rvieceli
Member
There's always the old adage:
"When I'm gone, don't let my wife sell my tools for what I told her I paid for them!"
Ron
"When I'm gone, don't let my wife sell my tools for what I told her I paid for them!"
Ron
<sends friend request>Im leaving all mine to my favorite FOG member
Google A.I. is onboard with that, though I could find no images:I plan on selling all my Festool stuff. Except, one Mini Systainer that I will keep to hold my remains. So that I may RIP (Rest in Plastic).![]()
Did you all know that an M437 Systainer would not be large enough to hold any of us?I plan on selling all my Festool stuff. Except, one Mini Systainer that I will keep to hold my remains. So that I may RIP (Rest in Plastic).![]()
I was surprised when I was told that too after my FIL died. The urn is really just a symbolic thing to help those left behind.Did you all know that an M437 Systainer would not be large enough to hold any of us?
Many years ago, one of my mortician friends (oddly enough, I do have more than one friend who is a mortician) and I were talking and got to the subject of cremation. I said something to the effect that I was amazed that we can fit in an urn. He told me: "Oh no, there's much more than that."
Turns out, the average person produces about two trash bags of ash and bone. The equivalent of your arm is in the urn. The rest is disposed of in a manner regulated by the federal government.
*This is what I think about anytime I see an urn.
Mine was "involuntarily cremated" in August of '19. Other than the blade, the only thing recognizable was the armature. It wouldn't be hard to store..So, we can get our track saws cremated?
I'm surprised the armature isn't mounted to your wall!Mine was "involuntarily cremated" in August of '19. Other than the blade, the only thing recognizable was the armature. It wouldn't be hard to store..![]()
This is weird. Granma was in a cremation society /yeah, we have such a thing/ and I am pretty sure this was not the case.I was surprised when I was told that too after my FIL died. The urn is really just a symbolic thing to help those left behind.
So what part of me would fit in a mini?Did you all know that an M437 Systainer would not be large enough to hold any of us?
Many years ago, one of my mortician friends (oddly enough, I do have more than one friend who is a mortician) and I were talking and got to the subject of cremation. I said something to the effect that I was amazed that we can fit in an urn. He told me: "Oh no, there's much more than that."
Turns out, the average person produces about two trash bags of ash and bone. The equivalent of your arm is in the urn. The rest is disposed of in a manner regulated by the federal government.
*This is what I think about anytime I see an urn.
My MIL was a somewhat macabre person at times, and we have a very large cemetery not far from us that had an open day one time and she wanted to go. The guide took us all through the place including the furnace or ovens (whatever is the proper name for them) and described what happens, and mentioned the usual container for cremation is between 2-4L depending on where it's ending up interred, and that represented around a 1/3 to 1/4 of the actual total generated from a cremation from memory.This is weird. Granma was in a cremation society /yeah, we have such a thing/ and I am pretty sure this was not the case.
She wanted to have her ash spread, not stored, so mother literally got to spread it all over a specially designated plot for this. There was not that big of a lot of it, but not small either. She was tiny though.
By the notion that I cringed a little tells me that people probably call it something else in our lifetimes! I believe the proper term is "cremation machines"? At least as evidenced in this website by the premier manufacturer of cremation equipment. I surmise they are the Festool of the cremation industry.The guide took us all through the place including the furnace or ovens (whatever is the proper name for them)
I totally get what you mean. I must also admit when the missus said her mum wanted to go it kind of seemed a really weird thing to me, I mean an open day at the cemetery?By the notion that I cringed a little tells me that people probably call it something else in our lifetimes! I believe the proper term is "cremation machines"? At least as evidenced in this website by the premier manufacturer of cremation equipment. I surmise they are the Festool of the cremation industry.
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This would actually align. Over here the urns are about thrice the size .. the ash is given to the family in a sealed officially marked plastic urn to ensure no swaps and this can then be placed in a decorative urn. Normally there is no need to unseal it.My MIL was a somewhat macabre person at times, and we have a very large cemetery not far from us that had an open day one time and she wanted to go. The guide took us all through the place including the furnace or ovens (whatever is the proper name for them) and described what happens, and mentioned the usual container for cremation is between 2-4L depending on where it's ending up interred, and that represented around a 1/3 to 1/4 of the actual total generated from a cremation from memory.
It might have been more but I'm pretty sure that's what was said as we'd always thought the body was reduced to an urn sized amount of ash too. Although the term ash would be wrong in describing it, it actually is more like kitty litter or fine gravel.
He also showed a stash of of embedded metal objects, including a LOT of melted pacemakers, which he said sort of explode in the kiln.
They don't quite hold that same level of "care" or reverence I guess for lack of a better word in most places here. If you opt to get relatives interred behind plaques in the walls in the gardens of the cemetery, the plastic container is about 2L roughly, interred in the ground in the rose gardens they were around 4L from memory, so the remainder of the body is simply disposed of. Other cemeteries here might differ, but I would expect they'd be pretty much the same simply for the financial side.This would actually align. Over here the urns are about thrice the size .. the ash is given to the family in a sealed officially marked plastic urn to ensure no swaps and this can then be placed in a decorative urn. Normally there is no need to unseal it.
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When you wrote 'two trash bags', that for me translated to about 2x 20+ litres /2x 5 gallons/. That had me confused. Though over here the ash /which is very airy/ is grinded to a sand-like composition that surely reduces volume. If similar is not done in US I can see the huge volume mentioned.
Here it would be a huge scandal about 'desecration' if the remains of someone were not 'treated properly'. I guess this is a cultural thing. Here there is lots of respect to the remains of people. Like. A LOT.