Friday, August 9, 2019

Year 19, Week 29, Day One (week 1029)

Year 19, Week 29, Day One (week 1029)
(January 17, 2000 was my first carving day.)
07-27-19 Saturday



High feathers and ripples, with some lower puffs. 91 degrees as the high with a humidity around 62%. There was a light breeze. Some thunder heads appeared in afternoon, but missed us for the most part spending the vast majority of its energy over the edge of the Everglades. 

After breakfast, we saw a sign for a yard sale but they were not set up. I got home and then headed out on the yard sale run. I found four yard sales. There an area on Dixie highway where there are some empty lots. People sometimes set up some yard sale stuff there. Today, a guy had all sorts of tools, a lot of them were new in-box craftsman stuff. He was selling them at half price. I considered a 10 inch high work-bench drill press but was not about to go the price he asked. I would rather have a floor model.
I had headed south first, then came up north on the back roads. I did not find another yard sale until I was almost at the northern part of the route. There a woman who has periodic yard sales had one with several of her friends. There was a lot of interesting stuff. I ended up buying a Kindle white-paper text reader. I gave a moment consideration for one of several guitars but I decided I am not willing to go through the effort to learn to play one. 
I found another yard sale that had some kitchen stuff and some furniture. Nothing I really needed. 
I got home, then went to the yard sale we saw in the morning and gave everything a good look. They had a scale where the gauge is on the top of a post. The needle spins around for each 50 pounds (I think) and a dial rolls for each time it spins around. I gave it a very long  thought, then left, knowing I could come back later. I never did. 

The kindle works. He has some books on there that I would not read. I need to clear it of his amazon account and load mine in. 

After a little bit, I went out back and looked around. I did not feel like pulling the lathe out. I ended up emptying the work bench and sorting through everything. I consolidated a lot of stuff. I did not find what I was really looking for, but I did find some stuff I forgot I had. I THINK I can find everything a little bit easier. We will see about that. I really wanted to be finished with this project as noon came around, but I finally got it done at about One. 

Mom’s neighbor got home from running around and found the house warm. He said the AC worked great last night but this afternoon it was not working. He opened the windows and is running the fans. It cooled it down some more. Older Florida homes were designed to be “cooled” without Air conditioning. In some of the older homes, the air conditioning was added later. Open the windows and air passes through, carrying away the hot air, and run some fans keep you cooler. 

I checked to find out what ornaments I did last year. I had made tea pots and gingerbread houses as last year’s ornaments. Those I got them done before Christmas. After Christmas I tried out hot air balloons and steam engines. I gave them out to a couple special people but never got farther. . I need to make enough of those two for this Christmas. I need to seek out some new designs to make.  Now is the best time to get started. I think I might pick up a stick of good two by two wood or a two by twelve (which tends to be a better wood for carving.) 
There are a few designs I did years ago that might be nice to do again, but will have to think about them. It is always nicer to come up with brand new designs. Those who received ornaments before, won’t be disappointed, and it is a bit more interesting to make also. Also, one must avoid any designs that have been done several times in variations. No more snow men, no matter how good a design might look. I may have done five designs of them over the past 19 years. That is enough.
I avoid simple ball shaped ornaments because that is more lathe work than carving.
Years ago, I thought about Rocking horses as an ornament. I still have not come up with a way to make them. Every design I tried failed for one reason or another. I had a possible method last year but ran out of time.
I started carving in the year 2000. During that year, I saw in one of Dad’s magazines where they wood-turned some Christmas trees, snow men, and Bells. I thought it would be fun to try. Dad had a tiny Craftsman lathe. I started turning with that. It would run a little bit and then die. A period later, it would run a bit then die. I finally gave up (mostly after I took it partially apart and then it refused to work). It dawned on me that I could carve them. I added a sleigh to the designs, and I carved a whole bunch of them and decided that I could do 12 of each. Half way through the project, It dawned on me that this was 48 pieces, and that was intimidating. By December, I had them done and took them to work. Some sold so well that I had to make a bunch more of them. 
After that, I was hooked and each year made a batch. In the past ten years, life got in the way and have struggled to get 4 designs or even make 12 of the designs I did have. Last year was the first in a long time that I had gotten seriously into making ornaments again.
Coming up with designs is the toughest part. They have to be simple enough to produce a bunch of them in a short period of time. They also have to fit within certain parameters. Generally, I prefer to make them out of two by two whitewood you can get at a hardware store. That places a limit on the size. I have used other woods and other sizes but my aim is to use whitewood. 
A lot of times, I will do the carving in stages. Rough out a bunch, getting the basic shape. Then add details to them, and then do the final finishing of them which will likely include painting, signing and adding a coat of varnish. 
I prefer making them by a knife but I will use a bandsaw, a lathe, dremel, etc. to remove the worst of the wood. I will also glue stuff on, though I do not like that kind of design. Some designs are strictly on the lathe or some other method if needed. 
What I need to do is to go on line and search through ornament design and see what is available. See if any ideas pop up as I search. 

