Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am the PP who sold their landscaping buisness, for the one who doubted me let me explain.
After taking over Somerset, Kenwood and Wood Acres bit by bit, I had to hire friends to help me cut lanws after school and all day on weekends. sometimes 30-40 lawns a day. I bought two trucks and two horse trailers,and hired people to drive them, bought as much used equipment as I could from the lawn mower place on Butler Road, and rented space off River Road to sotre the equipment. During high school I went half days my junior and senior years part of a work program I got into. Much like the students who do other trades, I got approval to do this.
I got several accounts for large developments like kenwood forest, parkside, and many others. Hired more employees and it grew and grew.
Need more proof?
How could someone under age 18 buy a car and horse trailer? Don't you have to be 19 to buy a car?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wouldn't want my kids being beggars in the neighbourhood.
I don't want neighbours employing my children, feeling superior to me.
Oh good grief, this post has to be a joke, right? I am assuming you and/or your spouse work for a living. Does that mean you are a beggar?
And do you really think it is better to teach your kids that they should worry about who is superior to whom in the neighborhood, rather than learning the value of hard work?
I work but I don't go door to door.
It's peasant like.
Anonymous wrote:My brother didn't want the responsibility of our yard, so I told my Dad I could do it. I was 8 years old and probably 60ish lbs. He paid me $5 to mow the entire yard with a push mower that he had to start for me. Took me about an hour 1/2.
But I was responsible, hungry for money and wanted to earn his respect. I'm now a 50+ woman with 5 successful businesses. Not BS, just grew up up with strong business people and wanted to emulate them.