The next big thing in home improvement
Everyone has a home improvement disaster story. Most of them, it
seems, come from a lack of the proper equipment, lack of
experience, or a miserable combination of the two. Well some of
the most miserable home-improvement disasters I can think of
involve some kind of "ladder-like" implement. Most of these
pitiful excuses-for-ladders are hand-me-down tools with one
wooden leg. Some of the most important tools in home improvement
are often some of the most neglected.
>From personal experience, I seem to use ladders more than the
average person. In fact last week, I was using an extension
ladder to fix some wind damage on my roof. Now this piece of
equipment I was using to get onto my roof, maybe 20 feet, became
nothing short of a near-death experience. This ladder has got to
be as close or older than me. But it's not the ladder's age that
frightens me. It's the ladder's experience that makes me worry.
See, our ladder spends most of its days out in the elements. It
spends most of it's days banished to a corner of my backyard -
grouped with the firewood. The only reason the ladder doesn't
get garage space is because the garage is for privileged power
tools and yard-care equipment.
The ladder, I fear, may someday exact it's revenge on me or some
other unsuspecting home improver by deciding it doesn't want to
support my weekend home-improvement endeavors. This failure will
come at the worst possible time - a bit of Murphy's Law. I can
see myself at the top rung of the ladder, about ready to step
onto my roof, when the ladder will undergo structural failure.
No replays of Clark Griswold for me, so I decided to get a new
ladder.
In my search for a new elevation-aiding apparatus, I came across
one of the coolest new ever in the history of ladder-dom. This
thing is money in nearly any situation - a primetime player in
the ladder world. Not only is this thing light, it's safe. No
more worrying about the thing collapsing on me. The ladder is
also more than just an extension ladder or an a-frame. It can be
a scaffold too. I can use it to paint my house or redo some of
the aluminum siding on the eaves of my house. This discovery,
I'm talking about is the
Little Giant Ladder.
This ladder has been the answer I have been looking for. It
works on uneven surfaces like stairs safer than any other ladder
on the market. Once I'm done with my work the ladder stores more
compact than my archaic extension ladder. It feels like I bought
about four different ladders. If it's out of my reach, it's just
right for my Little Giant Ladder System.