Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Equipment and Machinery 8


Tracks of the StoneBear Copyright MCMLXIII Uncle Hargus ALL Rights reserved

ROF= Ring of Fire Odyssey  

MEF-H = Marine Expeditionary Force- Hargus 
Equipment and machinery 8

You never drink twice from the same stream.



The love of heavy earth moving Equipment and machinery came from an early age. This is probably more than you want to know about it ... ie some family history is in here but will post the whole email story. I don't have pix from back then but these will do. Will add some more Equipment pix in time







Equipment and machinery 8 n

Tracks of the StoneBear Odyssey Ring of Fire
*****
Will try not to jump around too much on this. Bear w/ me. Here's the story from circa 1966.

1939 Dad's two older brothers have finished law school at ALa. Dad was further behind. 1941Pearl Harbor breaks out; the lawyers are Navy officers; Dad is enlisted Marine... never finished college, and that pretty well defines Dad's life. Never achieved his potential,... & missed opportunities, bad choices/ decisions ect.

Alright,... 1966. ... going into 10th grade. I say I want to go w/ Dad for the summer. Dad is an itinerant construction worker moving from job to job, town to town. 3 months here... 6 months to a year there... He worked for an excavation -- earth moving-- company "Moss-Thornton" const co. (They got the earth moving contract for Talladega Speedway .. more later). So I leave one night in late May 1966 w/ Dad to a road job in Tuscaloosa, AL building "River road", the 2-3 mile road along the Univ of ALA... & the warrior river. Now it is (google map) " Jack Warner Parkway ". And partly to the 82 bypass from river bridge to connect to 15th street right beside DCH Druid City Hospital.

Dad kinda bullshit me through office hiring & had already told them I was 16. I was out working before they could object. Actually was 15 & went to work that day as a "Grease Monkey" helper. I was on the grease truck... fueling, oiling, greasing heavy equipment roadwork machinery. Clean & change oil & air filters on all the machinery. We worked from noon to about 10 or 12 midnight depending on oil changes & more detailed maintenance --- out of sight.... out of mind! ?Remember the Marine rule: Don't be conspicuous, it draws fire? I learned it early. Dad said once i was 16 they couldn't fire me.

The equipment I worked on was: CAT* dozers... D8 & D9 w/ plow, D7 & D6 dozers. CAT 631 "Pan" scrapers. Euclid 14 & 24 "Pan" scrapers. A couple of draglines, a couple of road scrapers "Graders" , a couple of Sheeps foot, Crane trucks, a couple of company utility dump trucks, water trucks, backhoes, Pneumatic tracked ingersol- rand drilling rockwagons(drilling blast holes) and my baby... a CAT 988 front end loader-- a HUGE --loader that was easy to operate and FUN ! to drive.

A euclid Pan " 24" ... a EUC24 could scrape up 24 cubic yards of dirt & go... haul ass... 30+mph, it was about 60 -70' long, 7-8' high rubber tires, front engine w/ driver seat, middle lowering 24 cuyd pan scraper scraped up dirt as it moved, rear engine. A lot of times a big CAT D- 7 or 8 dozer would push on the rear steel bumper plate to really bite & scrape up earth. This is while both front & back engines are running wide open screaming about 3,000 rpms. ... I mean really putting out some real raw torque & horsepower. These powerful machines had built the interstate system ,... made AMERICAN in Euclid, Ohio. w/ American made Steel. It was the late 60's; It was the zenith of American industrial manufacturing to produce these machines.... to build America.... I feel lucky I'm glad I got to see the last of it... and work on it.... w/ my Dad too! Those pieces of equipment went through a LOT of oil & grease & filters. Dealing w/ & seeing the different rock strata layers in the earth really grabbed my interest & I wanted to be a geologist. ... among many other interests.

I got to crank up and move all these machines around to the grease truck & move them back -- & got to operate them a little & learned a lot quickly !!! It was a really "Dirty" job-- but a lot of fun for a 15 year old kid. Which guess what....


about a month later... the redneck guy grease monkey on the truck goes off on July 4th weekend & doesn't come back. So, ... you know me... Tuesday at time to go to work, I leave out driving the truck to service all the machines.... thinking he'll show up by next couple of hours w/ a hangover & I'd have covered his butt & all would be fine. So I did all the work by myself for the next few days & figured out he'd laid out drunk or whatever. (Road construction workers were notorious alcoholic & drug users). About Thursday the job superintendent drove his truck up while I was greasing a machine & said he knew about the main guy being gone ... & knew I was doing by myself. said he'd get ME a helper. So,... there I was ,... 15 (my birthday was July 25th 3 weeks away) & I was in charge of keeping a few million dollars of road construction heavy equipment running.


