Thanks DZLS. Hope you're not disappointment when I make my excuses for skipping tonight's workout then

I've just got in from work and it's time for bed.
I'm thinking of giving HST a go, whilst I'm slowly cutting. It sounds interesting and looks like a solid routine. I don't like the idea of Strategic Deconditioning, but I doubt anybody does. It'd be interesting to hear from anyone who's run HST a few times and tried it with and without SD. Last time I took time off, it was more like Strategic Decommissioning.
My problem at present is not wanting to load my back. That said, I spent the weekend bricklaying, carrying bags of sand and cement around, mixing mortar, etc - all stuff that's good for the back

. I've been so busy, I haven't really noticed whether my back's better or worse.
Anyway, assuming I'm not squatting, deadlifting or OHP'ing, and that I don't have access to dumbbells, how can I set up HST? Exercise selection is fairly limitied to flat/incline bench, supported rows, pullups/chins, dips, hypers/reverse hypers and abs. I'm also limited to a certain extent on the intensity front, since I'm not strong enough to add 5lbs on every bench/row session unless I start off at a trivial weight.
I was thinking of a bastardised routine, based on the same HST principle of increasing the intensity at every session and reducing reps to accomodate the extra weight. I'd start off at a weight that I can do about 15 reps at, then add 1kg/2.2lb (my smallest increment) at every session, reducing the reps when necessary (but before failure). The HST website says that the only reason for 15's, 10's and 5's is to make it easy to explain, so I assume my version is perfectly reasonable. I'd work my way down to 5's or maybe triples over a 6 week period.
Thoughts?