(02-23-2018, 06:23 AM)ShadowsDad Wrote: Yesterday the dooryard and driveway was rotten ice and easy to walk on. Today it was a skating rink. I tried to put last years cleats on my new boots, but no way would they fit. So tomorrow I'll try to find some that will fit. Bummer! They are some nice cleats. I won't get rid of them though, they might work on future boots.
While out walking the old dog yesterday, wearing my excellent but inexpensive cleats ($6) that so far have fit on every pair of boots or shoes I've put them on, I was thinking about the shortcomings of the rubber, stretch on cleats. Mainly its the ease (or otherwise) of putting them on or off, especially as we get older. You don't want to go walking around the house in them or on any wood decking. So I'm thinking I need to come up with a good, inexpensive pair of cleats that would have easy, step-in / step-out binding to the boots, be adjustable and durable and like I said, inexpensive. Maybe the solution is a frame that the cheap rubber cleats stretch over - the cleats themselves wear out but the step in/out frame remains durable. Or maybe I'm just over thinking things and I just need to put a bench outside the door.
Thanks for the tips on loading the blower. We've been thinking about ramps for the dog - he's getting old and arthritic and jumping in and out of the truck isn't as easy as it used to be - I know how he feels! So maybe its a dual purpose ramp. I'm always noodling ways at getting things done by myself. A couple of reasons for that , first, I'm usually working alone and second, I hate asking for help. For example, I change over my snow tires myself - two sets of rims for each vehicle with summers on one and winters on the other. I store the wheels on racks against the wall in the garage up high out of the way of things. I've had 3 shoulder surgeries over the past 16 years and they alway seem to happen in the fall around tire change over time. Pulling the wheels down isn't a big deal, its a controlled drop but putting them back up was a problem. The first time I actually asked my wife for help - marrying a German woman has its benefits. In any case, I didn't want to have to do that again so I set about rigging up a block and tackle system. I found that the local outdoor shop was the best place to buy pulleys and such - high quality, man rated and actually cheaper than the cast crap at the home depot. Rope too. So I got everything ready to go but as usual problems arose. In this case the problem was that my ceiling was too low. Given the height that I needed to lift the wheels to get them into the racks and the physical space requirements of the combined upper and lower pulleys, I couldn't get the wheels high enough. It was fun trying, but in the end I just made sure I properly rehabbed my shoulders and went to the gym and lifted weights so I can still hoist those suckers overhead into the racks. Alone. Yup, they'll find me some day in the woods, pinned under a tree - my epitaph? He didn't need any help. Seriously, I'm not stupid about it but if I can do something alone I will. I'm pretty conscientious about when its a multi-person job.