I made $2.55 an hour. really good money then. when I got back for school the other guys had been working as lifeguards & bailing hay ect for .75 c hour. I considered construction doing "A Man's" work... & that kinda set me in motion to always lean toward that rugged type work. -- I sat behind a desk for 5 years as a stockbroker & really didn't like it. I should have found a way to apply my skills & knowledge not so hard on my frame... like archaeologist / anthropologist / geologist. I feel worn out at 58 now from pushing it so hard all those years.


Anyway, all the old construction guys liked me 'cause I was a hard worker. They kidded me & gave me hell... but they all liked me taking charge of the equipment & keeping it running -- if their machine didn't run... they didn't get paid, so I made sure their machine didn't run out of fuel or had to be down for oil changes ect.... They appreciated that..... as the grease monkeys turned over very often from laying out drunk. I' change oil & grease the superintendents and formans pickups too so they appreciated their truck running. Wasn't supposed to, but would oil & lube some of the workers pickups & they really appreciated it. If they pissed me off,... I'd accidentally spill some diesel fuel on their equipment seat & it would rub a blister on their ass next day.  





This was like the grease truck I drove and worked on.





I'd see Dad on the job too in the late afternoon & it was always good to see him. He seemed happy; he seemed proud of me working w/ him & we'd talk some when I'd get in about 11. It was a good bonding time even though I'd spent most of my growing up time w/ him on other stuff. Dad was one of the hardest working guys there. Mom & the girls said he didn't work; they didn't know what they were talking about. Rain-out days the machinery didn't run in the mud,... so Dad & I would kick around Tuscaloosa; we lived about a block from Denny stadium on the university & several times walked through the quad & Dad would tell me what it was like when he went there. I think he went to the 1938 Rose Bowl game Alabama played in. Years later I followed in Dad's footsteps in an amazing parrallel fashion in many ways.

On the off days & many weekends I'd work with the Mechanics as a mechanics helper earning more hours --- & learning how to change out parts on the down equipment. CAT rollers, fuel injectors, worm gears, euclid pan blades... VERY hard work! & learned a GREAT amount of mechanical knowledge. 1" drive wrenches. I was in good muscular shape. On Sundays, Dad & I would go over to the football practice field near the Uof ALA Colosseum -- where "Bear" practiced the boys... & Dad would work w/ me coaching me to kick. Cadence, rhythm, timing, my legs were a coiled spring waiting for the correct timing to execute. Extra points for accuracy, & field goals for distance. Momentum, wind-age, concentration. I kicked a couple thousand goals that summer & developed good disciplined technique. The next year... I made the ALL - Jefferson County football team ; I was the place kicker of the #1 county in Alabama... & only a sophomore. ... thanks to Dad working w. me. I'll never forget my Dad for that sacrifice of time. I liked it 'cause when we were out kicking.... Dad wasn't drinking. He liked it too. Dad & I talked about a LOT of things. The Marines, WW II, He'd been to the middle East & holy land, grew up in the depression... He knew a lot; very intelligent,... working way below his capacity. Dad got to see me kick a dozen+ games. He was actually a good coach. He knew his football.



The downside to this was... well.... the transient... itinerant construction worker life. Dad wasn't homeless but it wasn't stable.. an apartment in July added a little stability. The 1st few weeks were in boarding houses & a "Room" for a few days.... & a room at an old truck stop. Some down trodden characters & some low lifes. I'd go w/ Dad into honky tonks & saloons & dives. I've seen a couple dozen bar-room fights, many taken out into the parking lots for some really brutal beatings. Some real violent. I saw 2 stabbings & a shooting.... surely not a place for a 15 - 16 year old kid. I grew up fast that summer. The bar floozies loved me 'cause I was young somewhat handsome; not some cruddy assed barfly. When I got back to high school after the summer, those little teenage girls were just silly little girls; hey, I'd been w/ real women. This was when I began to learn how to drink. ALL these guys were alcoholic drinkers. Drug guys were mostly pills -- from the truck drivers. But I did see a guy tie- off & shoot up in a boarding house. It's a wonder I didn't wind up in prison. Most of the road workers & barflys were uneducated ... maybe to the 9th or 10th grade if that. Some ex- cons, most drifters, all alcoholic drinkers. Guys that wanted to drink then fight; they weren't very smart. Many WWII & Korea vets. Viet Nam was cranking away & I knew I would soon be swept knee deep in it .... as a Marine; that was the only thing I knew for sure.

