Sunday, April 20, 2008

Oops! Not!

Another memory of a project at Saint Mary’s hospital; I was told that a special operating room needed to be remodeled and this one was going to be different. Because of the special and necessary equipment in the room, we would have to do all of the work behind a polyethylene barrier while the room continued to be in use. For surgery. We had to prepare by making certain that we had all of the material needed, as well as the manpower. All the rest of the ongoing projects would be halted until we had finished this one.

The demolition of the existing walls was quickly finished and then the plumbers had to pipe in all of the medical gas before we could start. And when we did, I was quite surprised to see that the operating table, the patient and the surgical team were only a few feet away from us, on the other side of the clear poly wall. Yikes!

So we did our work quietly on one side of this thin wall while the surgeons did theirs on the other. And neither of us said, "Oops!"

Paper Trail

I didn’t spend all of my Reno years working on casinos. That kind of work was sporadic at best and the Reno construction market had lots of other projects to offer. One of these was the on-going remodel of Saint Mary’s Hospital. Over the years, I would be sent to Saint Mary’s for any little job that came along; a day, a week, or rarely, months at a time. You had to be able to give the contractor, Q & D Construction, a detailed cost estimate before the work began and since I was a former estimator, I could do that. This way our office didn’t have to be bothered with sending someone out to estimate a $500 job; I could do it and then actually do the construction itself. The customer loved it and we never had any of our billings questioned.

And during this time, the hospital administration was quietly buying up houses in the neighborhood around the hospital; preparing for eventual expansions. Quite often we would have to work on one of the old houses as they converted it to temporary office space. And I remember one in particular, a very old house that was being converted into a ‘blood bank’.

I was working in the stairs that went into the basement and as I chopped off the old plaster ceiling, I noticed that the backside of the old wooden lath was covered with newspaper. Very old newspaper. I had heard that this was common in the ‘old days’, a primitive form of insulation.

I carefully peeled the newspaper off of the lath, a tricky job. And I ended up with a couple of fairly large pieces of newsprint from the local paper, printed in 1916. In fact, I still have them today.

I thought I had done quite well, retrieving a little bit of history, but two carpenters had been told to reinforce the joists in the attic and they had found boxes of treasure hidden between the joists. Yes, money had been found. Which went to the hospital administrators and was never talked about again. And no one thanked the carpenters.

Friday, April 04, 2008

El Dorado

All good things must come to an end and pretty soon it was time to open the new hotel, convention center and casino. But not till we survived another disaster. The hotel tower had been built directly over the convention center and on the day of the grand opening, the plumbers opened the main water line to the hotel rooms. They had used a temporary line to test all of the plumbing in the tower, but now it was going to be the real deal; city water pressure.

I was in the convention center, admiring my work, now that all of the lights were on. The walls were freshly painted and the carpet layers were finishing up a few seams on the vast expanse of carpet. Suddenly there was a roar and water began to pour down through the ceiling, about twenty feet above us. I used my radio to call for help. The plumbers responded, but not until a large portion of the ceiling was destroyed. It turned out that one fitting on a 1-1/2” copper line had never been soldered. And that fitting was on the 16th floor, with an open shaft all of the way down to the convention center.

Crews were soon vacuuming up the water while I took a 20’ length of cold rolled channel and began poking holes in the ceiling wherever it was sagging. Plenty of ceiling tile was already on the floor but we had remove all of the wet, or even damp ceiling before we could begin reconstruction. And the grand opening was scheduled for 8 that evening. It was now 10 in the morning. Yikes!

Of course we did it…money is no object when it’s time to open a casino.

Sunday, March 23, 2008

Another Easy Day

The El Dorado project was a great stress reliever. I only had to show up each day, climb up onto my scaffold and install ceiling tiles all day, minus a few breaks of course. And in the initial stages of this remodel, we would gather for coffee out on the existing second floor pool area. One morning we had an unexpected visitor ‘drop in’ on us while we were enjoying our break. Gary, a lather apprentice had been up on the ledge of the 7th floor, installing a safety cable. He had a roll of steel cable and was walking backwards and unrolling it as he went. Of course he walked right off the end of the building.

But…he grabbed the cable tightly as he fell and his momentum swung him out over the intersection and then around the corner and that’s where he dropped onto the pool deck in front of about 50 surprised workers! His hands were a mess, but he was alive and well enough to go back to work immediately. Probably because his uncle, who was a foreman, came down and chewed him out for doing such a dumb stunt!

Later on, Gary became a great foreman in own right, but as an apprentice, he was a lot of fun to have around; you never knew what he might do next!

A short story from the Sahara project; Gary was sitting on the top of the building and signaling for the crane operator, Dennis. We were unloading panels from a trailer and stacking them on the ground, a simple operation. And since Dennis couldn’t see the trailer from his perch in the cab of the tower crane, Gary was to relay signals from the ground. I could hear the whole operation on my radio and suddenly Dennis was swearing; not his usual style at all. It turned out that Gary had turned away from what was happening below just after giving Dennis a ‘hoist’ signal. The panel had started up and had become caught under a large advertising sign. The sign was not going to move from its spot, so the crane began to tilt; quickly. Things like that make tower crane operators nervous and very cranky! Gary, oblivious to it all, was watching clouds or something similar.

We got it all sorted out and sent the panel back to be repaired and we bought Dennis a few beers after work that day. Actually, all he wanted and Gary paid.

Monday, March 17, 2008

Moving on

OK. Short version of the tour bus drive-through job…we did finish the project and it never did fall down. As far as I know, it still exists today, a grimy smoke stained ceiling that few tourists ever look at as they exit their buses. The casino beckons!

That is pretty much the same story with all of the casino building projects. When we were finished with all of our hard work, the customers saw only the mirrors and the flashing lights. Just as it was planned.

