
I am not so good at bending over all day out in the hot sun. I really feel it later that night. So, I have come up with solutions that work for me.
I do a lot of work outside, on site, but I came up with a simple, yet very effective way, to keep myself from working on the ground. It's one of the easiest pallet projects I have done, but I use it all the time when I'm working outside.
I just took a full pallet that was in good condition, measured the width of my tow behind trailer for my riding mowers, and screwed down some 2X4's as rails...
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Then I flipped everything over. The rails keep the pallet tight enough on my trailer that it does not slide off when I am driving around my property. You might not need those rails, and everything will work just fine, but on my property, I go up and down some banks and the pallet, without rails, would slide. I did not want to drop the pallet, so I added the rails to tighten it up and keep it securely on the trailer.
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I decided to go with a pallet with gaps between the boards. That is because I am usually cutting boards or de-nailing boards on that makeshift workbench. Of course, when cutting the wood, I just line up the saw to cut in the gaps. When I am de-nailing some pallet wood, I toss the nails into the trailer down through those gaps. I don't leave nails in the yard, of course.
If I need a complete top, without gaps in the wood, I do have a couple of sheets of reclaimed plywood that were on pallets. For some projects, you might want a solid top. After two years of using this makeshift mobile workbench, I have never needed a full solid top out in the field. But if I did, I would toss some reclaimed plywood on top of the pallet.
Tool transport is very easy. I can easily lift up the end of the pallet, or slide it out of the way, and store all my tools in the trailer box underneath the pallet.
When I need the trailer for moving something else, like topsoil or compost, I just drive my mower over to my storage location and lift off the pallet "workbench" and set it aside until I need it again.

That was one of the simplest pallet projects I have ever done, taking less than 5 minutes to add the 2X4 rails, but it is one project idea that I use all the time. It keeps me from working down on the ground when I'm outside working in the yard.