My Mother was born / raised in France before the Second World War. Survived the German occupation and subsequent 5 yr. starvation. She told me to always have a wheelbarrow. Those that did were able to move things too heavy / bulky / numerous to move otherwise, and were able to charge a percentage of what they moved. Bicycles weren't as efficient... ☆
@@houseofwonders1 that’s the Rolls Royce of wheelbarrows. Including VAT in Denmark costs 6250 dkk. That’s around 930 usd. I own it for 4 years now, and I abuse it a lot.Its a good testament for its quality.
@@Ghost-of-a-man I don’t keep it I’m my car. Too heavy/the car uses more diesel if I have it full to the brim all the time. I only have few tools inside, just for that reason.
In Sweden we put a big SOLD-sticker on it and put it on the sidewalk. It will disappear within 2 minutes by itself. It is like magic!
@@swedishpsychopath8795 that’s a good one, had a good laugh 😆.
Thanks!
ahahahaha
My Mother was born / raised in France before the Second World War. Survived the German occupation and subsequent 5 yr. starvation. She told me to always have a wheelbarrow. Those that did were able to move things too heavy / bulky / numerous to move otherwise, and were able to charge a percentage of what they moved. Bicycles weren't as efficient... ☆
@@fjb4932 thanks for sharing that, the people that survived those times are a special breed.
I will definitely keep that in mind!
Work smarter, not harder, good move.
Sir I think you've got brains and brawn!
@@TheGiggleMasterP Thank you! I always try to find ways to not break my back. I know people with collapsed discs and it’s no fun at all..
Better have a good quality wheelbarrow for that
@@houseofwonders1 that’s the Rolls Royce of wheelbarrows. Including VAT in Denmark costs 6250 dkk.
That’s around 930 usd.
I own it for 4 years now, and I abuse it a lot.Its a good testament for its quality.
@@benjaminsagau Good Lord
Works well, father moved 200kg stones
@@heandonlyhe that’s great to hear ! 😲💪💪💪
Or since it’s waste material you could break it in to smaller pieces
@@Ghost-of-a-man it’s hard to break reinforced concrete, especially when there is no electricity on site.
@@benjaminsagau sledge hammer
@@Ghost-of-a-man I don’t keep it I’m my car. Too heavy/the car uses more diesel if I have it full to the brim all the time.
I only have few tools inside, just for that reason.
Too much trouble. And the crumbs and shards are a PITA to pick up and remove. @@Ghost-of-a-man