I will see what I do tomorrow.


Year 19, Week 29, Day two (week 1029)
(January 17, 2000 was my first carving day.)
07-28-19 Saturday

Early morning was blue skies, then puffs appeared randomly, then gathering friends. At about noon, thunder boomers showed up on the radar. They sort of skirted us and then disappeared. Yesterday, one of the thunder boomer cupped us on the Everglades-side and then faded as it slid west. Mom did not get the rain she was hoping for, for the plants she has in pots. 

Yesterday, the neighbor’s A/C died. My brother had stopped at a job in the morning before coming up and then came here directly in his truck rather than ride up with his daughter. I told him about the A/C. He checked it out. He first put a vacuum to the drain pipe to see if it was clogged. Nothing came out. It was clean. We then went out to the outside unit. Checking, he found that the capacitor had died. He said that the regular lightning we have around here does little bits of damage over time.  He said that the burned out capacitor was Chinese. The one he replaced it with was a much more expensive American made one. He has found through experience that they last a lot longer. My neighbor has air again. It turned out to be under warranty as he put the AC in earlier this year. 

My brother and I just sat outside and talked model railroading. He saw a video of a model railroad convention. He said it went on and on over the hundreds of manufacturers involved in the hobby.  
We got to talking about problems we had with running our model railroad and how things have changed in technology. They now have radio controlled engines, switches, and other controls. Some send the signal through the track, some send them over the air, some are operated by a computer plugged in, some are dedicated devices. 
They have battery powered engines that can go for days without replacing the battery or charging them. The remote control engines might have the track powered to full and the controls are on the engine itself. 
One of the big problems we were having was to keep the tracks clean and operating properly. They need to be kept in a surgical clean room for best results. You cook, you use a cleaning product, you wear deodorant or perfume, the vapors will waft into the air and settle on the tracks. The wheels are running on a square mm or even less surface area on the tracks. A tiny bit of dirt will break the electrical contact, especially if you are running really slow with very little power to the tracks. We never had a solution that would work well over several weeks. 
Back in the 90s, when I was really hot and heavy in model railroading, the cameras were just getting into HO scale engines. That is about 1/8th inch equals a foot. Now they have them in N scale engines, which is 1/16th inch equals a foot. I heard they are getting them into smaller trains. The remote control
We then got into talking about operations we experimented with, then with how we would do the layout differently. While it is nice to see trains run in circles, we found that operations is more enjoyable and we worked out what we would do different if we build it over again. We have some ideas. Running laps is nice, but Model railroading did not become really enjoyable until we were placing cars in front of businesses and picking others up, and placing them on the train where they belong, in essence, switching train cars was when we really found joy in having a train set.
I have a simple oval, with an oval inside and siding tracks inside that. We experimented with many methods of operating trains. Our layout could be anywhere in the country. We had passenger trains meeting, going in opposite directions, We had freight trains doing the same, but exchanging cars with each other, We operated trains where one of us would work the throttle, and the other directed the train and placed the cars. 
We had operating sessions where we had to drop off a car if we picked them up, or we simply decided what cars to swap. We also made up order cards that told where a car was going to go and have to follow those instructions on running the trains. That was fun as we were not making the decisions having do deal with what the cards required. The cards at the industry told us what had to be picked up, and the cards with our trains told us what cars to leave, and in some experiments we did, some cards had the cars go to another industry or stay until the next train. 
With these sessions where we did operation, we were totally focused on what we were doing. A train running circles could be ignored. If you had to do a select number of laps between stops, you had to watch the train and keep track of the times around, but swapping cars forced you to pay attention to little else. We would run our trains at scale speeds, walking speeds for the trains. If you missed your turn, reversing until you could take the right route ate a lot of time. 
We did one experiment with a railroad layout with just two sidings. We had simple rules for that and following the rules, swapping cars and such, ended up taking us 45 minutes. That was swapping out two cars, then reversing direction and swapping out two other cars.
When we started, we thought you needed several real miles of track with hundreds of switches to make a layout interesting. As we gained experience, our needs got smaller. My layout became the perfect model railroad layout. I have never seen anything better. BUT, that experiment we did proved that you did not need a lot of railroad layout to be totally involved with the layout. 
I read in the magazines that the modelers would build elaborate layouts, scenic them in super fine detail. When they decided it was done, they looked at what they had and started over. Reading the way they operated and looking at their plans, they were just running trains in circles, not switching cars to industry. My layout has no scenery, though I have a lot of buildings that could go onto it. We found that scenery was in the way of our operating sessions. It was not needed as our concentration was on the action we were doing, not on impressing people at the job we did. 
I’ve taken up other hobbies and changed my work times so I no longer have time to work with the trains. That layout, right now, is a good shelf for stuff I have no place for. 

