Yes in Feb. Solden, Austria.Wot, no skiing?
Yes in Feb. Solden, Austria.Wot, no skiing?

I know, I like a long break over ChristmasWimp

I like to earn over xmas as we can kick in a small fortune, then take time in January to enjoy the fruits of our labour. Make hay whilst the sun shines.I know, I like a long break over Christmas

Well done for working long hours - you've got loads of people on benefits to keep.Gaffer rang me up and said "Work as much overtime as you want, no need to ask for it before xmas" going to do 4 hrs a night and maybe do an allnighter over the weekend. We are unindated with faults at the moment and xmas lighting, not enough men and now not enough time in our core hours. I am on the new motorway link on Thursday and was promised to double my wages if I can get 20 new lights on in the day. This really is a rich mans world.

OMG you are right. I may have to reconsider this.Well done for working long hours - you've got loads of people on benefits to keep.

I had too many years of the silly Christmas deadline.Certainly is. I'm not bothering in December. Might have to drive a machine on Friday. I don't plan to do much in January either.
Know the feeling. The double garage we have just completed, I told him he'd be able to put his Christmas tree up, when we started in October. We managed to complete all the ground work (extras) too. Bonus.I had too many years of the silly Christmas deadline.
Yep. Done that.I’ve been out on site week before Christmas seeing 20 guys desperately trying to finish an extension because they had promised the customer it’ll be finished by Christmas.
We once did a biggish job in the run up to Christmas, whereby the roof purlins (steel) were in place but precariously perched on props, rather than on the yet to be built gable end. The risk of wind was high. The temperatures plummeted as did my heart. So we bought a brazier and stacked all the gable end blocks in a circle around the brazier and lit it. We got a pair of steel trestles, a length of rebar and a metal pail, and heated the water in the pail. We put some hot embers in the mixer drum. We mixed some warm compo having kept the bags of sand inside the customers house overnight. We ran a blowlamp over the existing block tops. We built the gable under the steels with the warm blocks and mortar. We first wrapped insulation around the blockwork. Then a load of dust sheets. Then a load of hessian sacking. It was -7 degrees that night.A nice job for a builder is having the shell of a big extension up in early Dec, sealed in, than back 2nd week of Jan to work inside in the dry doing all the internals.
Correct.Working in thick mud trying to dig out foundation trenches in Jan is not nice. Best avoided I think.