As usual, whenever I finished a project, there would be a few weeks where I would go to someone else’s project and work for them. My boss would continue to pay me my foreman’s wages and so I had an incentive to work just a little bit harder. And after the Harrah’s project, I was sent over to the new ElDorado hotel and casino.

This project was actually an existing hotel remodel; adding a 16 story hotel tower and a large convention center. As usual; the work went on right over the top of the customers. The existing casino and hotel never shut down for a minute.

Since most of the drywall and lathing crew positions were already filled, I was asked if I wanted to work on the acoustical ceilings in the convention center? Sure. I had already learned enough about that trade to make it appear as if I were not a rank amateur. I could fake it for a day or two until I learned more about it. And so I climbed up on the scaffold and began. It was fairly high, about 20’ up, but we had large platforms to work on and only had to move these scaffolds once a day.

Putting together a concealed spline acoustical ceiling was a great way to relax after the stress filled days of running a big project and I looked forward to doing this mindless work. For awhile.

Sunday, March 16, 2008

Curves Ahead

Elevator work finished, I was back at the new tour bus drive-through at Harrah’s Sports Book. The project consisted of our building a plaster ceiling that did not touch any of the walls and consisted of a series of up and down arches for the length of the ceiling. (300’) Imagine a section through the waves on the ocean. Arch up. Arch down. And as it progressed through the building it was supposed to lose about 3’ in height. A sloping arched and wavy ceiling.

The first problem we ran into was the fact that we had to suspend this heavy ceiling from wires that would be shot into the hardened concrete, not embedded in the poured concrete; the preferred method. This ceiling was directly beneath the parking garage and the contractor for that project was not the same as the one we were working for. And he wasn’t going to allow us to embed any wires.

The second problem was the fact that the parking garage was built as a post-tensioned slab. These slabs are quite strong, but they vibrate easily because of the tension built into them. Traffic going up and down the ramps of the garage was going to cause our ceiling to vibrate as well. And since this ceiling was all cement plaster, it was tremendously heavy. Wires could be vibrated right out of the concrete. Once one wire failed, the rest would go quickly. I had nightmare visions of the ceiling crashing down onto half a dozen tour buses.

We decided to double the amount of wires as a safeguard. We had no engineering to tell us whether or not that would work, it just seemed to make sense. So, while one crew spent days shooting eye pins into the concrete and tying the wires to them, I had another crew bending the ¾’ ‘black iron into the radius shape we would use for the arches. Miles and miles of curved iron. And all bent with a roller that slowly formed the arch as you rolled the iron back and forth in its jaws. I worked with both crews, wherever I was needed.

Boring. Weeks went by as we tied hundreds of wires to the pins and formed a ton of steel into curved shapes.

Then we had to build 3 scaffolds that would be used for us, the framers and lathers, and then used by the plasterers and finally the painters. The drive-through was about 40’ wide, so we tied 4 scaffolds together for the first low section of the arch. Then a taller set of 4 scaffolds were tied together for the top of the arch, followed by another 4 low ones. And all 12 were tied into one huge scaffold. Moving it took the combined efforts of about a dozen men.

Wednesday, March 05, 2008

The end...almost

Following my harrowing inspection of the elevator shaft, there came a time to actually do the work I had calculated and so I found a couple of guys in the crew that would work fast and neat. There wasn’t a lot of room behind the barricades on each floor; just enough room for the material and maybe a few more spare feet. And since they wanted it done quickly, we were going to have to do the work on a weekend and have it complete by Monday morning.

I showed Bill and his apprentice just what I needed done and then I warned him, “Be careful. They can’t set the doors into the frames until we finish the wall; that means that you could reach your arm out into the shaft and touch the elevators as they go by. Don’t!” In fact I warned them both a couple of times. And to demonstrate that particular hazard, an elevator hurtled past just as I was speaking. They both jumped back in alarm. (Elevators are very quiet and they never say, ‘excuse me.’)

I left them to their work and went back to mine. Then, every couple of hours, I would go back to the tower to see how they were doing. They were making great progress. Bill had his apprentice work one floor above, getting things ready while Bill finished the floor below. Good thinking.

Then, I went back one more time and opened the barricade door and found Bill lying on the floor, looking dazed and his tools scattered all over. “Bill! What happened?” He shook his head and then told me, “Well, I needed John (on the floor above) to give me some more screws, so I leaned out into the shaft to yell at him. The next thing I knew I was on the floor over here” Yes, an elevator coming up had struck him and thrown him about 10 feet away. But imagine the results if it had been an elevator coming down.

We finished the project on time…even though Bill worked at a much slower pace.

What goes up

Eventually we finished our work in the South Tower and the crew moved over to the Sports Book and casino remodel. I was given a new project to run, the tour bus drive-through below the parking structure. But first, this story…

Just after I had settled into the routine of work at the Sports Book, I received a call from the Harrah’s representative; the elevator installers (Otis) needed us to return to the South Tower and rebuild the elevator walls where they had been torn apart to install new doors. Harrah’s had reconfigured one elevator so that it now had a rear door in it and it was going to serve as the ‘Housekeeping’ elevator for the new hotel rooms.

OK, I knew most of the Otis mechanics and so I asked one of their foreman, Bob, when would they like us to do the work? He told me that, perhaps, I should take a ride with him the next morning and we would both get a good idea of how much work was needed. Fine; I would meet him the next day.

I met Bob at the loading dock where the service elevators were located and that was when he explained that we would take the newly remodeled elevator and go from floor to floor to assess the situation. Using the special Otis elevator key, he opened the doors and I saw the top of the elevator at my feet. We were going to ride on top of the elevator! Yikes!

