I wonder what Susan wears under her shoes: nylons stockings or sock. Are nylons less slippery than men's socks? James Grebe R.P.T. of the P.T.G. from St. Louis, MO. USA, Earth Piano Service and Piano Periperals Creator of Hardwood PLTR's and Custom Piano Benches pianoman@inlink.com If I wake up in the morning, it WILL be a great day! ---------- > From: Glenn <rockymtn@sprynet.com> > To: pianotech@ptg.org > Subject: Re: World-Class Junk of Susans muses (rambling) > Date: Wednesday, July 08, 1998 11:54 PM > > > -----Original Message----- > From: pianoman <pianoman@inlink.com> > To: pianotech@ptg.org <pianotech@ptg.org> > Date: Wednesday, July 08, 1998 5:52 PM > Subject: World-Class Junk of Susans muses (rambling) > > > >Hi Susan and all, > > > > On the subject of taking off shoes: I am not the most graceful person in > >the world and I don't know about you, but it is slippery in your socking > >feet, downright dangerous. > > >James Grebe > > > I agree with this. Also, there might be insurance and liability issues > should something happen to you. I tried to get the furniture delivery men > to remove their shoes but they said it was forbidden. What if they were to > drop something on their foot? Sort of makes sense. I mean if you are > worried about tuning when there is a 16 year old alone in the house then . . > . . > > How about getting a bunch of those hospital shoe "hairnets." That is the > best way to describe them. We saw these once in a basket by the door of a > home we were looking at with a real estate agent. Great idea and everyone > can keep their (smelly ;-) shoes ON!! > > If someone finds a cheap source for these (they are disposable) please let > me know. If I find it first, I'll post it here. > > Glenn.
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