Thursday, May 31, 2007

On the Road Again



Took a nice little ride this morning. The weather was brisk and cool and humid, with dark clouds overhead. It didn’t rain, but it was humid enough to feel a little clammy. I rode north to the Wichita Mountains and Lake Lugert, and further to the Lodge at the lake. Climbing the hills to the lodge was good for my legs, since I’m trying to get a little work in preparation for my upcoming cross-the-state ride.


I can’t look at the mountains without thinking about the history involved; the native Americans who live there for generations, and the forays the white soldiers made into the “wilderness” back in the 19th century. It all seems like it wasn’t that long ago, but so much has changed.


The lake is finally full again after a six year drought. Water is actually spilling over the dam. The river is full from the spring rains. I like it. Can’t wait to get back out in the kayaks again soon.


Saw lots of wildlife today … lots of wooly worms on the road. I guess they like the warmth of the asphalt. While I was going through the mountains on the way to the lodge I had three vultures swooping near my head. Don’t know what was up with them. I also saw some cottontail rabbits, a jack rabbit and a big bird that looked like a brown pelican.

Thursday, May 17, 2007

Patio Cover Day 6




Installed the felt (some folks call it tar paper) over the bare decking on the old roof. Today's effort was all about precaution ... the felt is not a necessary part of the finished structure. The new hip roof of the patio cover (hereafter abbreviated as pc) will cover and protect all of that section of the old roof when completed. But I needed to install the felt simply to prevent water damage to the house in case of a deluge before the pc is completed.


I've been studying the weather closely for the past several weeks, and have determined that it's pretty hard to predict exactly when the mother of all thunderstorms will happen. That's always the case during the monsoon season here in SW Oklahoma. The forcast is for a chance of t-storms tomorrow, so I think we're protected.


If we can get good weather Sat and Sun, I'm predicting a roof over the pc this weekend!


By the way, this pc is costing more than we expected. It's already cost me my favorite pair of jeans. See what happens when you scoot around on the roof on your butt for two days!




Wednesday, May 16, 2007

Patio Cover Day 5

On day 3 my wife and I put up the joists you see in the above picture. Day 4 was a bust due to rain.

Here on day 5, if you look closely you can see that I ripped the shingles off the house where the patio cover will intersect. It took all day. (well, yes it took nearly an hour to get ready because I had to unbury my extension ladder from where I had it stored because I knew I wouldn't need it ... until now). But as I was saying, it took all day because there were two layers of old shingles to remove, and they were brittle and stuck together from many years of sitting in the baking Oklahoma sun.

My wife and I loaded them all into the back of my pickup where they now sit waiting to be unloaded at the dump.

If tomorrow goes well, we'll have a new layer of felt on the old part of the roof, and a good many of the rafters put up for the new part. So far so good.

Sunday, May 13, 2007

Patio Cover, Day 2


Oh, you missed day 1 ? Dang.

Oh well, here you can see the basic size of the patio cover. Nothing very spectacular here. It will be your standard hip roof patio cover.

You'll be able to tell more about it as it takes shape. I know you're breathless.

Cycling content: I went for an early ride this morning before church. Rode about 16 miles to the little neighboring town and back. Nice ride ... no wind, perfect temperature, new bike ... it couldn't have been better. Even found a wrench on the road.

Tuesday, May 01, 2007

Guitar Overdose

If you like guitars, be careful. Too much viewing of the pics below could result in fatal drooling.


I dropped by a guitar shop here in Wichita today. They had exactly what I needed. And a whole lot of really nice stuff I don't need.




Whole racks of Gibsons ... J45s, Hummingbirds, les Pauls ... you name it.

They also had some really nice hand-made instruments, along with some of the mid-range brands. In the back there were banjos, mandolins, classical guitars, dobros, and even a dulcimer.


Nice place to browse, even if all I bought was a $15 music stand.

Monday, April 30, 2007

Cows on the Overpass

While travelling across Oklahoma on my way to Wichita I pass this sign which reads "Chisolm Trail ... East Branch Crossed Here". Every time I see it I wonder how they got all those cows across that overpass.

