bluerail wrote:"Standard issue in the towers was a chair designed to protect against electrocution. Glass insulators are attached to the base of the wooden chairs' legs. "A friend of mine claims you can get five people standing on that chair during a storm,"
The four glass insulators are stored (in fair weather) on the upper left of that top shelf. They look as if they fit on the legs of that green chair.
(Full Size Pic)
Foot Stool with Glass Lightning Insulators
So, it looks as though the lonely tower occupant places the insulators on the chair legs, then sits down and puts his feet up on the insulated foot stool. Then he gets to wait in suspense and fear of death while the storm rages all around. It must be fun to sit in a building on top of a mountain with lightning rods on the roof. Lightning rods ATTRACT LIGHTNING! Of course, they are supposed to harmlessly funnel it into the ground via the big copper wires that run down all four corners of the tower, but do you really want to bet your life on it? Meanwhile, there's a metal wood stove right next to you in the room with a metal chimney pipe sticking up through the roof. Yikes! I've been up in Round Valley in a summer thunderstorm, so I can just imagine what it must be like on top of a peak getting repeated lightning strikes...