Well, I couldn’t let Bob know how terrified that made me feel. Of course not. (It's a guy thing) So I joined him on top of the elevator and he picked up the remote controller, explaining that we would be moving at ‘inspection speed’, far slower than the rest of the elevators that surrounded us. Before he closed the doors, I noted that there was very little to hold onto…in fact, there was absolutely nothing I could touch! In the center of the small space where we stood, the cables from the traction motor, 25 floors above us, were located and Bob warned me, “Careful. Those cables will be moving as we move and they’re pretty greasy.” And then he closed the doors.

There was one small 60 watt bulb on the roof of the car but the light it gave off seemed to be swallowed up in the darkness of this shaft that held 5 other elevators; all of which were moving up and down at what seemed to be a great speed. You never saw them, you simply sensed that they were close and then a gust of wind would strike you as the car passed by.

Inspection speed is slow. Far too slow. It seemed to take forever to get to the second floor, where we could step off for a few tension relieving minutes while I measured and calculated the work needed. Then it was time to get back on the elevator and go to the third floor. Another eternity. Eventually, one floor at a time, I made it to the 24th floor, where I thanked Bob very much for the tour and told him I would probably take the stairs to get back down!

Drinks on the House

While working on the Harrah’s South Tower expansion, it was fairly easy to forget that you were working at a casino. We were high above the crowds that circulated through the downtown gaming district and the work itself kept us focused. But once or twice a week, a Harrah’s rep would come up in the man lift and distribute ‘drink tokes’. He usually carried a coffee can full of the cardboard tickets worth one drink apiece. These would be passed out to the crew and then at 3:30, we would gather up our lunch pails, thermos’s and other gear before getting in the man lift and descending to the Restaurant Level. Here, stairs would take us directly to the casino and the bars.

Somewhere in this time frame, Harrah’s also began the construction of a new Sports Book and parking garage. And right in the middle of this remodel and new construction mess was a bar. Most casinos have bars scattered all over the property and Harrah’s was no exception, except that this one bar became ‘ours’. Once a day, just after 3:30, this bar filled up with guys in hard hats. No civilians allowed. Oh, sure, they might wander in by mistake, but one look at the clientele would cause them to depart in haste. Beer was the only drink consumed and it was usually Bud. Order a Coors and there was a good chance that you would be ridiculed all night. You could order Millers safely, as popular opinion had ‘no opinion’ about that one.

And being highly paid, we would usually give the bartenders a buck with each free toke. The bar might hold the entire construction crew, perhaps 75 people and they were all drinking and giving the bartenders a dollar for each drink. They were raking in the money! This resulted in great service and the promise of just a few more free drinks, even after the tokes had all been used.

Friday, February 22, 2008

Moving on up

It’s been awhile since I posted here. But the memories are still valid.

This job (Harrah’s South Tower) had more than its share of problems. For one, Bill Harrah had recently died and the construction was being overseen by the new owner, the Holiday Corporation, owners of the Holiday Inn name. Harrah’s and Holiday Inn were never synonymous and it really showed on this project. The original budget per room for decorating was around $300 when Bill Harrah was alive; with Holiday, it was $78.

Plus, the Holiday people had used a construction management firm and not a ‘real’ contractor. That left the subcontractors on their own to manage scheduling. It was soon a disaster in the making as every contractor did exactly as they pleased. Finally, after many weeks of frustration and angry meetings, we all agreed on one guy to handle the scheduling for us and agreed to follow his lead.

It didn’t take long for us to catch up and start exceeding the schedule and we were soon finishing a floor every week. But we did have one slight handicap to overcome. Our ‘Boss’, the owner of Solari and Sons was also the chairman of the board at First Interstate bank; the tall black building about a block away from our site. And from his boardroom, he could look at those who were working…or not working. And I would get phone calls from him; “There’s a taper on the 3rd floor and he’s smoking and looking out the window! Go down there and fire him!” And off I would go…to find a plumber or an electrician smoking near the window. Not my problem. Then I would have to call him back and let him know that it wasn’t one of his employees. And he always doubted me. I finally passed the word to all of our employees that they should expect to be seen by Al Solari while working on the south side of the project and if they needed a break, go over to the north side. Duh!

At the same time we were building the hotel tower, we were also remodeling the casino on the ground level and the seafood restaurant at the second floor. Plus a few other odd jobs at various spots around the offices in the basement.

A note about casino remodeling. Nothing is more important than getting the customers back in and gambling. Cost doesn’t matter; time does. I would often meet with a Harrah’s rep at 8 in the morning and he would explain what work he wanted done and where. There was no time for cost estimates or contracts. We would work as many hours as needed and at 8 the next morning, the work would be complete. Fresh paint and new carpet. I would then submit a bill and they would pay it.

Example: I met the Harrah’s rep one day behind the barricades that had just been erected around a 20’x30’ space. The slot machines had been removed and were now lined up against the barricade wall. Besides me, every trade was represented at his meeting. Ironworkers to painters. The ironworkers would go first, putting in a few beams as the laborers removed the old construction. My crew would fireproof the beams as soon as they were in place. My framing crew would follow and the electrician was right behind. Plumbing, plastering, HVAC and drywall. No one left till they were complete. There were probably close to 30 people behind the barricade, all working shoulder to shoulder or waiting for their turn. And 24 hours later, the barricades came down and the slot machines put back in place.

Saturday, January 05, 2008

Progress slows

We had solved all of the layout problems on the 3rd floor rooms and the 4th floor was framed right on schedule. But the 5th floor was the starting point for a general slowdown in production. It just so happened that the existing Harrah’s hotel had a rooftop pool on the 3rd floor and you could observe the pool and the guests starting at the 5th floor level of the new construction. Since it was early summer, the pool was filled with guests’ everyday and every worker on the project seemed to find a reason to do something, anything at all (except work), on the north side of the building which overlooked the pool.

It was fall before we were able to get into full production again. And by then we were on the 24th floor. You had to have binoculars to see the pool by then!