When I got to the Marines I thought... this is my place. After the hell ride to this point I feel like i'm home. This place was made for me. The disciplined controlled chaos... these are my kind of guys. These are my kind of motherfuckers. And they issued me my own rifle & I shot Marine rifle expert. Is this a great country or what.

Anyway,... the work part was good. I learned an awful lot about work AND life early. In 1966 in the South these were all still bigoted Jim Crow guys & they really had prejudice for the black guys. Black guys were "Laborers"... & that was the best term they could get. several days when I worked extra with the laborers it was just me,... & black guys. One job I did a couple days was we put in some drain concrete pipeline. There was no crane truck to lift. It was 7 black guys & me with pick - handles. we'd roll a 16" pipe onto pick handles on the ground & get on each side & lift. The black guys would sing & grunt--- like chants when we did this & they kidded me & goaded me into chanting w/ them. Basically,... I was like a RailRoad Gandydancer chanting . Some of it was like chants, some was like some gospel mixed in. Some had some blues. They'd chant "got a wo-man -- huuuup -ugh(lift the pipe) ... goall night --huk(start moving forward.. almost like forward , march) ect.. it was a work gang rhythm. The black guys all knew the songs and how to do it; I caught on quick & followed their lead & they tolerated me & kidded me. It was HARD work. 

August in Tuscaloosa, ALA, right beside the Warrior river & the humidity was ungodly. Talk about sweat. The black guys didn't give me a hard time; they nicknamed me cornbread. Looking back now.... it was amazing to see that kind of work.... & actually do it. The foreman wouldn't pay the black workers until Saturday AFTER work was done. Not before. When he payed them Friday afternoon, most wouldn't show up for Saturday work. Most of the younger white guys were just as bad. Laying out drunk until Monday & often Tuesday. Most of the older guys showed up & worked. They probably just knew how to work w/ a hangover. Most of the workers & foremen liked me 'cause I was a hard worker & didn't shy away from the hard jobs. Maybe I just hadn't been corrupted yet being so young. Some off days, Dad & me would get a sandwich or burger & go to an equipment spot beside the warrior & eat lunch... & talk & watch the tugs push barges up & down the river.

The blue collar guys,... I tend to side w/ them. I have sweat w/ them. & they worked hard. The stockbrokers I knew... privileged cheating frat boys that made fun of the workers... they were a loathsome, if not a contemptible ilk devoid of any values or trust.... or any respect.

Couple of years Later,... during the winter, Dad is working on the Talladega Speedway racetrack here 30 miles from home. Remember Moss-Thornton? There is still a Moss-Thornton seating section right near the finish line that I always try to sit in -- not just because it's maybe the best seat in the house- on the track... but because my Dad & I worked on it & worked for that company... & it brings back GREAT memories of my Dad before he declined. We tried to do the same thing as the Tuscaloosa job & Dad tried to Bullshit me into a job. I worked with him a couple of weekends on the track & the superintendent & foreman (different ones) didn't buy it & said I couldn't get on the payroll. besides I was actually in high school & couldn't be full time. I look back & in hindsight thought that if I could have gotten Dad into a house-- a stable environment-- he would have done ok. Worked... drank a little but still woudl be ok. It took years of the AA guys to finally convince me that I couldn't have saved him & had to go on w/ my life --- that it was ok for me to go on w/ my life. (--- In TCL an AA building was near the job & I asked & learned some & got Dad to go some. He did better & seemed more at peace... some purpose & stable definition... & not so much just drifting ). Later when the track was more finished I got up close to see some of the nascar guys testing & met a few. Richard Brooks, David Pearson (the Silver Fox) told me to stay in school -- I wanted to run away & join the racing circus. Mr Nelms,.. Kens Dad / Codys Grandad taught Ken & me auto mechanics during high school years. Malcolm was way ahead of his time as an auto- engineer... ... he tuned up the nascar guys when they raced on the sand beach at daytona -- before it was nascar. He was that good.

