Quantcast

***Thursderp GMT***

  • Come enter the Ridemonkey Secret Santa!

    We're kicking off the 2024 Secret Santa! Exchange gifts with other monkeys - from beer and snacks, to bike gear, to custom machined holiday decorations and tools by our more talented members, there's something for everyone.

    Click here for details and to learn how to participate.

Adventurous

Starshine Bro
Mar 19, 2014
10,850
9,888
Crawlorado
Also, WTF. Child practically potty trained herself in the last week and rode 1/2 mile on her pedal bike last night. Prior to that she hadn't ridden more than 30 yards.
 

Toshi

butthole powerwashing evangelist
Oct 23, 2001
39,748
8,748
I recently purchased a number of plain solid color T-shirts for work.


Dress for the job you want, not the job you have.
I'm not supposed to wear T-shirts here

yet I do. I think my job is safe
 

Nick

My name is Nick
Sep 21, 2001
24,905
16,472
where the trails are
In St George he could have R + R + R + R...
I built a big project in Cedar City, north of St.G. One of the last trips home, flying out to SLC then CO, they asked if I could stay another night leaving tomorrow. I assumed it would be no problem, but that was the start of a national Mennonite Women's convention or retreat, and there wasn't a room to be had. I had more jokes lined up about churning my butter than I can remember.
 
Last edited:

gonefirefightin

free wieners
Funny, this made me think.

Spent my whole career changing clothes all day at work, Military and fire both have at least 4 different uniforms and all 4 were frequently used in the same day. In fact, I was in the Army long enough to go through 5 completely different uniform changes.

PT uniform for the mornings, Shorts, running shoes (Both careers)
Daily uniforms were either BDU/ACU (Army) and Casual station uniform attire for fire
Dress uniforms for the military were either class A, B, or C with a Dress Blue option and Fire had 2 levels of dress uniforms
Full battle rattle in the military was all unique gear as were turnouts for fire calls
And then you had MOPP gear for the Army (chemical) and a nomex flight suit suit when in armor
On the fire side, we had hazmat suits as well as wildland gear.

I spent my life hauling around a shit ton of uniforms and gear like the village people
 

jimmydean

The Official Meat of Ridemonkey
Sep 10, 2001
43,075
15,163
Portland, OR
T-Shirt and shorts in the office every day. Maybe even flip-flops.
Our lab guy wears a collared shirt every day but switches his dress shoes out for slides he wears around the office. I actually thought he wore the slides to work because I've never seen him in shoes, but then I saw the slides under his desk when he wasn't here.

My wife asks if I look the worst in our office and the truth is I don't. Our CTO looks homeless. :rofl: