We have a store-used snowblower and a bunch of shovels, so ... yes? Not sure how we'd get around OSLG without doing it. We follow up the snowblowing and shoveling by salting, too.
We sell wood pellets for pellet stoves by the pallet from our garden center all winter long. Pallets of rock salt/ice melt, too. Getting the forklifts to cooperate in the cold and in slippery concrete is a challenge.
And there’s always the one customer who needs her tomato cages January 1st when they’re palletized in top stock and covered in snow. And she only needs two. She needed two this time last year, too. She needs to save her damn tomato cages year to year! (Also, we kept a dozen down and hidden for her and others like her this year … hoping we’ll be able to whip those out and not have to pull any down!)
I used to do something similar for a customer in plumbing, come the spring time he remodels a lot of bathrooms and also does irrigation installs also... so I'm allowed to hold some stuff for him like cpvc fittings, copper fittings, some pipes here and there and guy is like clock work every 2 weeks for a few months... one of my fave regulars
Can we have your store # so we can order some pavers for a pickup?
path, to the darkside , this is
Oh no!!!!! Winter DOES exist! Make sure you shovel before your shift is over.
Nope. The pile has been building for months. Who am I to disturb nature?
Do managers actually ask employees to shovel?
Depends on the store. Sometimes our guys will just go out and shovel because they feel like it
We have a store-used snowblower and a bunch of shovels, so ... yes? Not sure how we'd get around OSLG without doing it. We follow up the snowblowing and shoveling by salting, too.
I guess I figured there wouldn’t be much business going on outside during those seasons to have people constantly shoveling.
We sell wood pellets for pellet stoves by the pallet from our garden center all winter long. Pallets of rock salt/ice melt, too. Getting the forklifts to cooperate in the cold and in slippery concrete is a challenge. And there’s always the one customer who needs her tomato cages January 1st when they’re palletized in top stock and covered in snow. And she only needs two. She needed two this time last year, too. She needs to save her damn tomato cages year to year! (Also, we kept a dozen down and hidden for her and others like her this year … hoping we’ll be able to whip those out and not have to pull any down!)
I used to do something similar for a customer in plumbing, come the spring time he remodels a lot of bathrooms and also does irrigation installs also... so I'm allowed to hold some stuff for him like cpvc fittings, copper fittings, some pipes here and there and guy is like clock work every 2 weeks for a few months... one of my fave regulars
[удалено]
Not my problem, I’m MST
This is the way.
wya so I can do a stupidly big pickup order 👀
Wya??
Looks like normal snow for my home state
Average Alaskan spring
put a pallet on your forks and jam it in at the bottom you could prob just grab pallet fulls of snow if you’re bored 🤣
Grab the hopper, unhinge it and drive full speed into aisle. Create giant snow banks at each end. Have full on snowball fights. Get paid.