$hot
To say what? :)
- Joined
- May 25, 2018
- Messages
- 1,444
- Reaction score
- 3,524
Have you seen his avatarWTF were you searching for?
WTF were you searching for?
Jesus Kevin lol
They used to hang a hotdog from a string with mustard on it then ride up on motorcycles and the girl would try and eat it god old family time
Luckiest pickle I ever seen
How did the crane support the weight of that technicians ballsI said the same thing when I watched this! .... Bit of adrenaline pump!
Fuck thatI said the same thing when I watched this! .... Bit of adrenaline pump!
#1What’s her number again?
Fuck that
Sent from my SM-G973U using Tapatalk
X 2. I get the heebie jeebies just watching it.
I said that to my wife 24 years ago! And told her she was high maintenance. How wrong I was. Married 20 years this May.Ah fuck it I can’t afford her anyways
Nice of her to sautee my dinner for me
Like you wouldn't do the sameThe dude in the green boat cracks me up! Slowly creeping by in reverse to get a look! haha
Like you wouldn't do the same
A few years back I worked for a German outfit that was involved with the Tunnel project from France to England... In North Vancouver we had several cranes on a tunnel boring project almost 700 feet down hole one of my jobs was crane inspections nothing like that shit ... guy has got to have adrenalin issues...I said the same thing when I watched this! .... Bit of adrenaline pump!
I said the same thing when I watched this! .... Bit of adrenaline pump!
I’ll bet he has to drive one of those enormous mine trucks just to carry his balls from place to place.How did the crane support the weight of that technicians balls
I'm in ok shape but my legs would tell my brain to F-off about halfway up and they would have to rescue meWhen you're that high you no longer understand heights and you just focus, it's weird. I worked on the edge of the grand canyon on the skywalk bridge, and you look over and it almost seems innocent and peaceful. You still respect it, but it has always been that 30-60 feet range where I have that pucker factor.
These guys aren't wired in the head properly.
Sir she is a professional.
Seeing she allowed that to be filmed. I’m sure she is rather cheap.Ah fuck it I can’t afford her anyways
I don’t think I could do that if you gave me a million bucks. I would be to terrified to move.I said the same thing when I watched this! .... Bit of adrenaline pump!
I'm in ok shape but my legs would tell my brain to F-off about halfway up and they would have to rescue me
I'm not afraid of heights actually but I do respect it, it my legs that would give up. Claustrophobia yes.I've had apprentices lock up at 15 feet, I remember being there when I was an apprentice before. When you climb rebar you have 2 lanyards and 1 position hook. The first time I went up in the air and things are swaying around all of the journeyman were yelling at me to let go, because the position hook keeps you in place. This old timer told me I should ask for a 3rd arm for Christmas. After a week of that I became a vertical guy, and now I get to make fun of my apprentices while keeping them safe. I've actually had to help guys that were in my same class down walls after they locked up.
Heights, you learn to not be afraid of it, but you respect it, once you lose that respect that's when bad things happen.
Probably the worst feeling ever is scaffolding. They call it the 2" heart attack. You're walking along paying attention to your work, and even though you're safe you perfectly step off of lapped OSHA planks and your foot goes down exactly 2" and you instinctively grab something thinking you're falling.
I've had apprentices lock up at 15 feet, I remember being there when I was an apprentice before. When you climb rebar you have 2 lanyards and 1 position hook. The first time I went up in the air and things are swaying around all of the journeyman were yelling at me to let go, because the position hook keeps you in place. This old timer told me I should ask for a 3rd arm for Christmas. After a week of that I became a vertical guy, and now I get to make fun of my apprentices while keeping them safe. I've actually had to help guys that were in my same class down walls after they locked up.
Heights, you learn to not be afraid of it, but you respect it, once you lose that respect that's when bad things happen.
Probably the worst feeling ever is scaffolding. They call it the 2" heart attack. You're walking along paying attention to your work, and even though you're safe you perfectly step off of lapped OSHA planks and your foot goes down exactly 2" and you instinctively grab something thinking you're falling.