Actually I see many homes when some one jump or do any activity which hammer the roof, noice created for the person who stay under the roof. How we reduce this noice.
I think he means to 'bring on summer'. Then, there is 'no ice' on roof.
Robert Said: :laugh:??? :blink:
:laugh:
I keep tellin' y'all and tellin' all y'all. Woody is one hilarious dude. Priceless. No poun-poun; peepo eat peepo eat. Rotfl. (Oh, yeah, we'll be borrowing that one, I can guarantee that.)
We did a roof for a very particular customer, the kind that watches all day, calls the office instead of talking to the foreman etc. Well her cat freaked out from the noise (ran around the house shitting everywhere). she demanded the the company pay for emotional distress and therapy for her AND the cat! Good thing our contracts have a recommendation to remove pets before work starts. :laugh:
Tropical Roofer: Licking the hammer doesn't work though.
Someone needs to explain this to Miley Cyrus! B)
I used to explain to them that roofing is loud and suggest they not be there during the installation unless they wanted to and in that case turn the stereo up and stay away from the fireplace. :laugh:
If you lick each nail before you hit it with a hammer, it won't make a sound. Licking the hammer doesn't work though.
Actually KC, your post reminded me (I can't imagine why) of an incident many years ago we had while reroofing a Chinese restaurant. The owners seemed to only speak enough English to be convenient for them. I had agreed to not do any work from 11 to 1 to not disturb lunch diners. But on the last day, I was so close to finishing I worked just a little past 11 when the owner lady came running out screaming at me, "No poun-poun, peepo eat, peepo eat." We still use that chant today.