When I went off to the Marines, right before I left,... I told Dad that I would just be back in 2 years,... & "when I get back... we'll build houses". Dad said he'd like that. During Christmas break a couple years before we had worked for a couple weeks with a builder framing houses & I liked that enough to think I 'd like to be a builder some day. When I got out of the Marines and came back home in 1973... Dad was gone. The drinking had taken him & he was not functional by then, A few months later, I left for college at Alabama & after seeing Dad decline so fast, drove back to Tuscaloosa one night & cried while driving .... on the way back... knowing I had to go on ahead. I didn't see Dad again for several years. I felt like I'd left my Marine buddy behind. I wrestled w/ that for years. The next time I cried... was when Lee died.

I've seen a lot in my life. My blessings are abundant & I sure have far more than I deserve. I try to give back when & where I can; where it counts & makes a difference. I have just a few real life friends and consider that a blessing. I still try to lend a helping hand to needy folks. I still give a few dollars to the homeless guys. Still give blood. & do more stuff w/ the MCL guys now.

***

USMC 8th Engineer Battalion , 2nd Bridge Company



All built by hand.


In the Marines,... 8th engineer Battalion, I was in 2nd Bridge company. A couple of Bay City rubber wheeled cranes lifted bridge bulk off the flatbed trailers & then it was all by hand of a 14 man Marine squad to manhandle all the pieces. ... back breaking work ! in the field sometimes 20 hour days. pneumatic floats... I should have taken that knowledge & done the pneumatic floats down the Colorado river through the Grand Canyon as a tour guide. A missed path. I felt lucky to be in & see the last of "The old Corps" with the old breed Marines. You're never the same once you've run w/ the Marines.








Triple truss Bailey Bridge.


building a dock for 5 float barges toferry grunts and equipment/ tanks across the river.






Floating pontoon bridge



Pneumatic air floats. Bridge platform on top made a 5 float barge to ferry grunts to the other side of the river.


*****
In college I worked a couple of summers for an underground utilites contractor putting in water distribution systems/ lines into Alabama towns. Case backhoes were the workhorse. some IR mobile air compressors running hand held pneumatic drilling rigs -- I did their blasting as I had some experience from the Marines. A couple of Vermeer trenchers were the biggest machinery.









So Keith,... when I see that picture of that Mack truck & UNIT hoe... I have a love for the work it did & a great respect for your restoration of that equipment. It IS history. A LOT of guys beside me know what it took to restore that to pristine condition. I enjoy looking at that picture. I am proud of you. Our bond was from the Marines and from the work those machines did. You are a really unique guy to have restored that machinery.

This covers just a few young years & had a lot to do w/ the life path chosen & my method of going my own way. ... doing things my way & on my own terms. I kinda feel like.... from what I've lived through... I'm just glad to be here. So,... I do look back some. I try not to. But I look back to the mistakes and not try to repeat them. I try to live in the present. ... to enjoy the days as they come. To live in the moment like I learned from the Cajuns. To enjoy the time I have left. So,... when y'all get a postcard from somewhere... know I was thinking about you & hoped you were well. Whit


You never drink twice from the same stream.

Just because you wander doesn't mean you're lost. 

Uncle Hargus: Last of the Independents  

Have Bear,    
          Will Travel 

StoneBearTracks Copyright Uncle Hargus MCMLXIII ALL blog posts/photographs/video ALL Rights reserved 

ALL Blog posts/photographs/video Copyright MCMLXIII ALL Rights Reserved 

Fold over once....


6
From Life Rule # 6. The best way to double your money is to fold it over once and put it back in your own pocket.(you keep control of your own money. Don't turn it over to stockbrokers or CFPs; you know what your best interests are better than they do.)

That is some pretty good advice you don't have to find out the hard way. Back when just fresh out of college, 5 years on Wall Street was a real learning curve. Back then... Disco era, late 70's... a big day was Dow up + 5 points on 50 million shares ; now thats done in the first 12 seconds of the market open.

