by PhebaAndThePilgrim » Mon 12 May 2008, 16:54:42
Good day from Pheba, from the farm:
I took some photos of our clothes poles, but could not figure out how to do the loading.
Clothes poles I can figure out, computers are a different story.
Our poles are about 9 feet tall. They are old porch beams that came from a construction site my husband was working on about 25 years ago. They are great. They are about 6 by 6.
The poles are not 12 feet long. They should be so 3 feet could be buried. Somehow my husband attached the poles to treated lumber, and buried the treated lumber 3 feet in the ground.
There are 3 lines, about 22 inches apart on the metal crossbar mounted on the pole. My husband used metal eye bolts, and metal cable for the line. I measured the crossbar at about 80 inches, and the center of the line at about 70 inches off the ground, sag.
The line should not be much taller because it strains my shoulders sometimes with heavy stuff.
But, with heavy stuff the line sags more and denim jeans really make it sag.
I remember when I was growing up, everybody had clothesline, and everybody had a long pole, about 2-3 inches in diameter.
The pole was about 6 to 10 inches taller than the clothesline.
One end of the pole was notched to slip into the clothesline.
When the line had heavy laundry on it, just slip the notched end of the pole into the clothesline at the center of the line to take out the slack, and stop the sagging. Works great, is portable, changeable,
and better than having a line strung too tall.
I am 5,10", and I almost find my line too tall.
Hope this helps, and if somebody would care to inform me, I would be happy to download photos.
They are in my HP Image Zone, but I do not know how to get them to this post.
I am back out in the yard. Pheba.
PS. One downside of hanging out laundry. Hubby raises blackberries, many gallons per summer. The birds rob some of the berries, and always, always manage to go potty on my nicest item of clothing I have hung outside, thus ruining it forever. I tend to hang indoors, more than out.
Almost never use the dryer.