Wednesday we left here early to haul garbage to the dump. We live so far away that we don't have garbage pickup. We put it in a building until there is enough to haul. You have to have at lease 290 pounds or you lose money at the dump as they charge a set fee for anything under 290 pounds. We had 530 pounds or so, so we didn't lose any money on it. I had to dump any old freezer, airconditioner, and electric cook stove, so my dumping was expensive. Carol went along and helped me.
We came back to this house where the freezer and airconditioner were, and set about to loading an upright grand piano on a pickup truck. I thought we could do it, but things went wrong. I was pulling it up a ramp with a large ratchet strap, and I used all my slack, so I needed to figure out another way to do it. So I hooked on each side of the pickup with a chain for each side. That made the piano pull sideways. Carol was at the bottom. The piano tipped over and slid down knocking Carol against an eight by eight post, and then on the grown. She laid there for a while holding her head. Then blood was all over her hands. The piano was still stuck on the ramp laying on its side. We got the piano loose from the strap, pulled it onto the ground laying on its back, put the ramp on the ground and headed for the hospital. She had a gash cut in her head 3 inches long, and at the hospital they used staples instead of stitches, 7 of them. Her head has hurt her a quite a bit the last few days, but she did go to church with me this morning. She had to try not to lay on it when she is sleeping, and it bothers her to bend over.
My son-in-law, his son, our grandson, helped me load the piano after up righting it. We figured out a better way to do it, and they were stronger, so that helped. I hauled it up here to our place, then I covered the piano with tarps. It did snow a couple of inches, but the tarps protected it. Carol wouldn't help unload the piano after that bad experience, and I don't blame her. Her brother from the Philippines asked her in an e-mail, why a 70 year old woman was trying to load a piano.
I laid cinder blocks down, backed the pickup on them, jacked up the back of the pickup, and our daughter, our son-in-law and I loaded the piano into the refer trailer. When Carol does not want to hear me play the piano any more in the house I will go out to the refer trailer and play that paino there!
I'm not sure how this happened, but our grandson's mother got rid of this paino when our grandson was a little guy; it was his piano. Well, it ended up in a house that I own, and when a renter moved out, she said that she didn't want the paino any more. I don't think she wanted to move it. I need to talk with our grandson's mother to try to find out how it ended up in this house. They don't even know that I have it. He is about 21 or 22 years old now, so he probably had not seen this piano for 14 or so years. I am planning to take a piano tuner/tech. course, and that old piano will give me something to work on, as well as being of sentamental value since it belonged to our grandson.