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Jim Henman's avatar

I lost that way of thinking when, at the age of 31, I became a carpenters helper in building my first home outside Bedford, Nova Scotia. My father-inlaw was the guide and expert through the whole experince from cutting the trees on the land down, to putting up the forms for the foundation, to

putting the last shingle on the roof we did the whole house by hand. It was the old way. We took Sundays off. Every Monday he would take our saws in to the shop to sharpen them.

It took us 10 months of 3-4 hours a night , full Saturdays to build the house. Of all I have done in my 78 years of life... the profession I worked at , the music awards from my time in the business, even the songs I have composed, this house is the project I am most proud of. I have never felt that staisfaction. (Well maybe the birth and life of my children but that's another story). Jim Henman

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Nate's avatar

My Dad taught construction estimating at BCIT for awhile. I've always thought that what many contractors lack is not sense or ability, it's business acumen. If we want them to be more productive and efficient they should either be supported with bookkeepers, accountants and office management or taught those skills early and thoroughly. We concentrate on the physical aspect, as you say, but most of carpentry is basic math (angles, measurements, fractions, etc.) which is also useful for most kinds of bookkeeping tasks. Also, we need to make forms and regulations as streamlined as possible.

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