Nothing else was done, but we had a lot of fun talking.
I will see what I do next week.

2423

This is my model railroad layout.
The tracks at the top (switch yard) were to store trains to come onto the layout and go off again.
the ovals is the best design layout I have ever seen.
the lowest tracks on the switch yard is a barge port where cars can be taken off of and added to the layout

this was the simple layout we tested. swapping cars makes for a fun operating session.
Doing laps around the layout, the first switch is the one you can back into.
You have to take the first car.
then you do some laps and then stop at the second track.
there you have to run the train around to the back of the train to swap the car on the end of the track, leaving the first car on the track.
you run the train around again to the head of the train and do some more laps.
You stop on the end of the oval and then run the engine on the other end and then do the same thing you did before.
swapping four cars with four cars on the train takes 45 minutes without even trying.

Monday, August 5, 2019

Year 19, Week 29, Day One (week 1029)

Year 19, Week 29, Day One (week 1029)
(January 17, 2000 was my first carving day.)
07-27-19 Saturday

High feathers and ripples, with some lower puffs. 91 degrees as the high with a humidity around 62%. There was a light breeze. Some thunder heads appeared in afternoon, but missed us for the most part spending the vast majority of its energy over the edge of the Everglades. 

After breakfast, we saw a sign for a yard sale but they were not set up. I got to mom’s and then headed out on my yard sale run. I found four yard sales. There an area on Dixie highway where there are some empty lots. People will sometimes set up some yard sale stuff there. Today, a guy had all sorts of tools, a lot of them were new in-box craftsman stuff. He was selling them at half price. I considered a 10 inch high work-bench drill press but was not about to go the price he asked I did not have it to spend. I would rather have a floor model anyway.
I had headed South first, then came up north on the back roads. I did not find another yard sale until I was almost at the northern part of the route. There is a woman who has periodic yard sales. Sometimes alone, sometimes with friends. This time she had several of her friends displaying stuff. There was a lot of interesting items. 
I gave a moment consideration for one of several guitars he had but I decided I am not willing to go through the effort to learn to play one. Now if one was electric, I might have gotten it for a friend. I ended up buying a Kindle white-paper text reader. I have a couple of them and really have not had the time to use them.
I found another yard sale that had some kitchen stuff and some furniture. Nothing I really needed. 
I got back to Mom’s, then went to the yard sale we saw in the morning and gave everything a good look. They had a scale where the gauge is on the top of a post. The needle spins around for each 50 pounds (I think) and a small dial rolls for each time the needle spins around. I gave it a very long  thought, then left, knowing I could come back later. I never did. I just did not need that heartache just yet.