A story:

We were on the 8th floor having lunch one day and I was sitting on a toolbox with wheels, when suddenly I felt the toolbox move slightly. And then again. We all looked at each other as we had all felt the movement. I stood up and the motion became stronger. What was it? The whole building was moving! Since we had been sitting close to the outer wall of the existing hotel tower, one of us noticed that the gap between the two buildings was opening and closing, indicating that only the new building was moving. We put a tape measure down and it showed that the floor we were on was moving about 2” and in a slow circular motion. The general superintendent happened by and we asked him about it. He was mystified as well and quickly went down to the office to call the engineering firm. He was soon back and told us that what we were feeling was the motion caused by the concrete pump on the ground floor. The pump itself was bolted down to a large ‘thrust block’ of concrete that was tied to the structural steel column in one corner. Every time the pump sent a surge of concrete up the ‘slick line’, it moved the building. They had been pumping concrete for the 12th floor during our lunch hour and so we hadn’t heard the usual ‘whoosh…pause…whoosh’ of the wet concrete across the steel deck.

Mystery solved. And what was more interesting was the fact that as we got higher in the building, the motion increased, up to 6” at the roof (24th floor). The engineer came out and told us that it was just what he had planned for.

Saturday, December 22, 2007

We're Back!

To make a long story shorter… after all, I was working as a wrangler for only one week a year; I will return to it later. Let’s just say that the first year was great! I enjoyed it thoroughly and was asked to return the next spring. And for 9 more years.

Back in Reno, life was fine. Since Solari & Sons had no competition for the majority of jobs, we rarely went without work. And when I got back I had a new project to start; Harrah’s Hotel Tower expansion. Harrah’s didn’t want to miss out on the remodeling frenzy that had gripped the town, but they were short on space and already had a 24 story hotel on Center Street. They had begun a casino expansion on Lake Street with a new Sports Book casino and the only place left to add on for hotel space was directly over the top of the Seafood restaurant on the corner of Second and Center. This expansion would tie into the existing hotel and add a dozen or more rooms per floor.

It had been decided that the expansion would never shut down the restaurant or the casino below it. These were located in what was called the Dondero building. The two-story structure had been absorbed into the Harrah’s building without ever demolishing it in its entirety. When we entered the ceiling space above the restaurant and the casino, we actually walked across the old roof of the Dondero building. Looking over the edge of the ‘roof’, we could see that the walls of the old building were enclosed by false walls in the casino. And this roof top area was also used as the spot for security to set up their monitors; the camera feeds that watched all the gambling below.

Needless to say, it was a tight little corner to have to build a very tall and tiny high-rise hotel. To erect the steel, they had to dig deep into the corners of the Dondero building without bothering anyone. Concrete footings were poured in the dark of the basement and behind walls. And it was our job to follow along behind that work and repair any damage that was caused.

Once the steel reached the level of the third floor, it was time to bring in a crane to erect the rest of the building. But not an ordinary crane; the site already took one lane out of Second Street and the city wasn’t going to allow any more than that. A very special Manitowoc crawler was brought in and it was able to stand its mast vertically and use the jib section almost as if it were a tower crane. But, as it squeezed itself into position, next to the manlift, it had to ‘squirm’, rotating the tracks on one side while braking the other. This action actually broke the concrete walls down in the Dondero basement and that caused flooding from groundwater.

But, we were soon moving upwards and onwards. Steel flew into place and we sprayed fireproofing on it just as soon as the concrete deck was poured. A few days after that we were doing the layout and building walls. Electricians and plumbers were right behind us. Progress!

And then we got to the 5th floor…

Monday, December 10, 2007

Dreaming

On the highway and on our way to the first camp.

It was only going to take us about an hour or so to drive the distance; the riders would take all day to reach the same site. A couple of the catering trucks would meet them at noon for their lunch break, while the main kitchen truck followed us and would setup in the same location. Well, almost the same location. It was always important for the kitchen to be upwind of the mangers and sometimes there was some bickering about where we were going to be located. Especially if there was a good sized tree to be used for a ‘deadman’ for one end of the mangers and that tree happened to be close to where the kitchen was going to be.

A note about our camp sites: About half were on private property; large ranches were preferred. The board of directors for the ride had chosen the various sites and had used their friendship with many ranchers and horsemen to secure us a good site. But…not all sites were created equal and the board members were not always knowledgeable about our requirements. Trying to fit 150 horses, mangers, kitchen and all the assorted vehicles that came with that, into a ‘scenic’ spot was sometimes very difficult!

Once we entered the area, we tried to keep the motor homes from crowding us; telling them they had to wait on the road, at least till we were in place. Some riders had begun bringing large motor homes with them so they could enjoy the comforts of home after a hard day in the saddle. TV and a couple of cold brews after a hot shower. This was an expensive way to go; as they had to pay their own way plus pay for their drivers’ meals and his bar tab. When I was involved in the ride, there was a limit of twenty motor homes and no more. Even with just twenty of them, they could crowd the campsite down to a painful minimum. The riders that chose to rough it and camp on the ground were our kind of guys!

Now it was time for us to set up the camp… all over again. Our goal each time was to have the camp ready and waiting for the riders at least an hour before they arrived. That would give us time to get cleaned up as best we could, enjoy a quick lunch and maybe even a nap in the back of the bed truck.

Did I mention the toilets? As it turned out, the only flush toilets we would see were at the beginning and at the end of the ride, a week later. In between we had to use pit toilets; hand dug by the wranglers. Being the new guy, I was included in the toilet digging chore every time. Once a deep trench was dug, we placed long and narrow 5 sided boxes with toilet seats screwed to the top of them over the trench. I’ve said enough…

And since we (wranglers) hated these toilets, we were always hoping that some minor county official would happen by someday and see them in use and then, in our dreams, he would put a halt to their use. “What do you people think you’re doing? You’re going to have to rent portable toilets and immediately!” Just a dream of course.

