Chili Palmer
Master of My Domian
- Joined
- Jan 7, 2010
- Messages
- 11,560
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I’m doing a construction project out in Lancaster and since there is no fire hydrant in front of the job site I have to hook up the water meter and roll out three 2-½”x 50’ hoses every morning down the street to the closest fire hydrant and roll them back up in the afternoon, since this job is subbed out and the contract says we have to supply water for the subs I don’t have any laborers I have to do it myself everyday.
The hydrant is in front of a townhome complex and this morning the gardeners were doing their weekly maintenance when I smelled a scent I haven’t smelled since I lived at home - the smell of fresh cut grass and dog shit. Yep, that scent took me back to my early teens, from early spring to mid fall, every Saturday I’d have to mow and edge front lawn, then vacuum the pool, rake out all the planters around the pool, then hose everything down. We currently live in an HOA and have a concrete backyard other than a couple of planters with grass that I cut with a weed wacker, the association takes care of the front, so I haven’t smelled that for over 40 years. When I was a youngin’ It didn’t matter how many times I walked the front lawn looking for dog piles, there was always that one short tootsie roll piece or those micro piles from rat dogs. It’s a good thing my old man had a front throw lawnmower, but that smell would always be in front of me until I sprayed the grass catcher with the hose.
Good times.
The hydrant is in front of a townhome complex and this morning the gardeners were doing their weekly maintenance when I smelled a scent I haven’t smelled since I lived at home - the smell of fresh cut grass and dog shit. Yep, that scent took me back to my early teens, from early spring to mid fall, every Saturday I’d have to mow and edge front lawn, then vacuum the pool, rake out all the planters around the pool, then hose everything down. We currently live in an HOA and have a concrete backyard other than a couple of planters with grass that I cut with a weed wacker, the association takes care of the front, so I haven’t smelled that for over 40 years. When I was a youngin’ It didn’t matter how many times I walked the front lawn looking for dog piles, there was always that one short tootsie roll piece or those micro piles from rat dogs. It’s a good thing my old man had a front throw lawnmower, but that smell would always be in front of me until I sprayed the grass catcher with the hose.
Good times.
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