The kindle works. He has some books on there that I would not read. I need to clear it of his amazon account and load mine in. If you are selling something like this, It might be good to clear it first. He did not have a charger so he had no idea what was on it.

After a little bit, I went out back and looked around. I did not feel like pulling the lathe out. I ended up emptying the work bench and sorting through everything. I consolidated a lot of stuff. I did not find what I was really looking for, but I did find some stuff I forgot I had or did not know where it was I THINK I can find everything a little bit easier. We will see about that. I really wanted to be finished with this project as noon came around, but I finally got it done at about One. It always takes longer than planned. This is not the place for this stuff but I have to empty out the shed and see what is in there, and figure out what I can relocate before any of the stuff on the workbench can be put away, if I can make room anyway....

My neighbor got home from running around and found the house warm. He said the AC worked great last night but this afternoon it was not working. He opened the windows and is running the fans. It cooled it down some more. 
Older Florida homes were designed to be “cooled” without Air conditioning. Sometimes the air conditioning was added later. Open the windows and air passes through, carrying away the hot air. If you run some fans, you can keep the house cooler. Many times what I will do is have a fan blowing into the house from a window our out a window. The air has to go somewhere and there is an exchange of the old air. 

I checked to find out what ornaments I did last year. I made tea pots and gingerbread houses as last year’s ornaments which I got done before Christmas. After Christmas I tried out balloons and steam engines. I gave a couple of my test examples out to a couple special people but never got farther.  I have worked on a couple so far this year but really did not get far.  I need to make enough of those two designs for this Christmas. I need to seek out some new designs to make.  Now is the best time to get started. I think I might pick up a stick of good two by two wood or even better, a two by twelve (which tends to be a better carving wood.) 
There are a few designs I did years ago that might be nice to do again, but will have to think about them. It is always nicer to come up with brand new designs. Those who received those old designed ornaments before might be disappointed with getting them again. It is a bit more interesting to make also. 
Years ago, I thought about Rocking horses as an ornament. I still have not come up with a way to make them. Every design I tried failed for one reason or another. I had a possible method last year but ran out of time. I was not satisfied with what the results looked like. It is harder than I thought it would be. 

I will see what I do tomorrow.


Year 19, Week 29, Day two (week 1029)
(January 17, 2000 was my first carving day.)
07-28-19 Saturday

Early morning was blue skies, then puffs appeared randomly, then gathering friends. At about noon, thunder boomers showed up on the radar. They sort of skirted us and then disappeared. Yesterday, one of the thunder boomers cupped us on the Everglades-side and then faded as it slid west. Mom did not get the rain she was hoping to get for the plants she has in pots. 

Yesterday, mom’s neighbor’s A/C died. My brother had stopped at a job in the morning before coming up and then came here directly. I told him about the A/C. He checked it out. When he is working, I tag along like a little child, helping when I won’t be in the way or make things tougher on him. He first put a vacuum cleaner to the drain pipe to see if it was clogged. A clogged drain pipe can flip a switch and prevent the A/C from running.  Nothing happened. 
We then went out to the outside unit. Checking, he found that the capacitor had died. He said that the regular lightning we have around here, does little bits of damage to the capacitors over time.  He said that the burned-out capacitor was made in China. The one he replaced it with was a much more expensive American-made one. He has found through experience that they last a lot longer. He said “the Chinese are doing their best.”  My mom’ neighbor has air again. It turned out to be under warranty as he put it in earlier this year. 

