Climbing 35ft to the top of the ladder, washing the window and then going all the way back down again to fetch the squeegee you left in your bucket
Driving several miles to work and then going back home again to fetch the ladder you left behind
Starting a big Initial clean, only to break the 4inch Unger razor scaper and find it is the last one you have
Then having to waste time finding a hardware store and buying a little Stanley Scraper and knifing off hundreds of panes of glass with that all day long
Having an employee break a pane of glass and having to lose an afternoons work replacing it...then losing the customer anyway
(thats nice innit Roger
)
Or getting half way through your last job of the day and getting a 'nick' in your rubber that leaves lines with every pass, and the only replacements you have are at home
So you either detail every line left on every pane or use that little cut down 6inch squeegee you use for some georgian work....except in this case there are loads patio size windows to do
Or managing to knock over your bucket of water just at the point where there isn't any left in your BOAB and your applicator is almost bone dry
And it's winter time, the customer isn't in and the water supply to their outside tap has been turned off
Or, pulling off to go to the next house and as you turn the first corner all your ladders fly off the roof rack
Or, you forget that your ladders are tied on in such a way that you MUST undo the straps holding the front end of the ladders first.....failing to do so sees your ladders tip ever so gracefully onto the bonnet of your car and then slide down it before you can stop it
How about leaving your big ladder up against the side of the house as you knock on the door to collect the money.
Only for a huge gust of wind to take it just as the customer is handing you the money.
Then you all watch open mouthed as your ladder then crashes onto the bonnet of their nice new car
Or walking up a sloping roof 20ft above ground, only for a gust of wind to blow your ladder down.
The customer of course is never in to put the ladder back up for you
I could go on
Ian