The idle musings of a former military man, former computer geek, medically retired pastor and now full-time writer. Contents guaranteed to offend the politically correct and anal-retentive from time to time. My approach to life is that it should be taken with a large helping of laughter, and sufficient firepower to keep it tamed!
Monday, January 31, 2011
Men at work . . . sort of . . .
Clearly, these guys had way too much time on their hands!
...And yet we allow base-jumping, rock-climbing, parachuting, hot-air ballooning, amusement park rides....
Even in the short clip I can see that they have taken care to measure distances and have adequate safety margin to any obstacles. I know the harness and slings used, and they have a massive safety factor above the forces at work here. The fear when you do something like this is that you might be unaware of some failure mode, always a danger when you do something for the first, tenth, or hundredth time.
But before the video even started, when I saw the man in the harness and the bucket behind him with the sling between, my first thought was "This does not conform to the Work at Height Regulations 2005 (as amended)"
Of course, a second later I thought the individuals in the video were among the most wonderful people on earth. Somewhere there must be a happy medium that allows fun, between making sure that people aren't coerced into unsafe working practices (on one hand) and putting an ugly fence next to the top of every ravine in a national park (on the other extreme).
Boss: "Ha, ha, ha, you're all fired."
ReplyDeleteJim
Agree with jim... STOOPID!
ReplyDeleteThat would probably also be the day that the OSHA inspector showed up for a random worksite inspection.
ReplyDeleteEmployees fired, foreman demoted and fined, company fined BIG time.
...And yet we allow base-jumping, rock-climbing, parachuting, hot-air ballooning, amusement park rides....
ReplyDeleteEven in the short clip I can see that they have taken care to measure distances and have adequate safety margin to any obstacles. I know the harness and slings used, and they have a massive safety factor above the forces at work here. The fear when you do something like this is that you might be unaware of some failure mode, always a danger when you do something for the first, tenth, or hundredth time.
But before the video even started, when I saw the man in the harness and the bucket behind him with the sling between, my first thought was "This does not conform to the Work at Height Regulations 2005 (as amended)"
Of course, a second later I thought the individuals in the video were among the most wonderful people on earth. Somewhere there must be a happy medium that allows fun, between making sure that people aren't coerced into unsafe working practices (on one hand) and putting an ugly fence next to the top of every ravine in a national park (on the other extreme).