My brother and I just sat outside and talked model railroading. He saw a video of a model railroad convention. He said it went on and on about the hundreds of manufacturers involved in the hobby.  
We got to talking about problems we had with running our model railroad and how things have changed in technology. They now have radio controlled engines, switches, and computer controlled lighting effects. Some remote control train controls send the signal through the track, some send them over the air, some are operated by a computer plugged in, some are dedicated devices. 
They have battery powered engines that can go for days without replacing the battery or charging them. Some remote control engines might have the track powered to full and the controls are on the engine itself. 
One of the big problems we were having was to keep the tracks clean and operating properly. They need to be kept in a surgical clean, temperature controlled room for best results. You cook, you use a cleaning product, you wear deodorant or perfume, the vapors will waft into the air and settle on the tracks. Heat will cause the tracks to stretch and shrink. The wheels are contacting on less than a square mm surface area on the tracks. A tiny bit of dirt will break the electrical contact, especially if you are running really slow with very little power to the tracks. Fewer electrical pickup wheels a train has, easier a bit of dirt will stop it. We never had a solution that would work well over several weeks. 
Back in the 90s, when I was really hot and heavy in model railroading, the cameras were just getting into HO scale engines. That is about 1/8th inch equals a foot. Before then, you could only get them in the Lionel engines (1/4"=1'-0" scale) Now they have them in N scale engines, which is 1/16th inch equals a foot. I heard they are getting them into smaller trains. The remote controls are getting smaller too. 
We then got into talking about operations we experimented with, then with how we would do the layout differently. While it is nice to see trains run in circles, we found that operations is much more enjoyable and we worked out what we would do different if we build it over again. We have some ideas. Model railroading did not become really enjoyable for us until we were placing cars in front of businesses and picking others up, and placing them on the train where they belong, in essence, switching train cars the way real railroads operate was when we really found joy in having a train set.
I have a simple oval, with an oval inside and siding tracks inside that. We experimented with many methods of operating trains. Our layout could be anywhere in the country. We had passenger trains meeting, going in opposite directions, We had freight trains doing the same, but exchanging cars with each other, We operated trains where one of us would work the throttle, and the other directed the train and placed the cars. 
We had operating sessions where we had to drop off a car if we picked them up, or we simply decided what cars to swap. We also made up order cards that told where a car was going to go and have to follow those instructions on running the trains. That was fun as we were not making the decisions. One had to think about what you were doing rather than being lazy and swapping any car that was convenient . The cards at the industry told us what had to be picked up, and the cards with our trains told us what cars to leave, and in some experiments we did, some cards had the cars go to another industry or stay until the next train. 
With these sessions where we did operation, we were totally focused on what we were doing. A train running circles could be ignored. If you had to do a select number of laps between stops, you had to watch the train and keep track of the times around, but swapping cars, forced you to pay attention to little else. We would run our trains at scale speeds, walking speeds for the trains. If you missed your turn, reversing until you could take the right route ate up a lot of time. 
We did one experiment with a railroad layout with just two sidings. We had simple rules for that and following the rules, swapping cars and such, and our experiment ended up taking us 45 minutes. That was swapping out two cars, then reversing direction and swapping out two other cars.
When we started, we thought you needed several real miles of track with hundreds of switches to make a layout interesting. As we gained experience, our needs got smaller. My layout became the perfect model railroad layout. I have never seen anything better. BUT, that experiment we did, proved that you did not need a lot of railroad layout to be totally involved with the layout. 
I read in the magazines that the modelers would build elaborate layouts, scenic them in super fine detail. When they decided it was done, they looked at what they had and started over, building a new layout. Reading the way they operated and looking at their plans, they were just running trains in circles, not switching cars to industry. My layout has no scenery, though I have a lot of buildings that could go onto it but we found that scenery was in the way of our operating sessions. It was not needed as our concentration was on the action we were doing, not on impressing people at the job we did. 
I’ve taken up other hobbies since then so I no longer have time to work with the trains. That layout, right now, is a good shelf for stuff I have no place for. 

Nothing else was done, but we had a lot of fun talking.
I will see what I do next week.

2264


Sunday, August 4, 2019

Year 19, Week 28, Day One (week 1028)

Year 19, Week 28, Day One (week 1028)
(January 17, 2000 was my first carving day.)

07-20-19 Saturday 82 degrees in the morning, 90 in the afternoon, 65% humidity. It is getting so hot that I might have to move up north where it is cooler...... (hotter up there) Radar showed dots and splotches of showers were coming in off the ocean with a slight north tilt to their path. It was mostly mixed clouds, high, low, and thunder heads here and there and a light breeze. It got up to 90 degrees and was about 62 humidity. I did get a little shower early morning while working. It was enough to wet the ground but not enough to penetrate a thin layer of sawdust I had left on the ground when I moved my equipment under cover when the first drops hit.