Friday, November 30, 2007

Calm before the storm

Where was I? In a dirt parking lot in Riverside and in the back of a truck. OK, it wasn’t quite that bad; the Riverside Rancheros club site was actually secluded and surrounded by thick Eucalyptus groves. With some imagination you could believe that you were far away from civilization.

With the horses quieted down, it was time for dinner. Since the caterers’ truck hadn’t arrived from Arizona, we were on our own for this meal. Burger King. But…all of the meals, beginning the next day, would be catered by a crew from Wickenburg and we had already been given a menu for the week ahead. Steak and lots of it. Plus the occasional lobster.


Most of the riders were socializing in the club house while we set up our sleeping spaces in the bed truck. A few of the riders did manage to stumble down to the mangers later in the evening to see to their horses, but not many. Most were too busy with partying. Although it wasn’t really our responsibility to care for the horses on that first night, we took the remaining horses to water.


My first lesson as a wrangler was to learn how to tie and untie horses from their assigned spots on the manger. And to remember where they were tied. Each manger space had a number and I learned quickly that horses don’t necessarily like their neighbors. Get a horse in the wrong spot and it’s likely to cause a fight. A horse wreck. I was also told to gather up as many horses as possible when watering, at least 3 of them and 4 would be even better. So I would carefully note the numbers as I untied the 4 horses and led them out. But, horses, being as stupid as they are, would quickly move back and forth and all around me as I tried to keep them separated. I soon had a tangle of horses in my hands, all pulling in different directions. And as soon as they were at the water troughs, they would move from trough to trough, sampling a little water from each, while I tried to keep them in some semblance of order. Impossible. Once they were full, I would lead them back while I tried to remember which one went where? What was that number? Talk to me horse! Where do you belong?


With 6 wranglers working, it didn’t take long to get the horses watered and back in some order. But this was easy, I was told, we only had about 90 horses and tomorrow we would see the additional 60 added to the mangers. Oh, oh!


Judy woke us up at 5:30 and we began our day by filling the water tubs and adding some hay to the mangers. Then it was time to begin the daily watering rodeo. And it really was a rodeo as the horses had grown quite thirsty overnight and pulled us to the water. After a few trips, I switched to taking no more than two at a time, just to avoid being crushed in the rush to water.


After the horses were back in place, it was time for our breakfast. The cooks had arrived late last night and had been up since 4. And being wranglers meant that we were always first in line for food. A perk we loved!


A little while later, relaxing with coffee cups in hand, we watched as the riders gathered for the ceremonial beginning of their first ride, 17 miles to the south. And once they had left, the work began for us. The mangers and all that gear had to be taken apart and placed in trucks and trailers for our trip to the first nights campsite.


About 1-1/2 hours later, we had everything packed and our bed truck was now filled with the suitcases, cots and bedrolls of the riders. A mountain of gear. And since I was the spare driver, I was given the veterinarian’s truck to drive. A brand new Chevy pickup with all of the luxury items included.


It was time to hit the highway and our caravan went just as fast as its slowest vehicle, the hay truck. But we were moving and the adventure had begun.

Wednesday, November 28, 2007

First Day

We pulled in to the long and narrow dirt parking lot of the Riverside Rancheros club and then we began the drill of setting up a camp for the first time. My fellow wranglers were already complaining about the location for the setup; being new, I didn’t have much to say. I would learn.

Setting up required that we first unroll the heavy bundles of canvas and steel cable that made up the mangers. Hay, from the hay truck was dropped as directed and then the truck was parked. The ‘bed’ truck (where we would live and sleep) was placed in position as the center anchor for the mangers. Cables and chains would secure the end of the mangers to the frame of the truck. The hay truck would serve as the anchor for the other end of one manger and a buried ‘deadman’ or a convenient tree would be the anchor for the end of the other manger. Since this was the first night, some horses wouldn’t show until morning and so we didn’t need to set up the ‘little manger’, a separate unit that required its own anchors.

Here’s the picture; from right to left, the hay truck followed by a length of manger that could accommodate about 60 horses. That manger was then attached to the right side of the bed truck. On the left side, another long manger was attached and that ended with an attachment to a large eucalyptus tree. Heavy chains and cable ‘come-alongs’ made the final attachment at the bed truck. These would be tightened, which would lift the manger off of the ground. And to complete the lifting, drive poles were hammered into the ground at 3’ intervals and the manger lifted onto the hooks on the poles. These drive poles were made of heavy 2” pipe with a sharpened point to penetrate the soil. And the only way to install them was to use a sledge hammer. One man would hold the pole and the other would swing. Once it had been well started, we would alternate the swings. (We used to joke that we were well qualified to work in the circus) The goal was to drive the pole till the hook reached the level of our belt buckle. And I quickly learned to rise up on my toes to make this critical measurement! And I also learned why the others had complained about this location; it was a parking lot and the many vehicles had compacted the soil. I soon became an expert on soil types.

After the manger was in place and lifted onto the poles, we opened the bales and put a flake of hay into each numbered spot on the manger. Then it was time to get out the large water tubs and the smaller grain tubs. Hoses were linked and we soon had all 6 tubs filled with water. Our bed truck was our next chore and so we arranged the bags of grain at the far end and then set up our sleeping spaces; a foam bed roll, a pillow and a sleeping bag. We placed our other gear wherever we could find space. Since the bed truck didn’t really carry anything important, like hay… it became the truck that anyone could throw whatever they wanted, into. The riders would use it to carry their bedrolls and extra gear. It was the baggage cart, despite the fact that it was also our home for the next 7 days. We would have to rearrange this mess every night after making camp.

That first night came quickly and we soon had about 80 or 90 horses tied to the manger. Unhappy horses. They had spent the winter in tall grass and roaming free at their owners’ ranch. Most didn’t like the neighbor they had been tied next to and so we had to put up kick poles between them. Dave, one of the wranglers and our farrier, would gather up a supply of small rocks and whenever a horse would start kicking at its neighbor, he would nail it with a well placed rock to its rear. I liked that!