Sunday, April 29, 2007

First kayaking of the year



Yesterday we were finally able to take the kayaks out. The weather was absolutely wonderful … 80 degrees and a light breeze. We launched onto our local lake, and paddled around for more than two hours. I was surprised at the number of boats on the lake this early in the year. We saw several fishing boats, a couple family party boats, and a few speed boats (one pulling a ski-boarder). As far as I could see there were no other human powered boats on the lake that day.

We have quite a few small and medium sized lakes within easy driving distance, so we’re looking forward to enjoying them all this summer.

Wednesday, April 25, 2007

Absent, but busy

It’s been a while since I last posted, and there’s been a lot going on around here. We enjoyed a trip to Texas to visit the in-laws a couple of weeks ago, and last weekend we reconnoitered a nearby lake with the expectation of soon hitting it with our kayaks.

We ordered the majority of the materials to build our patio cover, and it now sits in the garage where my wife’s car usually sits. I built the forms and poured the concrete for the post pillars, but the actual framing will have to wait until after my trip to Wichita next week. Hopefully, by then most of the April showers will be past.



Last week our DSL modem bit the dust. My wife spent a couple days troubleshooting the system with the help (or hindrance?) of on-line support, and ended up ordering us a new modem. It arrived yesterday and she installed it and had us back up and running before the evening began. It seems to be rock-solid and fast so far.

On a personal note … It was forty years ago today that my father died. He had just turned 39 years old, and I was not yet 16. It’s strange to think that he’s now been gone longer than he was alive. And after all this time I can still remember the way he walked, the sound of his voice, the feel of his hand on my shoulder, even the way he smelled. If my own children remember me the way I remember him, my life will have been a success.

Thursday, April 05, 2007

Everyone Loves a Surprise

When I got back to my hotel room after work last evening I found this in my room.



If it's not immediately obvious what that is, I'll tell you. It's a Candy Bouquet Easter Basket bubble thingie. And I like it. It's got candy and blue plastic grass and two blue stuffed monkeys and a ribbon on top. I can't help it if you've never seen an easter basket in a plastic bubble.


You see, my wonderful little wife is so sweet that she just can't keep from doing nice things for those of us lucky enough to be a part of her family. She's constantly showering me, the kids, the dogs, the grandkids, friends and fellow bloggers with thoughtful expressions.


I like it so much I'm gonna wait till I get home to open it so we can sit on the bed and eat the candy together.


**********


Here I am in Kansas without even a jacket. It was in the 70's when I left Oklahoma, so I didn't even think about it. But now it's snowing! Bummer.


Oh well, at least I'll be heading home in the morning.


Wednesday, April 04, 2007

Catch-Up

Been busy, lazy, committed, out of town, indisposed, apathetic, etc, etc, blah, blah, blah ...

Here's a picture of the Mustang my son recently purchased. It's his first car purchase (his others came from ol Dad) and he's rightfully proud. It's a guy thing.

Here's a pic of my Randonee that I promised in my last post. It's ready to ride, and I even rode it to work (once).

Been working in the backyard lately. First we removed the 24-foot pool. It's going to live at my daughter's house. Then we disassembled the deck. The deck posts have now been removed, but the holes are waiting for me to fill them.











Haven't had a chance to get the kayaks out yet, but we did stop by the local lake to see if the water level has risen any (didn't look like it). My beautiful wife took pictures of the lake while I took pictures of her. I have my priorities.

Tuesday, March 20, 2007

Toy Heaven


It’s been a really busy couple of weeks. (Actually, it’s been twelve days, but it seems like a lot of time has passed very quickly). I spent last week in Wichita, KS on a business trip. I didn’t feel good about the amount of work I got done; things didn’t work out like expected and I spent most of my time waiting around.

On a personal level it was a interesting trip. My lovely wife had decided that it was finally time to purchase the kayaks we’d been wishing for and talking about for almost 4 years. So, I spent all my free time searching for kayaks, evaluating the ones in stock in the various stores, comparing features and prices, and deciding the best way to get them from Kansas to Oklahoma.