We actually had real NEWS, by real News organizations,... that would announce in places that this was an editorial opinion that did not reflect the position of the network. Those were real reporters. Now... the crooks running wall street have figured out,... just buy the newspapers and broadcast networks and we'll just write the stories / ( presented as news) according to how we want to push the market-- Up or Down-- ... depending on the positions we have taken -- Long or Short-- ... you think I'm kidding?

This is not a real economic market anymore. I can make the case that any ordinary retail investor has no business ever owning a stock again. There is absolutely no reason for any family to put their hard earned money anywhere near the stock market. Even prefered stocks and bonds with a decent yield ; inflation will eat it by maturity. Back then... around 50% of the paper -- stocks -- that Wall Street put out was worthless. Now... I think it's about 95%.

Imagine this scenario. Every morning / week... you look at your investment bank account (brokerage account) and the value has decreased mabye a couple of thousand dollars overnight. You bring this to the attention of the brokers and manager ; they say... "well stocks go up and down in value" . You do further research and realise the stock your broker sold you was fairly worthless. You tell the sheriff you've been cheated out of money.... he says it's all legal.

Next morning you go into the downtown cafe for breakfast. Across the room at the same table are the broker, manager, and sheriff; they all wave at you and smile. They should smile; you bought them a nice breakfast.

?You want to buy some more stock? put 10k into the market; I need another vacation trip.


************************
just added this below the Occupy post in the catch all-- ROF blog


******

Occupy 2 Unearned money usually buys trouble.

This requires an additional post. This is too significant of a place in this journey. These posts are about travel... this one a bit of rant.

The illusion was that it was about capitalism... capital formation, and was good career step after college to pursue. These are the best salesmen in the world; no joke. It was the best life training, ever. Wouldn't take anything for it; I have a Phd in Liars Poker.

It didn't even take 2 years behind the corporate vail to measure the bad choice made surrounding myself in the ilk of investment bankers; stockbroker. If I had to go back to being a stockbroker today... I think I'd just choose to be a street whore... there would be more dignity.

Working and dealing with about 200+ brokers, from the retail to CEO level, I've yet to witness a more contemptable bunch of ilk, professional con men and theives, in 30 years. These were no nothing priviledged frat boy blowhards that didn't know anything, would lie to sell their Grandmothers false teeth for a buck and sleep peacefully; they had no conscience. The high point of their conversation was what they owned... silly cars way over their status, or mcmansion homes with jaccuzis. The only thing more embarrasing was listening to the bragging of who they knew, usually even bigger no nothing blowhards void of any depth of character.

Unearned money usually buys trouble. remember that rule; it holds true.

The stock market is designed to separate your money from you, and make you feel good about it. It's an investment. yeah, you bet.

The recent economic collapse, from the markets cutting IRA's in half, the housing bubble via mortgage fraud are an epic tragedy and Wall Streets fingerprints are all over the crime scene. Don't forget their paid minions,.. the big accounting "consultant" firms to grease the skids with their "audits". Remember Ennron? World Com? That was just the tip of the iceberg.... and they're still producing audits of fantasy. ... and I'm not even yet talking about derivatives. They are congress' pimp.

If American main street ever could figure out just what they did,... and are still doing... understand... selling short... naked short selling, pipeline transactions.... they'd run these guys inside the building and set it on fire. You get the drift I don't like these guys? I worked with them... shined their corporate shoes and saw how they operated and know how they think. ?You have respect for priviledged frat boys stealing with impunity? ...?with no concsiquences? Put 10k in the market for a few years, and get back to me with the results.

So to get to Zucotti Park / Liberty Square....to see the origin of the Occupy Wall Street protest... I'm just glad to have seen this, to have been at the origin of the Occypy protests. and we'll see how this plays out. If they would have let me... I'd have helped build gallows there.

