Dynamite Daze (274eef47-64b4-4b3c-b71a-71551df93b44)

- Organization:
- International Society of Explosives Engineers
- Pages:
- 1
- File Size:
- 39 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 2004
Abstract
We had a cold, gray winter here in Kansas City and I spent a lot of time watching out my den window at the squirrels and birds trying to get by in the lousy weather. I remember too well working in the cold, loading shots. I was frostbitten several times since I couldn’t tie in MS connectors with gloves on. Those old connectors had a piece of detonating cord on either end of a metal tube that held the delay and you tied them to the trunk lines with square knots. Doing this on a “warm” day in Alaska or Montana shooting ditch for a pipeline could be a frosty experience. Also remember how hard it was to connect up electric caps (detonators to you new guys) in the cold. Now I don’t want you to feel sorry for me ‘cause I suspect most of you younger fellows have also paid your dues in the cold and for that matter in the heat too. Wowee, the heat at the bottom of a Chicago dolomite quarry in August was enough to fry the brains of all that were there. Maybe that’s why the third deck of my brains doesn’t exist.
Citation
APA: (2004) Dynamite Daze (274eef47-64b4-4b3c-b71a-71551df93b44)
MLA: Dynamite Daze (274eef47-64b4-4b3c-b71a-71551df93b44). International Society of Explosives Engineers, 2004.