My wife wanted a sit-on-top kayak. It turns out that in our price range there were not many sit-on-tops to choose from here on the Great Plains. But fortunately I was able to find the actual model and color she wanted – an Ocean Kayak Venus 11 in the Tangerine color.

I wanted a sit-in model. There are lots of sit-in kayaks available in the sporting goods stores, but most of them are the little 9 foot fun boats. I wanted something just a little longer and narrower. I ran across a good deal on an eleven-foot Old Town Voyager, which was on clearance, and which I think will work well for a beginner like me.

The really difficult part of the whole process was coming up with a good method of transportation. I wasn’t really too keen on the idea of a roof rack, because I know that lifting 40 pounds of kayak over my head can be a chore, especially in a high wind. But I didn’t want to drive the 300 miles home with the kayaks sticking over 5 feet out of the back of my pickup bed. I could find no one in Wichita (or Oklahoma, for that matter) selling trailers made to haul kayaks, and I don’t want to pay $1500 - $2000 for a good trailer right now anyway. In the end, I managed to find one dealer in Wichita who had in stock the exact parts to install a good roof rack on my pickup, so I went with that. It’s not my preferred option, and it cost a bundle for a few pieces of metal, but it worked. I got the kayaks home safe and sound. Today they’re hanging in my garage just waiting for warm weather, and we’re anxious to get out on the water.


*****

The UPS guy brought my new bicycle Friday evening not long after I go home. I spent a little time that evening pulling it out of the box and assembling it to the point that it looked like a bike. I spent most of the day Sunday making all the necessary mechanical and fit adjustments and moving all the accessories from my old bike to the new one – racks, pedals, bottle holders, pump, computer, lights, fenders, saddle. I wanted to put a kickstand on it, but the rear derailleur cable is routed in exactly the spot where the kickstand would be mounted, so I’ll have to try using one of those that mount near the back of the bike on the chain stay and seat stay.

I think I’m gonna like the bike. It’s going to take a little time to get the fit just right, and I’ll have to adjust to shifting using STI shifters instead of down-tube levers. And lots more gears.

Tuesday, March 13, 2007

CDT

Central Daylight Time ... that's what we're on now.

What do I think about Daylight Savings Time, you ask? Well, I say put it somewhere and leave it. I don't care what numbers you use to express the time. I've used Standard Time, Military (24 hour) Time, GMT, etc. and I get along fine. The numbers are arbitrary.

Yeah, I know all the arguments. But If you want me to save energy, tell me to save energy. Don't tell me to change my clock. Just stop changing the dadburn time twice a year!

And that's all I have to say about that.

Saturday, March 03, 2007

Get Them Bars Up !

I replaced the stem on my touring/commuting bike this week. I had put on a set of wider bars a few months ago, and that helped, but I’ve always felt that they were a little too low. I had pulled the stem up to it’s “max” mark, and it still felt low. So I bit the bullet and ordered a Nitto Technomic from Rivendell. As Grant says, “This is a good stem to get if you just can’t get them bars up high enough.”
Well, they’re high enough now!

See the difference:


Wednesday, February 21, 2007

What Do You Want to Be When You Grow Up?


A common question asked of children is “What do you want to be when you grow up?” It’s almost like a game, and most children enthusiastically play along. It’s an imaginative game, and since there’s no pressure attached, they feel free to let their thoughts run and let their answers fly. We often hear the expected answers like “fireman” or “ballerina” or “singer”. But occasionally a child will think for a while and then respond with an “mmmm … I don’t know”. Maybe they truly don’t know, but I suspect that if they’re like I was, they just don’t want to say. I think some people realize at an early age that the lives they dream about don’t quite fit the expected pattern. I think they may somehow understand that the things they dream about would probably sound impractical or even irresponsible to most other people.

