13 thoughts on “Phil…

  1. My name isn’t Phil! But I do identify with a shed full of ‘treasures’. Hubby and I were installing a new 50-gallon hot water tank in a house we had just bought. We didn’t buy enough pipe to install it. I went to my ‘toolbox’ of junk that he wanted to throw away and came up with enough pieces/parts for us to finish the installation. We were able to take a shower in all that glorious hot water that night.

    • When I worked in the woods, the service body on my company pickup was loaded with stuff that most people wouldn’t have fooled with: old nuts and bolts, fittings, many odd things similar to that crazy piece of crap wood that helped Dad (in the video) get the job done.

      Guess who the go-to guy was when anybody on the job needed something that they didn’t have?

      My foreman nicknamed me “Kragen”.

      BTW, my 3/4 ton pickup, full of 110 gallons of diesel, oil, sweet water jugs, hydraulic hoses and tools weighed 10,800 pounds. The owner of the company would have had a fit if he knew.

          • Nope not in this area. We got Oreillys round here. HQ in Springfield Mo. found out this last year a friends sister in law is married to Mr Oriellys son, said she needs a new pair of shoes so shop weekly.

            kragen def was “collar”

  2. One of the reasons my Sweet Little Wife stopped questioning why I kept so much “junk”.

    I’ve saved us hundreds of dollars by repairing something with “junk”….

    • Which is funny, because if they put on a blouse in a very specific shade of plum and decided they needed to wear a hair scrunchie and sunglasses that day with it – they could look in the back of their junk drawers and pull out color coordinated accessories…

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