Well, apparently it never occurred to young Holden to go check it out and see all the mallards gathered in a huge crumb-eating cluster where they had broken through the frozen ice at the South end of Central Park
Maybe a more germane question, given the realities of New York City-- its huge army of people who work in all kinds of weather ( from letter carriers and sanitation workers to cops and firemen, and, most notably and noticeably in Manhattan, the slew of window cleaners ( most of whom don't like that more common term"Window Washers" it seems-- more if you keep reading)
Don’t You Dare Call Them ‘Window Washers’: The Cool and Terrifying Video Taking You Inside the World of NYC ‘Window Cleaners’
Oh yeah...to see the video that goes with this article, go to
http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2013/08/16/dont-you-dare-call-them-window-washers-the-cool-and-terrifying-video-taking-you-inside-the-world-of-nyc-window-cleaners/
You’ve seen them dangling in
harnesses from thin lines or on rickety looking platforms connected to
what you hope is something strong enough on the roof above. No one can
deny that window cleaners deserve some R.E.S.P.E.C.T for the dizzying
heights from which they hang to keep the outsides of windows clean.
The New York Times recently profiled one such “grime fighter,”
giving you a look at what it looks like from the perspective of the
“man on an edge.” And don’t you dare call him a “window washer.”
Brent Weingard has been in the business for 35 years.
“Washing windows is dirty work because
the city is so dirty. And to be honest, I don’t think the work is all
that healthy. But I love it,” he told the Times.
What is healthy though is having “a certain amount of respect and fear” for the heights,” he said.
To Weingard, he provides a valuable
service because “why live in New York, if you can’t look out the window
and see how beautiful the city is?”
Weingard started Expert Window Cleaners
while he was studying political science at Columbia University nearly
30 years ago. He now works with 10 employees on up to 1,000 buildings a
year.
Things have changed over the years though, especially as the city has become more wealthy, according to the Times:
“People are fussier,” Mr. Weingard said. “They get upset if they can’t get an appointment right away, or if the guy is five minutes late.” There’s also less chatting with the customer; usually, a domestic worker or a doorman escorts Mr. Weingard into an apartment.
Now, why a “window cleaner” and not
“window washer”? According to Weingard, people who use “washer” are
either not knowledgeable about the business or they’re “trying to put us
down.”
Here are some interesting fun facts about Weingard and Expert Window Cleaners:
- His solution: water, Joy brand soap, because “my grandmother swore by it,” and ammonia. ”God, I love the smell of ammonia in the morning,” Weingard said in the video.
- He calls his mops “porcupines.”
- His team has only dropped equipment — a pole or squeegee — five times.
- One winter day, he got stuck outside a building after the window closed. He had to go through another apartment unit’s window and ring the lobby to rescue him.
- Although the iconic picture of a window cleaner is rappelling by ropes down the site of a building, most due to city regulations, work from the inside as much as possible and do “belt work” in areas where there’s no other option.
- The average for apartment window washing is one to two times per year, costing $20 for each standard, double-hung window.
- “You missed a spot,” is what Weingard calls “the oldest joke in the window cleaning industry.” But he was generally gullible when he was younger and would often try to find the spot.
And now — what you’ve all been
waiting for — footage of Weingard showing just how they safely anchor
themselves so they can hang on the outside of the window safely:
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(H/T: Gizmodo)
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