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.......dealing with headstones....


chris hennelly
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We've, done a few grave yards over the years, on several occasions I have moved headstones with the tractor and put them back afterwards, I figure this shows more respect than breaking them...

 

As above, we've always managed to move them make sure you take a before pic so you put the stones back in the rite place. ;)

 

Sent from my GT-I9300 using Arbtalk mobile app

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Measure how high they are then find some old tractor tires that are slightly taller than the offending stone and rachet strap 2 together either side of the stone to protect it from accidentally dropped bits. Works well if you can't lift and shift em.

If you do shift em make a note of who is buried where as getting it wrong is highly embarrassing :confused:

 

sent while pretending to do something important on my mobile.

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A friend of my'ns son, 6 years old was killed by a large grave stone that fell on him while they were walking on a footpath through grave yard. A group was set up as a result of the tradgedy that used to go and test how stable the stones were all over the country. People might think that was very random accident, but a lot of old headstones are very unsafe. It destroyed my friend and her husband. she had a severe mental breakdown and took years to recover.

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A lot of really old headstones are too brittle to move, so we stack small straw bales either side, hammer fence posts in at the corners and put straps around. 9 times out of ten we never even hit them, but it's worth doing just in case.

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We do a lot of grave yard works for the local council and tbh by rigging carefully and often small we rarely have any issues. I certainly wouldn't advise moving them as the old stones are so brittle you'll break more than you save.

Tucky

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