much time looking for possible lost balls.
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23rd April 06, 04:32 AM
#9
I agree, a crawl space is no place for a kilt.
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23rd April 06, 04:48 AM
#10
Originally Posted by ckelly327
Iolaus,
I worked in a manufacturing plant in NC for several years. One day someone brought in a new set of wood pallets and when he cut off the plastic out came a whole army of baby brown recluse spiders. They were all over and we were out to get all of them for about 3 hours. I don't think anyone ever found "mom" in the pallets but they also got put back outside in a hurry.
I also had copperheads in the yard and saw water mocassins on the golf courses. I'm sure you've had your share of runins with rattlesnakes and scorpions in the desert. I played golf in Tuscon early one morning in March and since I was the first on the course they warned me about how the rattlers like to lay on the warmer cart paths in the mornings and nights instead of the cooler sand. I kept my eyes open and didn't spend too much time looking for possible lost balls.
Years ago I remember bowhunting the better part of a day when I sat down beside a mountain stream in Azuza Canyon in California and took my boots off to cool my feet down and when I looked to my right side there was a Mohave Green all coiled up just watching me, it never made any noise and I carefully moved away from it, I must have been there right next to this critter for a good three minutes. I guess his feet must have been too tired to close the two foot distance between us.
Chris...
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