Monday, November 26, 2007

Trailing

Should I be posting something here about vacations? After all, the focus is supposed to be on my working life. Well, these one week vacations where I imitated a ‘wrangler’ were working vacations, so I think they qualify for entry.

The first year of the ride, I had no idea of what I might be doing during this one very long week with 150 horses and riders. I got a list of things to take with me, from Bill. The list included gloves (2 pair), hay hooks, hats, boots, socks, shirts, thermal underwear and lots of Levi’s. And a camera. Oops, almost forgot; a bedroll and a pillow.

We left very early on a Saturday morning and drove down US 395, on our way to Riverside. We were supposed to drive into San Bernardino first and meet up with Judy, the head wrangler, and then pick up the trucks and trailers we would need to load all of the gear onto.

All went according to plan. Even if we weren’t, Judy was very efficient. He had been doing this for many years. We stopped at a truck rental firm and picked up the ‘bed’ truck and another, larger truck for hauling hay. We were all assigned trucks to drive; except for me…the new guy. I would fill in as needed.

Then it was time to pick up the ‘iron’. The word described it well. Steel posts and cables and Come-alongs and chains and nuts and bolts, huge bundles of portable mangers…tons of gear that I had no idea as to its purpose. But…I would find out. This was all loaded into a horse trailer, along with about 50 long and narrow wooden poles; ‘kick poles’ that were placed between horses to keep them from kicking. Horses kicked?

After all was loaded, we followed Judy to a hay supplier who loaded our hay truck for us. OK, we helped, a lot. A full load of heavy 3-wire bales. Giving me a chance to see how my new hay hooks worked.

Once loaded, we headed over to the club headquarters of the Riverside Rancheros. It was from here that the ride would begin.

Explanation: Every year a different trail was used. I believe there were about half a dozen different ones. And every other year, the ride would begin in Riverside. In alternate years, we would begin somewhere far away and then trail back to Riverside. This year we were going to San Diego; actually a little bit east of the city, to Alpine.

Sunday, November 25, 2007

This is fun?

Construction in Reno was not all about hotels and casinos; there were plenty of times when I was sent to ‘normal’ jobs. And it was always a relief to get away from downtown and all that it represented. Plus, parking was easier!

And one of those jobs was Saint Mary’s Hospital. When I started working there, it was a small hospital, run by a charitable Catholic order. And it was during the 1980’s that this small and aging order decided that they couldn’t run the hospital any longer and so they hired a firm to manage it for them. The ‘Sisters’ were still around and would remain so, but they no longer had to worry about day to day operations.

This was when the hospital began to grow. Prices for medical care went up. Patients; all patients, had to pay their bills. The hospital was soon a thriving business and the hospital began to buy up property around the hospital in hopes of a future expansion.

At first, the projects at Saint Mary’s were quite small. Carl and I would be sent over to build a new office or add a wall in the pharmacy. These were jobs that could be handled by two people and be completed in just a day or two.

As the money rolled in, the projects grew in scope and pretty soon we had jobs that would take us a few weeks to complete and we had to bring additional crew in to help us. And it was during that time that a new man showed up one day, Bill Smith.

It didn’t take long for the two of us to become friends; especially when we discovered, during a lunch time conversation, that we both read books…lots of books. You have to understand that most drywallers did not read any more than they had to. So to find one that actually sought out books to read was a rare find indeed!

Bill, besides being a drywaller, was a cowboy. The real deal. And when I met him, he was also a new father and he lived with his growing family in Sun Valley. This part of the Reno suburbs had boomed during the casino construction times and it was now wall to wall in mobile homes. When you crested the hill that led to the valley, you were faced with what looked like the world’s largest ‘trailer park’.

It was during one of our lunchtime conversations, held while sitting on a large stack of sheetrock, that he mentioned his vacation adventures. Every year, he went down to Riverside, California and spent a week working as a wrangler for a group of horsemen on a long trail ride. 150 horsemen and their horses to be exact. These were the De Anza Trail Caballeros and most were lawyers, doctors, some dentists and a wide range of other ‘professionals’. All were wealthy enough to afford horses and the lifestyle that went with them.

Somehow or another, the conversation came around to the question; would I like to join him? There was going to be an opening for another wrangler that year and he knew the head wrangler quite well. He could get me the position if I wanted it.

Horses? I wasn’t sure about that. And 150 of them? At this time I had a general dislike of horses, a fear, and then the thought entered my mind; maybe I could get over this horse phobia by confronting it head on? That was how I had conquered my fear of heights and it was worth a try, besides, it seemed like it might be fun to take a working vacation. Yes, they would feed and pay us for the week. (That was in 1978)

Saturday, November 24, 2007

Back at the Sahara

On another morning, I took my place in the office of our superintendent and waited for an assignment. A normal, but time wasting routine. And that morning I was sent back downtown to the Sahara hotel once more. There I met Phil and we went to the roof to find ‘Trini’, the project foreman.

Phil and I were foremen, but without current assignments and so Trini, also a foreman, would try to find us a project that would fit our somewhat elevated pay schedule. Even if we volunteered to do the simple work, the mindless work…it wasn’t going to happen. We would be given a 'challenge'.

This morning he led us across the roof to a small steel structure that rose about 20’ above the roof. We climbed the stairs and found ourselves on a concrete pad that measured about 10’x8’. What a great view! There were no other buildings in the way and we could see all over town. And it was windy! There were also 2 large electric motors and other gear on the deck. This was going to be the elevator machine room for the two elevators that serviced the restaurant just below us. The only things missing here were the walls and the roof. And it was our job to measure for them, weld in some brackets and go to the panel plant and frame them. It was going to be a rush job, so as soon as we had the walls framed and boarded, the plasterers would install the EIFS finish on them.