THURSDAY
We had a water break in Fort Lauderdale On Thursday which caused a boiled water order. Of course the way news is disseminated, very few people likely knew about it. I make the coffee in the mornings so Friday morning I brought one of my big stock-pots filled with water from outside the Fort Lauderdale water district and used that to make the coffee. I filled it near the top, put plastic wrap over the pot, then set the lid on and put a layer of plastic wrap over the lid. I did not notice any spillage in the truck. I also brought a very large mug with handle and used that to scoop water into the coffee pots.

THE TURNING CLUB

The demonstration was on resin casting and the turning of cast resin. He explained that local bottle brush trees get an infection and create a ball of wood, a burl, on their branches and they have interesting figure in side them. He has a bunch of them that are really too small to use, so he started casting them in resin to make them big enough for projects. 
He gets said that for what you pay at the hobby store for a tiny bottle of resin mix, you can get a gallon of the stuff at auto body shops, boat shops, and on line. He gets the resin in gallon jugs, one jug of resin, one jug of hardener, they are mixed equal parts by volume.
He will put his piece of wood in a tube. He found that the cardboard tubes have to be turned off and cardboard acts like sandpaper on the tools. His favorite form is using PVC pipe. To un-mold a couple light cuts with a chisel and it comes off easily after the resin cures. 
He likes to turn a piece of wood to fit into his chuck with a slight indentation for the PVC pipe to fit into. He will super glue it in place using the glue to seal the contact area. He then glues the piece of wood inside the tube, and if necessary, turning it as little as possible to fit, and then super glueing that in place so it does not rise up with the liquid gets beneath it.
He will pour the hardener and resin together and start mixing them thoroughly, and it will become slightly milky, then as you mix it farther, it will become clear. He will then add his color and “pearl” flakes, to it as desired. He will pass a torch over it to knock down any bubbles on the surface.
He will very slowly pour it into the mold on one side and let the liquid flow down below the piece so it flows up the other side, and doing it slowly to reduce the amount of bubbles that might form. When he gets it high enough, whatever resin is left will be poured into a container he has nearby. He layers the resins of other colors he has poured over time and that becomes another project later. He raps the project and will put it on something that vibrates. A lot of the bubbles will float to the surface where he can pop it with a quick blast of a torch or sometimes even blowing on it.
He has a pressure chamber he puts it into. He pumps the air in and that causes the remaining bubbles to become really small. The smaller they are, the better. He will use the resin he has set out in the “waste” container to make sure the resin under pressure sets properly. When the resin outside is set, he knows the stuff in the pressure chamber has set also. 
You have to be careful with this as it creates a lot of heat. Large pieces really get hot. He said that there have been times where his pressure chamber (which looks sort of like cast iron) got seriously hot because of large pieces he has had in there. 
Depending on how much color you add and what else you do can create interesting effects. 
I am sorry to say that while this was interesting, it won’t be something I will likely do in the near future. I am still learning to play with the wood itself, let alone get into other materials, though I would like to work with metal of various forms including spinning sheet metal.
Our gathering was a pretty good group. Likely the best we have had at this location, in spite that the room we normally use was taken up for a concert. Some of the new people are really growing in quality of their work. I brought basically unfinished pieces. I did add varnish to my tea pot but I was unable to complete the job as I could not find my can of liquid varnish and I ran out of the spray can varnish. 

SATURDAY 

Because of the spacing of the radar dots I decided not to even bother doing yard sailing. You can see if the dots will miss you and by how much or how long, even when they are changing shape as they move. I figured not many people would chance dragging their stuff out when it could well get wet several times during the day.. 
I went out back and made two bowls out of a piece of wood I had split. I took a short break between them. I have a large “industrial” dust pan and between the two bowls, I filled it three times. The second one seemed to have more sawdust in it as it was the one that took loads. I am not sure why as they were the pieces of wood and the end resulting bowls were same size.
I had sharpened my tools recently and the wood came off in spaghetti most of the time, which happens when you have fresh, wet, wood and very sharp tools. I have a “bull nosed” scraper I’ve had for a few years and never used. I finally took it out of the original package and sharpened it a few weeks ago as no tools from the store is really sharp. One thing is they use a six foot diameter grind stone compared to our six or eight inch diameter stones. That extra curve improves the cutting of the tool. Until this year, I NEVER EVER had a sharp turning  tool. I still cannot explain what I am doing but it seems to be working. I am doing it by feel and intuition. I do still make mistakes but then correct them moments later.
While using the scraper, I was amazed that it was cutting as other tools did. It was sending out strings of sawdust everywhere. Just having that effect made the turning I did today a true joy. I almost giggled at it, but it was not quite that exciting so “almost” counts most.
I did pretty good on standing and turning. Several times I would turn away from the lathe and my legs let me know they did not like standing, but that faded after a few steps. I would sit for about five minutes and then be able to move around and return to turning again. 

