Be Safe Today and Everyday
Oh,boy, it's Friday the 13th. Anyone with suspicions out there? If I did, I wouldhave to believe that every day of the last two and a half years was a Fridaythe 13th and a full moon besides.
ButI have something rather unexpected to share.
First,here's another question. Do you know where asbestos comes from? Think about ita minute before you read on because I had NO idea, none whatsoever.
Hubbyand I watched an episode of Mysteries of the Abandoned last night. They starteach segment with a series of clues to the location they are at and let you tryto figure out what this mammoth abandoned structure had once been used for.
Once,they had an iron ore dock, like the one that used to be in Ashland, Wisconsin.I can't remember what country that one was in, but I was pretty excited that Iknew instantly what it was.

Okay,so last night's ruins, which threw me for a loop, were located on the borderbetween South Africa and Eswatini (which I had never heard of before but whichused to be Swaziland). The Havelock Mine was initially started for mining gold,but when that didn't pan out (pun intended), they realized something even morevaluable was in the ground. A group of naturally occurring, fibrous silicateminerals, which were useful in insulation and commonly used in buildingmaterials prior to the 1980s, when we all realized it was toxic andcarcinogenic. Yikes!
So,back to that question above, did you know that asbestos is a natural substance?Or, like me, did you think it was manufactured from a bunch of other things,which, when combined, turned out to cause mesothelioma and lung cancer? And canyou imagine how sick all those workers got? They did, and there were manylawsuits, before the mine finally closed. But sadly, I read that only 66countries have banned the use of asbestos and it is still mined in some places.
I'mjust sharing this tidbit of information today. Have a good weekend, stay safe,and don't push your luck by messing with any insulation made in the seventiesor before.