So it was about 3 days later and we were up on our elevated perch with welding leads in hand and lots of clamps. The wall sections were soon flying up to us and we guided them into place. Now we had to become creative. There were no structural plans for this room and we had planned it so that the roof panel would tie all of the components together. But, in the meantime, we had hold the walls in place, temporarily. But how?

We had a full lift of 1-1/2’ black iron sitting on the roof and I began cutting it up into 6’ and 4’ pieces. We would weld those to the elevator motor brackets and then to the walls while the crane held them in place.

The first panel was the scariest. About 4’ wide and 10’ tall, and that meant that I had to use a stepladder to reach the top of it and release the crane. If I thought it was a great view from the floor, it was an even more spectacular view from the top of a stepladder placed against a narrow metal panel that was quivering in the wind. Or was I shaking?

The panels blocked the wind, so gradually it became easier and more comfortable for us as more panels were put into place. But, we were creating a spider web of black iron welded to black iron within the confines of the small room. When the last panel was flown into position, we could barely move through the maze of iron we had created.

Finally, it was time to place the roof panel. It was going to be flown up in a horizontal position, ready to drop onto the walls. Fine, except someone would have to climb up on that roof panel to release the chokers. Oh no!

With the roof in position and welded in place, we could safely remove all of the black iron. As I remember it, it took us most of a day to remove the iron and grind off our welds. We had already taken some verbal abuse from the elevator installers and so we had to leave the room looking a little better than how we had found it when we began.

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

Iron(ing)

With so many projects ongoing in the Reno area; if you were a foreman without a current project, you were sent to whichever project needed some extra help. It was great! Variety was the spice of my life! I would check in with the office on a daily basis to find out where I was needed. One of the projects that I was sent to was the Porte Cochere at the MGM Grand Hotel.

I don’t remember how tall the structure was, but I do remember that the scaffolding was quite high, maybe 40’? and it seemed to cover about a football field in size. It was solidly planked and there were about 3 dozen people working up there. Ironworkers, electricians, carpenters and lathers.

For this job I became a lather, something I was still new at. But with hundreds of yards of 3.4 galvanized metal lath to install on the ceiling, I was going to become better in a hurry. Interesting thing about the 3.4 metal lath; it’s very sharp! Rub your hand across it in one direction and it’s quite smooth. Rub the other direction and it’s sharp as razors. We would wear gloves with the fingertips cut out so that we could handle the wire ties, while we used the back of our hands (and glove) to smooth the lath as we tied it to the ¾” black iron supports.

Another bit of info… the black iron we used came from Japan and it was always dipped into some cheap black paint before being bundled and shipped. And this paint would flake off constantly, landing on our upturned faces as we tied the lath to the iron. At the end of the day, our faces were a mass of black specks and our fingers were bloody. Great combination!

Monday, November 19, 2007

Dizzy!

The Circus Circus tower was finishing up as we placed the large roof panels. But there were still plenty of projects to work on downtown. Every casino wanted part of the action and there were remodels being planned almost daily.

One project that I was sent to was the final phase of the Sahara hotel and casino. They were hanging the last 3 or 4 floors of panels and help was needed. Especially help that knew something about panels, hoisting and welding. That was us.

These panels were being made in Arizona and shipped via truck to the jobsite. Once the trucks pulled into town, the drivers wanted to unload and get back on the road, but with no storage available on the site, we had to quickly hoist the panels off of the truck and install them at the same time.

Luckily, the Sahara had two tower cranes on the job; one about 40’ taller than the other, so they could swing over and under one another. And they were always busy, hoisting panels and steel.

One day, I was working with the North crane, the taller of the two, and I was unloading a truck that was parked in the alley. I was actually up on the roof, about 280’ up, but I could see the crew on the ground and see their hand signals. The crane operator couldn’t see into that alley, so it was my job to relay the instructions via radio. No problem; at first. But then an odd thing happened in the middle of the day; the sky was a perfect blue as the sky in Reno usually is and I had glanced up just after I told the operator to begin hoisting a panel. There were puffy while clouds sailing by and just then the South crane rotated and the boom and his load swung past me, I felt a twinge of dizziness and looked down. Oops! As I looked down, I saw the panel coming up out of the alley and at the same time I watched the manlift begin its descent. I looked up again, quickly, and I suddenly had a sensory overload! I was falling! Luckily, I remembered that I was standing with one foot on the parapet, a parapet that was only about 2’ high, so I tried to make sure I fell back onto the deck… and I did.

It took me a few minutes to recover and in the meantime, the panel simply hung there in the air while the crane operator, who could see me, tried calling me on the radio. Another one of the crew grabbed the radio and talked the panel into place while I tried to figure out what had happened to me. Vertigo?

I was shaky for the rest of the day and certainly didn’t want to get too close to the edge of the building. Next day, I was back at it, but with a new awareness of my surroundings. And I never forgot that day.

Friday, November 16, 2007

Getting Better

The large arched panels at the roof line were, at the time, the largest prefabricated panels ever lifted. A record. The very first one was delivered early in the morning by our crew from the panel plant on Tampa Ave. The plant was probably 4 or 5 miles away from the jobsite and since the panels were too big to ever be legally transported, they would bring them down around 4 in the morning, hoping no one would see them. It worked.

Since these panels had large structural elements built into them, we had to hire Iron Workers to do the final welding and we used a composite crew to set them in place. Since we knew all of the local iron workers, it wasn't a problem...except for the local Carpenter's Business Agent, who was ticked off.

The panels were over 16' wide, 16' tall and about 6' deep. But, being made of lightweight materials, they were going to be an easy lift for the crane. And we had built a lifting point into the panel, so rigging was very simple...attach one choker and let it fly!

And so we did. After some tense moments as the crew made sure everything lined up with the panels below, we finally saw some sparks flying and knew the panel was being tack welded into place.