I did get a little shower during the first bowl. I felt a few drops and pulled my lathe under cover, then went inside for a drink and a bit of relaxation. The shower was just enough to wet the ground but not enough to penetrate a thin layer of sawdust, that when I swept that up, it was dry under the pile. I have seen yard sales close up because of just that much watering.





Year 19, Week 28, Day Two (week 1028)
(January 17, 2000 was my first carving day.)
07-21-19 Sunday

77 degrees early morning, 90ish in the afternoon. Mostly blue skies.

I did my yard sale drive I saw some signs but no sales, well there was one with some furniture out front but I did not stop. The guy was not outside so he might not have been ready yet.  None of them pieces were something I needed. Would not fit my decor (early American yard sale and side of the road) even if they were in my price range.

I went out back and decided to make brand new feet for the four footed cane. I had lost one last night. I had a spare but was dissatisfied with this batch. I drilled the holes too deep for the size of wood they were and the actual depth that the cane feet penetrated. 
This time I measured how far the feet could actually go into the hole, then went just a little bit deeper. I also started with more wood around them  than I did before. 
Last time I had drilled 4 holes across the four inch wide wood, this time I did only three holes across the wood. I took extra time to measure and mark and MAKE SURE I HAD THE RIGHT MARKS before I was to drill. I made several mistakes and caught them. The extra wood made the pieces much bigger which meant there was more wood to remove, but it also made them easier for me to get the outside surface centered on the hole (it is known as cheating). I used one of my bowl gouges to slip inside the hole. I used that to rotate them against the disk sander. There is always more than one way to do anything, and in this case, the disk sander was far easier to do this project than the lathe was.
The drilled hole is slightly smaller in diameter than the pipe of the foot, so I have to dremmel them out a little.  After I made them and had them on the cane, I decided to taper them so they don’t look so blocky.  It is a bit tougher to do this after enlarging the hole as my rod does not fit quite as well. After tapering them, they still do not look like a commercial foot and they are still very bulky, but tapering helped the look some. Even so, they are still big. 
The first wood feet I had made were well worn down quite a bit. One was as much as a quarter inch shorter than other two (I had lost one which was why I needed to make more). I never marked which foot each went to, which would have helped knowing how they wear. I figure if I don’t lose any of these, they will wear down for a very long time before they have to be replaced. That is why I drilled the holes just inside rather than the deep ones from before. There is over an inch of wood to wear down.  These feet make the cane an inch and three quarters taller than it was with the commercial feet, and that is kind of nice but not really noticeable in practice. 

Mom gave me some eggs that were stuck to the carton. I had seen on line where they microwave eggs in the shell. I poked a hole in the shell on top, put that half of the carton in the microwave and started it cooking. I heard a double boom, and immediately turned off the microwave. Two eggs were gone and there was not two eggs worth of mess in the microwave. I had a nice mess to clean up. I instantly figured out some of the things I did wrong. One is that you must not only puncture the shell, you must also puncture the membrane and I think, the yoke. THEN, it might have worked. Oh well. There are times when you remember why your attempt fails AFTER you failed. This is how you learn to fail differentlyeach time.

I will see what I do next week. 

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the tea pot with a little bit of varnish on it. 


my face vase

my diet bowl. whatever stays in it you get to eat.

drum sticks

basic wood I started the first bowl

partially turned bowl

sawdust with a tiny bit of rain on it

sawdust after the first was swept up

botom second bowl starting to turn.

top side of the bowl about to start

top side of the two bowls

bottom side of the two bowls.