Borrr-ing, in a good way
You could hear it purring from a half-block away -- and when you finally saw it, you wondered how it got into that tiny side yard.
Bill Cotton had been called in to drill holes for piers, and he had maneuevered his diesel-powered auger, perched like a little oil derrick on an ancient flatbed, between the sapodilla and the porch and gone straight to work. "I think he could squeeze that thing into a one-car garage," I said to Freddy, the painter. Not a delicate man, and not a delicate machine, but Bill made it dance and shimmy like a finger puppet. Up came the bore. Flick, the debris flew into a neat circle around the hole. Down. Turn. Up. Flick. . . .
The piers have to be anchored in no less than 3 feet of capstone -- and Bill hit cap at about 6 inches. Shorter work than expected. So Brantley and Ref were furiously wiring their rebar sculptures together.
With all that, the inspection is moved up a day, as is the initial pour -- and then maybe we can get the pool dug next week.
By the way, they didn't have to rush to build the forms -- they'd made enough when they set the piers under the house, and the leftovers have been stacked and ready ever since.
1 comment:
like a finger puppet....the writing here is soooo sweet it makes me want to lick the paper, to get every last creamy bit. oh, that would be gelato, this is jpt's writing. richest stuff this side of the mississippi......and the other side, too....i say bring on the publisher. or the grad students who could haul up a chair and see how it's done when it's done the best way humanly possible. hey haven't there been a few other fine writers who called KW home???? bam p.s. since i was unable til now to post my comments, i want to go on the record as publicly mentioning that the passage about your papa was one i will never forget....the ribbons of highways, the way he doffed his cap. i read it hours and hours ago, and it's still clear as if i was watching his whole life unfold.
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