Warm weather and good timing landed a nice bread & butter job the other day. A bit of wind, but no bother. A loyal customer who flips houses contracted us to restore the beauty to this tired looking roof.
-- Edited by Mark Fermoyle on Monday 18th of January 2016 05:11:06 PM
I have a couple house flip customers. They are not really ever big ticket jobs, but they all always call me a few times a year each. They also all have multiple other contractors on site that are potential referral contacts.
Nice work Mark!
Bob Riddick said
Jan 19, 2016
It's great to have those regular customers, the ones that feed you all year. Nice work, Mark. And way to take advantage of that nice day.
11 degrees here this morning!
Brandon Vaughn said
Jan 19, 2016
Looks great Mark, gotta love those repeat customers.
AC Lockyer said
Jan 19, 2016
Love that your getting some winter gravy with this mild weather!
AC
Mark Fermoyle said
Jan 20, 2016
Thanks, guys!
Brr, not so warm the past few days though. 12 degrees the last couple of mornings and supposedly a ton of snow on the way this weekend. Good thing Let Us Spray also has a snow blower to take up some slack with the 12+ inches of "global warming" we're going to get. LOL
Tim Teed said
Jan 20, 2016
Its just a different type of roof cleaning when we get a lot of snow
Troy Layman said
Jan 21, 2016
<Milk Run> Nice job Mark! That roof cleaned up very nicely.
My wife was saying we're supposed to get something like 4 inches tomorrow, 6 inches Friday night, and another 4-6 inches on Saturday or something like that over the next 36 hours. I'm just glad that infernal rain finally eased up. The ground was so soggy about 10 days ago that while driving in 4WD about 5 MPH my truck just sank in on level ground...so embarrassing.
Mark Fermoyle said
Jan 25, 2016
It had definitely been soggy beyond belief lately. Had to postpone a roof job in Colonial Heights due to their water meter being padlocked. Thing is, I didn't realize it was padlocked until AFTER I had bailed it out to be able to visualize the valve. Completely filled to the top with water! Filled right back up again within about 20 minutes.
It had definitely been soggy beyond belief lately. Had to postpone a roof job in Colonial Heights due to their water meter being padlocked. Thing is, I didn't realize it was padlocked until AFTER I had bailed it out to be able to visualize the valve. Completely filled to the top with water! Filled right back up again within about 20 minutes.
What a drag.
So sorry to hear about that. I don't mind a hard days work, but it is frustrating to get to a jobsite and find out it was a wasted trip.
Glad you all didn't have any issues with the fire trucks and ambulances either.
Warm weather and good timing landed a nice bread & butter job the other day. A bit of wind, but no bother. A loyal customer who flips houses contracted us to restore the beauty to this tired looking roof.
-- Edited by Mark Fermoyle on Monday 18th of January 2016 05:11:06 PM
Very nice Mark!!
Nice work Mark!
It's great to have those regular customers, the ones that feed you all year. Nice work, Mark. And way to take advantage of that nice day.
11 degrees here this morning!
Looks great Mark, gotta love those repeat customers.
AC
Brr, not so warm the past few days though. 12 degrees the last couple of mornings and supposedly a ton of snow on the way this weekend. Good thing Let Us Spray also has a snow blower to take up some slack with the 12+ inches of "global warming" we're going to get. LOL
My wife was saying we're supposed to get something like 4 inches tomorrow, 6 inches Friday night, and another 4-6 inches on Saturday or something like that over the next 36 hours. I'm just glad that infernal rain finally eased up. The ground was so soggy about 10 days ago that while driving in 4WD about 5 MPH my truck just sank in on level ground...so embarrassing.
It had definitely been soggy beyond belief lately. Had to postpone a roof job in Colonial Heights due to their water meter being padlocked. Thing is, I didn't realize it was padlocked until AFTER I had bailed it out to be able to visualize the valve. Completely filled to the top with water! Filled right back up again within about 20 minutes.
What a drag.
So sorry to hear about that. I don't mind a hard days work, but it is frustrating to get to a jobsite and find out it was a wasted trip.
Glad you all didn't have any issues with the fire trucks and ambulances either.