When I was about 10 or so, one of my aunts signed me up for a subscription to Boy’s Life magazine. Every issue of that magazine described boys doing things I could only dream of – adventures, new skills, learning outdoor things like tying knots, sailing a boat, making things out of sticks like whistles and slingshots, building a fire, raising a tent, hiking, swimming. Those boys were not like me, stuck at home all summer with nothing to do. They went to summer camps and had exciting fun-filled days doing neat things.

Then there was the series of boy’s adventure books, the name of which I can’t recall, that I found on our hallway bookshelf. The boys in these books were not like any of the boys I knew, not even like the boys in the magazine. These boys lived lives of constant high adventure. They were always hiking or canoeing hundreds of miles through the untouched forests of Maine or Canada or somewhere, finding excitement and danger around every turn. Man, that’s what I wanted to do. Nothing sounded finer.

The most enduring boyhood fantasy of mine was that of the eighteenth century American frontiersman. For some reason it was the perfect fantasy. I loved the whole idea of leaving home with a long rifle in my hand and a dog by my side, wearing buckskin leggins and a coon-skin cap, and heading off toward the western frontier territory of Kantukee. Leaving home and friends and walking into the “howling wilderness”. My daydreams never included much about fighting the Indians whose home I was invading … I just assumed I would live so much like them that we would become friends and learn from each other. I wanted to walk along animal paths under a canopy of hardwood trees, discovering waterfalls and hidden pastures dotted with grazing elk and buffalo that had never seen a man. I wanted to climb high into the Appalachian Mountains and peer far into the smoky distance. I wanted to follow creeks to their source, gather food from nature’s bounty, and hunt animals when necessary. I wanted to live like the natives, but never stay long in one place. I wanted to see everything unspoiled. I wanted to be away from factories and cars and planes and trains and schools and stores and houses. I wanted to lie awake at night and hear the whippoorwill and the panther. I wanted to discover where the animals live freely and without fear, to swim in undiscovered pools and drink from secret mountain springs. I simply wanted to be part of the world as it was meant to be.

Tuesday, February 13, 2007

Router

If you like woodworking, and you like tools, what better project for a weekend than making a woodworking tool? One specialty plane that I’ve been wanting is a router plane. These planes are used to level the bottom surface of grooves and dadoes which have been cut using a chisel or other tool. The planes come in various sizes and construction types. Most commercial ones are (were) made with a metal body, while most craftsman made routers (and a few manufactured ones) have wooden bodies.

Over this past weekend I made a router plane using John Wilson’s excellent instructions in the August 2005 edition of Popular Woodworking magazine. His photos and text made for a quick an simple project.

I formed the wooden body of the plane from a well-seasoned plank of white oak a friend had given me several years ago. Since I’m not a metalworker, making the right-angle cutter and the holder to attach it to the wooden body was obviously the most challenging task. I I did an ok job shaping and grinding the cutter and holder, and they do work, but I think some fine-tuning is in order.

I did find it humorous that I used an electric router to round over the edges of my new manual router. In fact, all the operations in making this hand tool were done with power tools … bandsaw, drill press, belt sander, drum sander, and router.

Wednesday, February 07, 2007

Post Haste

Ok, so I finished the trestle desk yesterday and asked my sweet wife to take a couple of pictures of it for me. In fact, I'm using the desk now as I write, and I must report that it completely fulfills its requirement of being a sturdy horizontal surface.

I think I'm supposed to write a whole bunch more now about how great it feels to be finished with the project, about all the things I learned, all the mistakes and problems I had to overcome, and my plans for the next project. Nah. Maybe later.


Thursday, February 01, 2007

Resisting Temptation, and How Flat Is Flat?

I’m nearly finished except for the finishing.

What I mean is, I’ve nearly completed the woodworking portion of the Shaker Trestle Desk, and I’m almost ready to begin putting the finish on it. I think I’ll paint the support a nice dark green, and finish the top with a stain and a clear poly.

