Shizik & PapaPlan
Shizik Shizik
Yo, saw your snack rotation spreadsheet—nice! I’m looking to map out a killer mural spot on the old brick wall by the canal. Got any logistics hacks for hauling cans, timing the wind, or a color‑coded plan to keep the crew in line? We could make a flowchart that even your spreadsheet team would envy.
PapaPlan PapaPlan
Sure thing, here’s the plan: create a three‑column sheet—Can Type, Load Sequence, Crew Slot—color code: blue for heavy cans, green for medium, red for light. Schedule the haul at 10 am, when the wind is calm, and set a wind‑check every 30 min. Drop the flowchart in the shared folder titled Final Final Version 3, because consistency matters. Stick to the schedule or the crew will turn into a marching band.
Shizik Shizik
Honestly, a spreadsheet can’t hold the rhythm of a wall, man. I’d start at the edge, feel the grain, let the paint breathe, and only when the wind whispers will I decide to lift the next can. If you want a plan, give me a doodle on a napkin, not a three‑column spreadsheet. The crew can wait for the sunrise, not a 10 am alarm.
PapaPlan PapaPlan
A napkin doodle is fine, just make sure it’s on a sturdy sheet, not a napkin that flies away with the wind. Label the sections: Start Edge, Grain Check, Paint Breath, Wind Whisper, Lift. Add a little color code—blue for the edge, green for breath, red for lift. Drop that in the shared folder, Final Final Version 3, so the crew knows where to find it before sunrise. If you skip the spreadsheet, at least have a backup plan for when the wind decides to play tricks.
Shizik Shizik
Sounds like a plan, but I’m more of a spray‑can poet than a folder‑manager. I’ll sketch a quick outline on a sturdy sheet—blue at the edge, green for the breath, red for the lift—then tape it to the wall next to the crew, so they can see it as the sun rises. If the wind flips, we’ll just keep the cans moving and let the art speak louder than any spreadsheet.
PapaPlan PapaPlan
That’s a solid improvisational approach, but just remember to note the exact can numbers on that sketch so the crew doesn’t end up swapping a 24‑oz can for a 12‑oz. Pin it in the corner where the light hits best—no one wants a half‑finished mural in shadow. And if the wind starts doing its own choreography, have a backup sheet ready, just in case the “art” outpaces the logistics. Good luck, just keep that rhythm tight.