Appalachian Trail Georgia 7 ROF

Tracks of the StoneBear Copyright MCMLXIII Uncle Hargus ALL Rights reserved

ROF= Ring of Fire Odyssey  

MEF-H = Marine Expeditionary Force- Hargus 

AT = Appalachian Trail journey

November 2004









Tracks of the StoneBear Ring of Fire

Blood Mountain Georgia Appalachian Trail Thanksgiving 2004


Back to the Appalachian Trail. Kujo Kenn -- li'l brother (not really,... not blood,... but checks in on me like a brother) asked me to go hike a leg of the trail with his buddies. ... like 60- 70 miles. From Unicoi st park at Helen, Ga to somewhere up by Franklin, NC. Said I needed to get in shape and see If I could; would not want to be old grandad slowing them down. So for a month, put 40lbs of rocks in a back pack (4 liters of water is 8+ lbs) and did my normal 3 mile afternoon walk to see how I'd do. Made sure to go up the hills around here. Local yokals looked at me like i'd lost my mind; screw 'em. Basically did some conditioning to make the hump; it's been 30 years since doing forced marches in the Marines. In a couple weeks... I knew I could do this; let's go !

So I hiked some 60+ miles on the southern end of the Appalachian trail.... hiked with guys 10,... 20... and 25 years younger than me. And they did NOT have to slow down or make exceptions or adjustments for me to keep up. I kept up the whole way through. And at times for a few days was the lead dog on point. It was a learning experience to hike with these young kids and see their new modern equipment... the lightweight tents, clothes, sleeping bags,...Micro filter water purification (a lot better than halizone tablets in a canteen.)... camp stoves that would fit in your hand. they've got it together and are on their way. Even in my old dinosaur Marine equipment I kept up and made everybody over 54 proud. Their equipment was maybe 5 to 6 lbs lighter than mine. David had given me a surveyed Marine Corps Mollie pack which was really good backpack and frame equipment.

Hiking part of the Appalachian Trail was one of the highlights of the Tracks of the StoneBear journey ! Water was scarce on the AT, very interesting.... That;s why you had to carry 3 to 4 liters a day. Some of the springs were barely flowing, the size of your kitchen table, and was interesting to see the micro filter water pumps the size of a coke can work. Same thing with the butane stoves... the size of a coffee mug... cooked / heated dehydrated food for a week.

I've hiked many places and trails less traveled, hiked the 4 corners of the continent, ... have seen a lot of things... hiking and camping in the sleet and snow on Blood mountain, Georgia.... named for the Indian wars between the Creek and Cherokee tribes claiming hunting grounds... doesn't get much better ! Looking out through the mountain fog and clouds rushing by at some 4, 500' elev in November.... eating a Thanksgiving cold weather MRE supper in sleet and snow tasted good... the kind that have an extra 1,000 calories in the meal -- we're burning some 6,000 calories a day. Hang packs and food up 15' high to discourage bears. There are bears here. ...maybe some kinfolk / cousins.

A couple nights were in a 3 sided Adirondack... it was like a hotel after being out in the wilderness. And I mean wilderness. Tent on a mountain night in a blowing sleet then snow is not too bad.... just sleep / rest for the next days hump as you'll need the energy. I wondered if a hiker got injured,... broke and ankle... they'ed have to arrange an airlift as it was that primitive and often 10 to 15 miles between route points / exits. Hiking with a team was good; hadn't make a hike / hump like this since the Marine Corps 35 years earlier. This is home for a bear that opted out of the rat race long ago. I feel more at home here... would rather be here out on the edge than to be at the core of a festering rotten society.

Sent a postcard back to friend Rob with instructions to say hello to all the other corporate sharecroppers in their cubicle. If there is something that will bring the end of mankind and civilization via collapsed brain function,... it is ... The Cubicle. After 5 years of academic struggle you're rewarded with a piece of paper and a cubicle. ... a box, really a half box made of carpet. Carpet on the walls... instead of the fire extinguisher in the break glass box should have a straight jacket in the box. ... after a couple years in a cubicle your either tamed or you'll reach a point where your individual spirit gets raptured up.


It's the Journey that counts. Hiking with buddies Kenn, Brett, Zack, and booboo, makes it great. Surviving is easy, living while you do it is the hard part. You never drink twice from the same stream.

--Also see the Hawk Mountain post (coming soon) hiking at the AT in Pennsylvania with Marine buddy Keith and MJ & T-bird. --

You never drink twice from the same stream. 

Just because you wander doesn't mean you're lost. 

Uncle Hargus: Last of the Independents  

Have Bear,    
          Will Travel 

StoneBearTracks Copyright Uncle Hargus MCMLXIII ALL blog posts/photographs/video ALL Rights reserved 

ALL Blog posts/photographs/video Copyright MCMLXIII ALL Rights Reserved