Give the smartest guy the hardest job and he will find the easiest way to do it?
Yes, but wouldn't a wheelbarrow be easier to move bricks with than a bicycle?LOL! wait. This was my greatest managerial "trick" in the Merchant Marine. Ask the laziest guy how to do it then ask the hardest working guy to actually do it.
The lazy guy would come up with the short cuts but the honorable guy would only do those that still ended with a success.
So I broke down and decide to not let the stuff in the sink take over!I'll have to get a picture of the drying rack by the kitchen sink in the future when it is full up..... my dad would make a tower rather than towel dry.... I have always done the same. Some thought has to go into packing and I do like the guy with the bricks. It seems the back tire compressed a bit
I have a Power-Point presentation titled "Who needs a truck", that has a lot of photos of small lightweight motorbikes in present day Vietnam and how they are used to haul everything from pigs in crates to 20' sections of PVC pipe. There's one, my favorite of a family of six, all piled onto one little, probably 50cc bike.Reminds me of something I read years ago about the Vietnam war. The north Vietnamese used to move war material down the ho che min trail with bicycles. The weight estimates that one person on a bicycle could move was between 300 to 500 lbs. This depended on the construction of the bike and the way it was strapped on. Impressive when you think about it.
I see that some "stud" built a bike outta 2x4s so he could "lumber" down the street. (Tell me you "saw" those puns coming.)That guy just needs a redneck made stronger bike like this.
I wood not say that, it might stain my reputation and I'd have to varnish the comment over hehehe, good ones;-}I see that some "stud" built a bike outta 2x4s so he could "lumber" down the street. (Tell me you "saw" those puns coming.)