We were going to have to wait until the next morning for another arched panel to make it's secret journey down the hill to us, or so we thought. But then, the owner of McKenzie Construction came out of the job trailer to tell me to take the panel back down. What? He wanted to have the local TV news cover the story and we would have to fly the panel back up for the cameras. The owners of the Circus Circus also wanted the publicity. I said, 'No!' There was some shouting and some threats were made. Finally, I said I would take it back down when Mr. Solari told me to. I didn't have to wait long. In a few minutes the Project manager called me into the trailer, "Phone call for you, Steve."

So... we hooked the panel to the crane, cut the welds loose and lowered it to the ground. 30 minutes later, the TV crew arrived and we did it all over again. Better, of course.

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

Really High


After a few weeks, we had developed a good pattern and could lift and weld in about 20 panels a day and we were quickly gaining on the concrete crews. The ‘Flyers’, the forms for pouring the floors, extended out past the edge of the building, so we had to stay at least a floor away from them if we were going to be able to hang the panels. When we came too close, we would take a break for a week and let the form work get ahead of us.



It was definitely exciting work as we had to remove the safety cables from the floor we were working on and then reach out to grab a swinging panel and pull it in close enough to get a hook on it. Naturally, the windy days were the worst. It didn’t take a lot of wind to make a panel spin like a top. The tag lines would keep the panel steady… until the panel reached a height beyond the limits of the ropes and the handlers had to let go of them.


I found this great photo of the project and it shows the tower crane, the manlift hoist and 5 of the 6 large arched panels at the roof line. You can see the brace connecting the tower crane to the building. I think that was on the 16th floor and every day, Dennis would climb out the window and then walk across the narrow beam to the tower and then climb the rest of the way up via the internal stairs on the crane. I wonder where I was when this photo was taken? I was certainly there that day.



I remember standing on that floor and talking to Dennis when he asked if I wanted to come up and see how the crane worked. I really did, but when faced with stepping out onto that beam… I suddenly remembered something else I needed to do, somewhere on the ground!

Monday, November 12, 2007

Normal?

After the grand opening of all of the casinos, life became a little less hectic, but only a little less. The various hotel towers still needed to be completed so that the casinos could be filled with happy (overnight) guests.

And it was about this time that I was asked to be the foreman for the framing and drywall on the Circus Circus tower. Sure! The Money Tree could be completed in just a few weeks and since the two jobs were only a few blocks apart, I could walk between them to make sure everything was going well. And the two jobs had the same general contractor and project manager. I already knew everyone!

The Circus Circus was the second ‘flying form’ post tensioned slab building I had worked on and so I knew a little about how it would go together. But, what was different this time was the fact that we were supplying the exterior ‘skin’ of the building as well as all the interior partitions.

It wasn’t long before my duties were expanded to oversight of the panel crew. These were the guys that were installing those panels that I had worked on while at the panel plant during the previous winter. I knew the panels and I had a general idea of how they were installed. This might be fun… and it was.

First, I had to get used to working with a tower crane. Luckily, the crane operator, Dennis was a great guy to work with. Serious, while he still had a relaxed manner about him. And he told me, ahead of time, what he wanted from me. Most of the time, a tower crane operator is working ‘blind’. He can’t always see the load and/or its final destination. When the crane is used for pouring concrete on a deck, he can see the entire operation. But we would have him swinging out to a spot he might not be able to see. We would be his eyes. And as he said, “When you’re signaling me…it’s your crane and you are the operator. Pay attention. I’m just your tool.” Scary! Normally, we used our radios to direct him, but there were times when you had to have both hands ready to grab onto something… anything at all! A radio would only get in your way, and then it was time to use hand signals. Something new for me to learn.

Here’s how it would work. First we would determine by measuring and leveling, just where we wanted the panel to be. Then we would weld angle iron clips at the floor level. We had already installed steel backing plates in the concrete forms and now we had a secure place to weld our angles. A truckload of panels would arrive on the jobsite, but since there was no room for the truck and trailer, we would block a lane of traffic with safety cones while we unloaded them, one at a time. I would have 4 people in the tower itself, ready to clamp and hold the panel in place once it reached them. On the ground we had the truck driver and two men to secure the chokers and hold the tag lines once Dennis started the lift.

I was usually on the floor above the top of the panel, so that I could see the whole operation. I would call Dennis, “Trolley out. Easy, high...hold the trolley. Swing right. High. C’mon down… down. Easy now. High.” (The word 'high' stops the crane) The guys on the trailer would hook up the chokers with a clevis through the studs and then hook the chokers to the hook that was now swinging just above their heads.

Now the guys on the trailer would use hand signals to direct Dennis to raise one end of the panel while swinging the boom slowly and smoothly. The panel would slip off of the trailer without disturbing or damaging the one below it. Then it would hang in place for a moment or two while the tag lines were attached to the bottom of the panel. Once the two men had moved across the street with the tag lines and we had traffic stopped, Dennis was given the signal to raise the panel.

Tower cranes are powered by electric motors and so they are very quiet. On the ground, you ccould only hear a faint whine as the panel would quickly rise to its spot on the building. The tag lines would be released and I could then guide Dennis as he maneuvered the 24’ long panel closer to the building. Close enough, someone would reach out and with a come-along hook, begin pulling it closer. Because of overhead obstructions, Dennis couldn’t get the panel tight against the building; we had to pull it over and then clamp it.

As soon as we had 4 clamps on it, we would release the chokers and let the crane go back to the ground and prepare for another hoist. The 8’ x 24’ panel was held to the building by 4 clamps and nothing else while we pried and pushed to align it with our layout marks. And once we had it where we thought it should be… we welded it in place. Just a few spot welds, as we had to get the next panel, which was already flying up towards us. The real welds would come later, after the truck and trailer were empty and the traffic was back to normal on the street below.