Bunch of sissies.
Pretty soon going to work will be too hard of work to do.
:monkey:
Well, I would put it as right up there with setting chokers, maybe even more of an aerobic workout. One doesn't have to carry blocks and lines around but one starts out the day with several quarts of paint...here we carried a case and thank goodness I wasn't on the marking crew here all the time. Those folks all have back problems or had at some time.
You are moving up and down all day long. I worked on steep forests and could eat anything and any amount of food and not gain any weight. In fact, since we didn't work in the winter, I'd put on weight when we stopped and then come spring, 20 pounds would fall off...that's how we worked.
But now I wish that I knew more about logging when I was marking. I could have made things a bit easier.
The marking crew was an entry level job.
You NEVER told anybody what you did for a living. If you were in the bars around loggers, and they found out what you did, there would be constant, "Why do you guys do this? Why did you have to do that?"
What with all the fear of the chemicals, and we marked with lead based paint back in the day, it is
The Job Nobody Wants To Do.
I put my foot down when some wildlife crew folks wanted us timber folks to mark out their salamander buffers. They were deathly afraid of the paint. They went out and marked in hazmat type suits.
In Arizona, we all had Carpal Tunnel problems starting because in that doghair, when we were marking pulp, we were marking 700 to 800 trees per day. The powers that be would not allow Leave Tree Marking to happen. That's why I run a computer mouse with my left hand.
Definitely a good workout and hard work...around here.