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Backhoe operator, carpenter
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My Father-in-Law is an engineer. I joke that the problem with engineers is that they know a little bit about how everything works, which means they also know how to fix pretty much anything. It's a wonder they can get anything done; they must fight the urge to fix every problem they see. Ranchers are like blue-collar engineers (And I know, some of my ranching friends are actual engineers. I'm not talking about you). We have to be able to do -- and fix -- a million little things to keep a ranch running smoothly. I have to be a veterinarian, cowboy, mechanic, carpenter, trucker, butcher, logger, hydrologist, electrician, farrier, nutritionist, and plumber. We're generally just not as precise as engineers.
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Trapper |
I was thinking about all this on Sunday as I lay face down in the mud with my head in a hole as I repaired an 1 1/4" pvc pipe that fed 3 water troughs. I'd hit it with a pair of post hole diggers while I was being extra careful and digging this particular hole by hand because I thought there might be a pipe down there, somewhere. I was right. It was the last thing I wanted to do on a Sunday and I wasn't pleased. Just that afternoon, I'd already been a heavy equipment operator, carpenter, and surveyor. Now I was a reluctant plumber. And, as my wife and kids pointed out, I could add sailor to the list, because I sure was swearing like one.
1 comment:
I like my son-in-law doing engineering. It saves me a lot of work.
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