I've used them at a gym, with the middle around a post, pumping the ends with your hands like a rope. It's a great workout for your arms. A local gym might buy it off you, but I'm sure better suggestions will be along shortly.
A piece of land is worth as much as the person farming it.
-Le Livre du Colon, 1902
We used it to pad the places where the cattle panels meet on our hoop house. I used strips of rag to tie it on so there was nothing rough against the greenhouse plastic cover.
It is tough to cut and I think we found that tin snips worked the best, cutting through the fold on one side and opening it out flat to use.
After checking, I see that we cut down both folds and used just the webbing on the flat joins and for the corners we cut only one side and left the rubber lining.
I think it might last a long long time even out in the weather year round. Ours is only on it's second summer though.
"We're all just walking each other home." -Ram Dass
"Be a lamp, or a lifeboat, or a ladder."-Rumi
"It's all one song!" -Neil Young
They could be used as a hinge. Similar to how people use an old glove as a hinge.
A tree ring? Bury it in a circle about an inch deep. Keeps water by the trunk of a small tree.
Tow strap?
Use like a chain for a swing or tire swing. Or hanging from a tree next to a swimming hole. Ladder rungs into a tree house? Lots ot kids play uses......
Wranglerstar recommends making tool sheaths out of them - he might even have a video of it on YouTube.
Growing on my small acre in SW USA; Fruit/Nut trees w/ annuals, Chickens, lamb, pigs; rabbits and in-laws onto property soon.
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We used to run chains through them and then hang them at the back of horse stalls, wash stalls, trailers, etc to keep the horses in (without them getting all cut up). Works also for cattle and I would imagine goats.
If it holds water you could close off ends, fill them, and use them as weights for ground cover or other things that need to stay put on windy days (i'm looking at cardboard in my garden over newly buried trenches full of bokashi rot).
Dustin Rhodes wrote:Wranglerstar recommends making tool sheaths out of them - he might even have a video of it on YouTube.
We also use our old hoses to make sheaths for the files and rasps necessary for maintaining said tools. 1" Hose is just the right size for that purpose, but what you have will do. If that's 3" fire hose it makes a pretty decent bar cover for chainsaws.
Today I will do what others won't, so tomorrow I can do what others can't.
We have something that looks very much like a firehose. It is called a "Snatch em strap".
Similar to what Wayne said "tow strap". It is use some what like a come along. When someone is stuck in mud, you use it to pull them out, thus the name "Snatch em"
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This is a bit different suggestion, but the fire troop I learned to spin poi from used to use the kevlar from fire hoses to make wicks for their fire dance equipment.
"Where will you drive your own picket stake? Where will you choose to make your stand? Give me a threshold, a specific point at which you will finally stop running, at which you will finally fight back." (Derrick Jensen)