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Working on a building site in winter is extremely cold. Bricklayers struggle during this time, while plumbers thrive. Tradespeople need to drink more hot beverages. The painter has mastered carrying multiple things at once. The site manager rarely leaves the cabin and is hardly seen. The "old boy" is hidden away sleeping during work hours. A building site during the winter months can be one of the coldest, most extreme places on our planet. The key to making it through the brutally cold winter is to eat plenty of food, and these guys will definitely do that. The winter months are the harshest on a building site, and there will be a good number lost, especially the bricklayer. During the summer, these bricklayers will thrive, but as soon as the weather changes, bricklayers will disappear, only to be seen in the spring. The other side of the site, where the plumbers dwell, is starkly different. They thrive in the cold temperatures, seeking out frozen pipes and spigots. When winter comes, so does the need for tradespeople to increase their intake of hot beverages. For some, this task can mean many trips to and from the kitchen, but over time, the clever painter has developed the skill of the multi-carry. The elusive site manager does not fare as well during the colder months. He will leave the safety of the site cabin very rarely, and even then, it will only be a fleeting visit before he vanishes like a phantom. Every site has one, the old boy. Rarely seen with the naked eye, but if you know where to look, you'll find them buried away sleeping during the hours of eight till four.