Last night I performed that ancient rite of passage into galoot-dom … the hand planing of a tabletop. I’d done quite a bit of surface planing before, but nothing is quite as satisfying as watching (and performing) the transformation of three common pine boards into a smooth, level tabletop. Considering the fact that I was using 4/4 pine from the local building supply center, the edge jointing and gluing resulted in a pretty level surface. The misalignment of the individual boards did not exceed 1/32 of an inch in the worst places.

I did all of the planing with a jack plane. My attempts to improve the surface with my old wooden coffin smoother were disappointing. The plane felt and acted like it’s bottom had gone convex since the last time I used it. I also tried a few strokes with an ancient No. 3, but it seemed only to want to gouge and catch. ( Looks like I have some tuning up of planes to do before my next project.) So, after rounding the edges with a block plane, I removed the few remaining plane marks on the top with a good helping of hand sanding. I’ll sand again with a couple higher grits tonight, then it’s out of the cold garage and into the warm kitchen for a little finishing.

There were a couple of times during this project when I really thought about rolling out a power tool. Like when I needed to drill a couple of ½ inch draw-bore holes for the pegs in the leg joinery. I seriously considered using the drill press because I didn’t want to mess up the framework that far into the project. In the end, I carefully used a brace and bit. Then there was the temptation to use my bandsaw to form the large leg tenons. But I used a backsaw with a bench hook, and cleaned them up with a shoulder plane. Easy.

This project feels like it’s taking a long time. But then, I’m only working on it a couple hours a day, a couple days a week. I don’t think the choice to use only hand tools had much impact on the time. I know from experience that setting up a power tool and running several test cuts can really chew up valuable shop time. Sometimes I think “designing on the fly” is what actually takes up the majority of my time. Now that the design and construction details are complete, I’m sure building a second one would take less than half the time of the first.

Thursday, January 18, 2007

Surrounded By Nonexistent Bicycles

I'm in Wichita, KS this week on company business. I usually make this trip about once a month. If you've ever spent much time in hotels on business trips you know that it can get pretty boring trying to find something to do when you're not actually at work. There's usually at least 8 hours of non-sleeping time to be used up.

I've been to the mall of course, but I'm too old to be a mall rat, and there's only so much time you can spend wandering through candle and soap shops. I tried finding woodworking stores but apparently nobody in this entire city cuts wood as a hobby. There are several "outdoors" stores that are good for a few hours worth of stooging. (You know, the stores that are full of guns, millions of fishing lures, furniture made from antlers, and ultraheavy camping equipment.)

One place I almost always go is to the local bike shops. And on this trip I decided to hit some shops along the way, too. In preparation, I emailed most of the bike shops in central Oklahoma and southern Kansas to see if they had any touring bikes in stock. Two or three of them responded positively, so I marked them on my map to visit, along with the regulars. Alas, so far the closest thing I've seen to a touring bike is one Bianchi Volpe. Everyone says they can order a Trek 520 or a Cannondale T800/2000, or even build up a Surly LHT. But no one seems to want to stock touring bikes.

I'm guessing that when gas prices go back up there will be an increased interest in actual transportation bikes. Till then, if you want to see a touring bike you'll just have to look at pictures of it on the web.

Saturday, January 13, 2007

One Less Bike ( For Now ... )

Well, I sold my '88 Cannondale Criterium bike this morning. I really didn't ride it much. I had never really gotten comfortable on the bike like I have on some others. It was just taking up room in the garage.

Still, I always have mixed feelings when a bike grows up and leaves home. But at least I know the new owner, and I think it will be ok in his hands. I would have hated to sell it to a stranger.

Hmmm ... now I have room for a new bike :)

Wednesday, January 10, 2007

Trestle Wrestle


Just a couple pics of the trestle desk I'm working on in my garage workshop. I've decided that this one will be done all with hand tools. No electrons are being harmed in it's construction.

I figure that I need to learn to do joinery both by hand and by machine, so I thought I'd do this one all by hand just for kicks. It really makes you think hard to solve problems in different ways. You can't simply use a table saw for every little thing. And doing joinery without routers and mortisers is quite interesting, to say the least.