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What do you do, or did you do, for a living?

Dan , Flexible hours alright especially @ 64 years old ( when I retired from it ) loading & unloading 600-700 Hay Bales a day when it's 95 * ! :LOL: Stay Healthy & Safe ! 73 & God Bless , Leo

My son had his first “real” job last summer. 100 degrees out...harvesting sod. Then he gets his paycheck and loans it to his older brother.

Had to remind him the value of a dollar...stacking 168 pieces of sod on a pallet, 50 times over, each pallet weighing 2500lbs...each day.

125,000lbs, two 18 wheeler loads per day, and you’re a damn bank now?

Lol!
 
Any takers?

I’ll add mine, But it’s kind of all over the map. Will take me a bit of typing.
20+ yrs marine researcher, underwater acoustics tech, AUV/ASV pilot.
Beach to deep water research ( Atlantic, Pacific, Gulf of Mexico )
Sonar
Multibeam
Sub-bottom

Early retirement
 

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Been working on the farm since I graduated high school in 2012. Been at the same job now for 8 years. I mainly run the spray rig and run a combine in the summer during harvest and will drive a truck every now and then. That’s the fun thing bout the farm you always do different things.
May need to get some pointers from you Pete.
 
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Rule # 1 about Farming . We handle a lot $$$ but just can't hang on to it that long ! Can you say " John Deere Repair " ? :LOL: I can give you a lot of tips ! First one stay away from Dairy Farming unless your big enough to Milk Round the Clock ! We milked 150 & that really wasn't enough to pay the bills ! That's why we sold Fire wood & made Pallets , but equipment to make pallets isn't cheap either . Plus here in the NE getting a decent load of wood to saw is few & far between . Just my 2 cents , that's why I retired . :) Stay Healthy & Safe ! 73 & God Bless , Leo
 
I'm 60 plus . My leather shows the wear and use of four decades of use on the roads of three continents , six foreign countries and at last count twenty eight of these United States of America . I have continuously held a motorcycle endorsement since 1972 . I learned basic mechanical skills from my father , his father and a tolerant neighborhood filled with mechanics and machinists of widely varied disciplines . I have built most of my motorcycles with the exception of those I rebuilt . I have never owned a new off the showroom floor motorcycle .

In something of a chronological order I have owned ...
A CA72 Honda Dream , yes , the square fender , rubber band , leading link , beginning of the end for the British and American motorcycle industry .
A BSA 441 Victor . By the time I was done only I could start it . I vowed to never again own an Amal carburettor .
R5/RD-250/350/400 . I had so many spares just to keep them running I still find them every time I have to move .
TZ-250 . Other than the water cooling what the hell was I thinking ?
1969 XLCH . Rather than a simple what the hell was I thinking I really need to elaborate . This example was indiscriminately abused simultaneously from behind and from the front by the bumpers of inattentive drivers . I got it cheap . I got it cheaper than a Bonneville , CB750 , or any Italian bike I could pronounce . Then again I had to learn how to straighten frame ,forks and swing arm . The 1973 Kawasaki was a rumor at this time and it was a year before I actually heard one . In the mean time I did everything possible to defy the gods of speed and destroy the structural integrity of the Harley Davidson engine . I did finally find a way to increase the displacement , valve size , fuel consumption , noise and rear tire wear to the point where the transmission was the last weakest link in the chain . I got real good at replacing transmissions . The only thing I choose to remember was the dawn of the 1973 Kawasaki Z1 in the hands of inexperienced squids and the look on their faces as the Charley Horse drove right around them . Hours later I could be found in my parents garage replacing clutch plates , primary chain and yet another main and counter set . The following season saw a better crop of riders and aftermarket parts for the Z1 and even after resorting to Cox Motor Airplane Fuel (at least 20% Nitromethane in my day ) as a major fuel component it was trial by fire . I don't know if I was more thrilled by the now diminishing ability to demolish the egos of overly enthusiastic rice pilots or spectators were more stunned by the occasional spectacular catastrophic metallurgical destruction of the Harley Davidson .

Interlude consisting of long periods of boredom and brief moments of absolute terror . My demons are my own and only in this one area of my life will I say " You weren't there , you weren't me , what good would it do to explain ? " Non sibi sed patriae .


A return to the world at large brought me into the grips of visceral contact with the combustion process . I knew I couldn't beat them so I joined them .

