Hi,
A few weeks ago my wife happened by as tree trimmers were doing their thing on a pair of Sycamores.
She stopped and made a donation to the tree cutters who happily loaded up the back of the TrailBlazer with some nice pieces.
Later I visited the site with my truck and loaded up all I could comfortably pack off.
When turning the first of the wet bits of wood I got some of the sap on my prescription glasses. When I cleaned the stuff off I could no longer see worth a hoot. Something had damaged the coatings and I have been wearing an old pair since.
Any experience like this from anyone else, and what the heck would do that. I always thought tree sap was mostly water - with the exceptions of the pine gum my father liked to chew.
Yes, I now make sure I am wearing a full face shield when turning. With the cost of prescription glasses and being blind as a bat without them I have repented of the bad habit of no face shield.
Bye for now
A few weeks ago my wife happened by as tree trimmers were doing their thing on a pair of Sycamores.
She stopped and made a donation to the tree cutters who happily loaded up the back of the TrailBlazer with some nice pieces.
Later I visited the site with my truck and loaded up all I could comfortably pack off.
When turning the first of the wet bits of wood I got some of the sap on my prescription glasses. When I cleaned the stuff off I could no longer see worth a hoot. Something had damaged the coatings and I have been wearing an old pair since.
Any experience like this from anyone else, and what the heck would do that. I always thought tree sap was mostly water - with the exceptions of the pine gum my father liked to chew.
Yes, I now make sure I am wearing a full face shield when turning. With the cost of prescription glasses and being blind as a bat without them I have repented of the bad habit of no face shield.
Bye for now