I didn't say anything to the police.
I'd like to go down with the heavier pole 4ft, and above 3ft, I could fill 
that a bit with cement. 2ft should do nice to anything with up to 20 inch 
tires. I could even keep the pole I have, just have the end ground off.
Now I have to get that fucking inlet pole out as the smaller clothes line 
pole is jammed in it.





On Wed, 24 Jun 2009, Lee A. Stone wrote:

>
> was this reported to the police? I can tell you because of problems
> with drunk drivers and other s that a bag of cement will not keep your
> new clothesline pole up.  I like your idea of using heavier pipe but
> maybe cnsider   a deeper support hole with much more rock, etc and lots
> of  loose cement? or an additional anchor  for the pole running back.
> but then it is something else to trip over.  depending on the amount of
> laundry you put out  one of those original  unbrella type clothesline
> things that you can close up or set to  be in an open position. Not sure
> of the name. either way  that drunk should be doing the labor. Lee
>
> On
> Tue, Jun 23, 2009
> at 02:35:42PM -0400, Spiro wrote:
>> Hi,
>> I have a ?heavy? metal pipe with a 4 spike cap that is used for a clothes
>> line.
>> My neighbor across the drive likes his alcohol consumtion; and he has quie
>> dented another neighbor's fence. He got a big SUV and ran down the pole.
>> It is bigger and heavier than the 2.5 inch in our chain link fence in
>> front.
>> But I've not measured it yet.
>> Here's what I want to do; check it out and let me know if I'm on the right
>> track.
>> There's a pipe in the ground, cemented and flush with the driveway. The
>> pipe with the 4 spike cap, fits down into that. Part of this is broken off
>> into the bigger pipe.
>> Somehow I have to get that out.
>> I then want to get a piece of the same size, 2ft down and 2ft above ground
>> and cement it. I'd like to then get the same size as the pipe that is in
>> the ground, and cement that. I could then drop the final clothes pole into
>> that and have cement and double piping up to about 4ft and make it more
>> durable and memorable than the one he destroyed by driving 5 feet onto my
>> driveway and breaking it for me.
>> Wife says that hang dry is faster, and is obviously cheaper; so I need a
>> very durable solution.
>> Wife wants to wimp and drag a solitary standing unit in and out every day.
>> Not good enough for me.
>> Thoughts, advice, help?
>> Thanks
>>
>>
>>
>>
>
> -- 
> malpractice, n.:
>       The reason surgeons wear masks.
> .
>

Reply via email to