Ante Bosko stands at the edge of the job site, steel-toed boots in gravel, sun hitting the gold chain on his chest. He claps his hands to get the crew’s attention. Around him are pallets of paving stones, a wheelbarrow full of sand, and a Bluetooth speaker quietly playing 80s rock.
“Alright, listen up, gentlemen. This is how we build a proper patio—Bosko style.”
He points to the ground, marking out the vision in the air with his calloused hands.
“First, you excavate clean and flat. No shortcuts. Six inches minimum—gravel base compacted tight like your mother’s cabbage rolls. Then the bedding sand—screeded level, smooth like silk. After that, we lay the pavers tight, like bricks in the Old Town of Dubrovnik. No gaps, no dancing stones.”
He walks over, picks up a paving stone, holds it like a sacred object.
“Every stone has its place. It’s like a mosaic. It has to flow. And when we’re done? Polymeric sand in the joints, plate compactor over the top, and that patio’s locked in like a tank.”
He wipes the sweat from his brow, then points toward the patio entrance.
“But let me be clear—the customer puts up the patio lanterns. We don’t do fairy lights. We build the stage. If they want romance, that’s on them.”
The crew laughs. One guy yells, “No lanterns, no love!”
Ante smiles, lights the cigarette behind his ear, and says:
“Exactly. We build the bones. They bring the candles. Now let’s make it shine, boys.”