BBChevro
Well-known member
Did your old door opener work OK with the heavier doors?
And...,we all know "the look".
And...,we all know "the look".


Mark, the old garage door openers worked fine with the heavier doors once I had them properly balanced. They are contractor-grade openers with simple one-button remotes and doorbell switches on the wall next to the house entry door..Did your old door opener work OK with the heavier doors?
And...,we all know "the look".![]()
Bret, thanks for stopping by and for the kind words.More great stories thanks for sharing Bob.
Bret
Stewart, I'm better at shooting spitballs through a straw than teaching but I'll see what I can do. I recommend one of those Harbor Freight infrared thermometers to check the temperature of that door. At 3:00 in the afternoon it should be griddle-hot.You know Bob if you're ever in the Crapital City, you could teach me how to install garage door insulation. Our door faces west and it's an oven in the summer.
JB, great to see you visit my thread. The day before we found this house, we looked at a place out in the swamps. It had an 8-car garage, which I kinda liked but the owner was bipolar and the house was all black and white. Your Hidey Hole seems to be about the same size but far less depressing.Bob,
It has taken me longer than it should have to make it to the temporary end of this thread, but not as long as it took you to start it.I love all of the stories and will keep up with your adventures from now on.
JB

Drives, I would never think of lifting an engine with a chain around my neck. I was just lowering a big block cylinder head onto the engine in my Corvette.i did see where you had a chain around your neck maybe holding an engine off of, but i'm sure i read that wrong.
djones1a, will do and thank you for reading along. As a child I preferred comic books -- lots of illustrations and a few words. I'm not exactly following that lead but I'll try to pepper my garage life memories with as many relevant pictures as I can find.I am enjoying reading this.Keep on writing.Lol
Don, I'd love to have saved a lot of things but my real space is somewhat limited. But I'm not complaining; my 3-car garage is a huge space almost anywhere besides the US and unusually large even here.That's a pretty cool bike Bob
Don't you wish you had it today. I wish I had it today It would fit right in with my other stuff in the party garage.
I do have a hotrod 20"er hanging up in there.
Toolfool, thank you so much. We do have a lot of stuff in common.Currently my favorite thread.
Coljar, I will continue and thanks for the support. Back in the 50s, everyone in my family dressed up in a suit and tie (dress and stockings) daily. We dressed down to shovel dirt and manure on the weekends. My high school even had "Dress-up Friday" when the boys wore suits or sport jackets and ties and the girls wore party dresses.Yes Bob, by all means, continue on. By the way, you were showing the picture of your grandfather dressed up while fishing. I remember my grandfather would mow his lawn dressed the same, tie and all.
Thank you, Stewart, the train party is a reminder for me as to just how lucky we all are to be alive. I don't miss everything about the good old days but maybe having to get out of the car and make a call in a phone booth was pretty good (I hate seeing people in the oncoming lane looking down at their lap!).Awesome idea on the train party. Making Long Island Ice Tea out lemons. Good for you.
No matter the subject, your writing is a joy to read and it's cool seeing how we once lived. Like they say, the good old days.
Ah shucks, I thought no one noticed. JB, don't let this put a damper on my fun but you actually nailed me.What Bob is really doing is slowly writing all of his life stories down for us to get entertained on, then in a few years will compile them in a book for us to buy. You are not fooling me Bob, I see what you are up to. Now where do I send my deposit? Also because I'm the first to figure this out I expect to have my copy serial number 1 and autographed. Thank you in advance,
JB

Just a fantastic read Bob
Thank you for sharing your story.
Regards
Thank you, my Aussie friends! I am trying to avoid making an even more disjointed thread by giving a chronology rather than multiple side trips into the past.I'm really enjoying all of your stories Bob, keep it up.![]()
Drives, in grade school I cringed when the teacher asked for a 500-word essay. As I wrote in ink I would count the words and mark each 100-word milestone in pencil. Getting to 500 words was like climbing Everest.Bob: your stories are so well written and always make me smile so you have my vote and maybe everybody else's to write in any order that you want to and have time to.
love the stories and pictures and if you have more please share as you can.
cheers
MH, thank you and I do enjoy reading yours as well.Great stories as usual Bob!
Herb, I was an avid fisherboy back then. I spent my limited cash on fly-fishing, bait-casting, spin-casting, deep-sea and drop-line equipment. When not fishing in Vermont, we went party-boat fishing on the Great South Bay on Long Island. Back in the early 50s it was chock full of flounder and fluke and we would catch bucket-fulls every time we went out. When the flatfish disappeared, we rigged for blowfish and would catch hundreds. On my uncle Harvey's boat, any fish not cleaned by our return to the dock were thrown overboard so I learned to skin a blowfish in seconds. The blowfish taught me that gloves are more than a fashion statement -- lost a lot of my own skin skinning them.Bob
The photo of your grandfather fly fishing made me smile really big. That's exactly what I wish I were doing Right Now!
I have really enjoyed all the old photos you have posted!! Thanks so much for the memory lane walk!!
Best Regards
Herb
Sub, I thank you and I'll keep posting but this will come back to the garage eventually...Great stories Bob!
Keep posting them up!
Gary, so glad you are enjoying it. Where in NY are you?I have really enjoyed this thread. Thanks for sharing!
Lamar, I completely agree. There is something calming and uplifting working on a farm. Of course I might have a different view if I had to go out and feed the chickens, milk the cows and slop the pigs in below-zero weather with snow drifts blocking the barn doors.Really enjoying the old farm stories Bob. I use to spend part of my summer school vacations at my uncles dairy farm and consider them some of the best years of my life and probably has a lot to do for why I bought my 15 acres and doing with it what I am. Some great stories for a "tech writer" keep um comin!
DLC, I think you should share your history. The stories shared on this forum have awakened my own memories and it gives me a warm feeling (of course, that could just be the incontinence).After reading that story Bob and the one that Hotfr8 put up over in 1/2 cups thread, I think that maybe I will share some of the history I remember. That was touching to say the least. Thanks for sharing.
...The stories shared on this forum have awakened my own memories and it gives me a warm feeling (of course, that could just be the incontinence).

Mark, you laugh but wait 'til you turn 70. Sneezing and laughing too hard are not your friends.

djones1a, I hope my memory isn't unique. I have a hard time remembering what I had for dinner the night before last but things that happened 60+ years ago are amazingly clear. On the down side I tend to repeat myself and I have a hard time remembering what I had for dinner the night before last.This is so cool how you have all these memories and pictures to share,i to am a car guy but do not remember all the details like you. Thanks for sharing!

) that I haven't had time to catch up with your story. I will shortly. I love reading your story. Mine doesn't come close, but is nearly as long.....