The time came to piss or get off the pot, so I met with the business man who offered me the partnership deal in the marina parking lot. We decided to move ahead on starting a brand new blasting company instead of purchasing the existing one. The upside is that it was actually cheaper to fire up a new biz than it was to pay for Thunderbird. The reputation end was a bit of a balancing act. Starting off new in a high risk game like blasting can be challenging , but dragging around someone else's reputation can be a hazard also. My new partner guaranteed the loans and promised to do some behind the scenes legwork to find some work. With the banking, legal and accounting people all in place, all I had to do now was find drilling equipment and explosives storage magazines.
The first round of gear came from a logger who wasn't going to be doing his own blasting any longer so he sold me all of his goodies. I had to go all over Hell's half acre to track everything down, including a boat trip to a remote log dump. That was memorable in that we were met at the beach by a guy who was running a piece of heavy equipment wearing only extremely filthy torn white underwear and sporting a toothless smile ( banjo music maestro please, ). He didn't seem to mind showing us around the jobsite in that condition, and was very cheerful and happy to be of help. I think that's pretty much the definition of "bushed", been out of touch for too long. That deal netted me air compressors, hand pluggers, tons of miscellaneous tools and two mini magazines.
Yarding the explosives storage magazine ( powder mag ) out to the road at the Northair minesite |
Everything loaded up for the trip from the gold mine to the Sunshine Coast |
Blasting pole holes in rock for BC Hydro, Extremely tough work with a potential great payday |
Using compressed air to blow out water filled holes , to be a blaster ... all you need to do is work super hard in all weather and abuse the living crap out of your body and take big risks |
Harness and rope suspended hand drilling ten foot deep holes in rock for a house site |
The blasting business is physically harder, demands more hours of work and a large outlay of dough before any comes back. Now some of the money coming in was phenomenal, more that I had ever made previously, but the bills coming in through the mail slot were just as big. And every once in a while just for fun some prick would decide that he wasn't going to pay his invoice. That took a lot of the fun out it, having to chase people to get paid. It was hard on the bank account and mental health, getting stiffed or conned. Some customers actually had no money at all, it wasn't like they had it and wouldn't pay, they had NO money. After a while you learn to spot the bullshitters and con-artists who are trying to make their dreams come true by using others.
Working for B.C. Hydro was in those days, a sweet deal. Contract prices for the work, but if you did it right, it was a great profit maker. The crews were great work with, some of the best. It was actually fun to go to work with those guys, and the best part was that the company paid within ten days after invoicing. I seriously wish that I could have spent my whole career working beside those boys.
In the days when I was just getting going, there was very little drama or concern when the blasting crew showed up in a neighborhood. Most people were comfortable having noisy drills and the "thump" and rattle of small covered shots going off all day. I would knock on the neighbors door and tell them that I would be working next door for a few days. Next was a mandatory inspection of their basement or crawlspace to look for pre-existing cracks for insurance purposes. The last detail was to ask then to take down anything breakable that the vibration might knock down. 999 people out of a 1000 didn't even bat an eyelash at the whole scene. Most were captivated by the whole process and usually someone on the block would bring out coffee and snacks at break time.
A major component of the residential blasting gig is working with the excavating company that is doing the digging and lifting the rubber mats. This virtual partnership can be fun, easy and very profitable, or it can be hellish and downright unsafe. You can't always choose who is going to have their machine on site, but if you can, of course you want the guy whose going to take good care of you ( meaning...not hitting you with the bucket and squishing you ) You put your life in the operators hands when placing the three ton blast mats on top of a wired and loaded shot.
You know all in all.there some fantabulous ( new word ) days. Everything went right, got to work with fun people and as a bonus, you actually got paid as you were wrapping up the tools. Those were the days that kept me hanging on to the dream.
Along the way, a local logging contractor decided that I was finally good enough to come a do a bit of work for him in the bush. Blasting for logging road construction didn't pay as well as residential work, but there were a lot more days of work available. And besides, it was simple and straight forward. On road building, move forward as fast as possible, while making the right sized rock for the construction crew. When drilling and blasting quarries for large volumes of rock, same deal move fast and get it done cheap.
Video of loggers drilling and blasting a small quarry ........not the best narration, but it is decent overview of loggers loading and shooting a small lifter quarry ( horizontal holes ). Not my video
This is definitely not the the Sunshine Coast!!....however it is good footage of blasting in soft rock. Blasters call it "Hero Rock" because it's so easy to break and it doesn't fly very far when shot uncovered.
A bonus of working for Hydro, flying into a remote site to drill anchor holes for a new communications tower with my friend Robin MacGregor of Goldwing Helicopters |
Rocking Robin lifting the tower sections into place ... Skip Reeves doing the hook up and comms ... |
BC Hydro communications tower site |
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