R5/RD-250/350/400 .I still had all those parts remember
Triumph T140 Bonneville 750 . A British anachronism with deplorable brakes and miserable carburetors mixed with oddly stunning road manners great looks . I saw a restoration recently sell for near five times what I paid for my used 1973 . In inflation adjusted dollars a net loss .
The Z's . So many rice pilots had turned so many of the Z's into scrap in my absence that it was a kid in a candy store moment . The aftermarket had caught up with and in some cases passed Kawasaki's original offering by a large margin .
TX/XS650 Yamaha I still have this sickness to some degree . I was a failed motocrosser and amateur road racer (read here "not very good") but I seemed at home on the dirt . Keeping all the spinning bits in the Yamaha cases was a bit of deja vu . This experience on the dirt lead me back to the pavement as a much improved road racer and somewhat humbled competitor .
TZ250 Again . They had improved a bunch
Liter Bikes . They resembled the parent Kawasaki Z's like , well , you get the idea . Fully race prepped drag race from corner to corner true superbikes . Chassis development lagged far behind engine development for several years . Unless you lived through this it's difficult to explain bending handle bars getting the bike to turn in or straighten out .
750's . The AMA obsoletes my years of engine development in a stroke and relegates the class to 750cc . Again any resemblance to the parent KZ750 was incidental if not accidental .
GPZ/KZ550 Fun
Honda VF500 Different kind of fun .
Putting a license plate on the 750cc race bike and surviving several near misses on the street lead to the sale of all race equipment in the span of a single weekend . On pavement I was frustrated and reduced to racing with my own money . On the dirt I was being forced into an extremely large expenditure for an XR750 just for a chance to be competitive . I find it odd that the insurance premiums for motorcycle racing were significantly larger than deep sea diving , Lloyd's of London does not .
KZ1000 Police . I was without a motorcycle for all of three weeks . I was so deep in spares from these engines that I still have complete engines in boxes to this day. I was not going to quit riding and what sold me on the bike was the floorboards .
And there I stayed for twenty seven years .
ZN1300 . The Battlestar Galactica (or Gigantica depending on who...) A 120 RWHP behemoth with cross country legs .

I saved the best for last .
1973 Harley Davidson FLH . I originally built this for a friend and ended up with it on his death . I like the bike and know its failings well . I attempted to out think Harley Davidson at every opportunity and fairly succeeded on most points . Just a few of the modifications were a real carburetor , a complete rethink of the combustion chamber , dry clutch and belt primary , STD cases , real starter motor and hours of work in the front end .

This is a fairly complete history of my experience .

Only now can get to the heart of the matter . I ride . In most cases I ride very well . There have been glaring exceptions . I have owned or ridden a wide variety of motorcycles . I can't wait for the next ride . I find excuses to ride . I build kit to suit conditions and ride in bone dry near freezing temperatures because I can . I can't pass up a disabled motorcycle . I love to point out that my KZ1000 Police was built in Lincoln Nebraska . When asked what motorcycle I'm riding I am as likely to respond with "one with two wheels " as a simple "mine" . If in a group of media led leather clad lemmings I'm the one by myself in the corner laughing quietly but obviously enough that the enthusiast and compulsive obsessive people watcher can't miss me . Squids and the stereotypical credit card biker get ignored only as much as they ignore me . The squid need not be a Hyabussa owner any more than the credit card biker need be a Harley Davidson owner . They have one thing in common . They ride to be seen riding . They deserve and have earned nothing from me . I anticipate the next conversation with a rider wondering if it will be a humanoid or an over priced , self entitled mockery of motorcycling in general . Any reasonable question will be answered reasonably . I have brought many new riders into the community simply by listening . Gaining an understanding of your audience even and especially if it's a solitary hopeful motorcyclist requires the disciplined mind of the objective observer mixed with the experience of a lifetime of all things motorcycle . It's humbling indeed when you feel not just obliged but compelled to give not just the whole truth but the very best truth you can when asked something as innocent as "Why do you wear all the leather" by a 10 year old .

Sorry for the jumble of thought above but you get it as it is . I'll just end with ...

Some ride to be seen
Some ride because they want to
Some ride because they have to

~kop

I may have posted this before. It still is only what I've done. It does not define who I am.

Have some good taste in bikes, I have a 1988 RZ350 with spare motors out the wazoo, Used to go to shanonville and mosport to watch my Uncle Race his Kawasaki sponsored KZ1000 which he held the 1 plate for a few years and also set a world record at daytona in 1981 for the most distance covered in 24hr race. He retired in 1982 then went on to build his exhaust systems (Hindle). Motorcycles are in my blood, have been riding my trusty 2000 CBR 929rr since 2008 and have convinced the wife that I will do one more supersport yamaha R1 2015+ before I hit a standard or cruiser...getting near 50 and back is starting to hurt. Keep the rubber side down.
 
I prep and paint at father in-laws body shop, we are working on a really nice 1966 Chevelle SS 396, thing is mostly original motor and built and 3" exhuast 4 gear this thing sounds amazing, love some of the old cars we get to work on. and best part I get to paint my own stuff.

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Tin , When that car is Washed , Please post another pic . I love seeing Old Chevy's w/ Small Tires & Factory hub caps . This if from my era , That's the way they came off the Car Hauler in the day , Dropped @ Dealership , they did all the mod's . My friend ordered a Brand New 69' Black Nova 427 SS , came off the truck looking like your Grandma's Car . Dealer put the wheel's , header's , & did other mod's . Thanks for the memories ! Stay Healthy & Safe ! 73 & God Bless ! Leo
 
Tin , When that car is Washed , Please post another pic . I love seeing Old Chevy's w/ Small Tires & Factory hub caps . This if from my era , That's the way they came off the Car Hauler in the day , Dropped @ Dealership , they did all the mod's . My friend ordered a Brand New 69' Black Nova 427 SS , came off the truck looking like your Grandma's Car . Dealer put the wheel's , header's , & did other mod's . Thanks for the memories ! Stay Healthy & Safe ! 73 & God Bless ! Leo

Will do, yes it does shine up well just dusty being in the shop, dude is selling just repairing some cracking paint.
 
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