Sunday, November 22, 2020

Two Birds With One Arrow

 Archery has been an off-and-on hobby of mine since I was a kid; back when the bow and arrow were state-of-the-art weapons...


Over the years I've used straw bales for targets, but they eventually rot and fall apart, so I started looking around for a better solution.  I found several posts by people who have used this type of thing, so I built myself one.  It has plastic tarp pieces for the front and back, and it's mostly stuffed with used shrinkwrap that my pals at the farm supply save for me.  



The other cool thing about this setup, on top of the fact that it's pretty impervious to weather, rot, and mice, is that I now have a place to put all those plastic bags that the grocery store sells me and won't recycle.  I can just open the lid and stuff them in.  Eventually it will get too full, but I'm hoping that as the plastic gets shredded by arrows, it will compact even more. 


Hinges on the back, bungees on the front


The plastic stops arrows really well, but they are not at all hard to pull out.



The nice thing about being your own photographer is that you can remove all 'extraneous elements' from the subject before you take the picture...😁











Sunday, November 8, 2020

Getting to be that time of year

 I save my dryer lint. To a mental health professional, that could be cause for concern. Unless the good doctor heats her house with wood. Then it makes just as much sense as saving your egg cartons...


About this time each year, I get out the lint, the egg cartons, and a couple blocks of paraffin wax, and make my handy fire starters for the woodstove. 












A pinch of lint in each egg cup...



A pot of melted wax...


A cup of coffee and maybe a bit of homemade bread...


A little rainy-day Norah Jones on the Alexa...



Ready for winter.




In other news, my 'new' 1954 tractor Myrtle was kind of a hillbilly when I got her, because she only had two teeth. Rancher Rick up the road gave me two more out of his goodie pile.  Had to modify them a bit, but now the Old Girl looks a little more respectable.





Another annual chore has been replacing the windsock on top of the water tank.  They last about a year before rotting and falling apart.  Got tired of doing that this year, so bought me another nifty weathervane.

Dragonfly design


Couple more shop cabinets...




And it's time to relax by the fire.














Wednesday, November 4, 2020

The Many Personalities of the LRT*

 *Little Red Tractor


Most people mow with their yard tractors.  I do too.  Five acres, several times a year, just to keep the weeds down for fire protection. 

But this LRT isn't content with just mowing...


She's almost never this clean





Today, I installed a trailer hitch for moving the boat around.



But she can still tow her own trailer



And haul the trash out to the street



And carry a spray rig


With her headlights and a couple cool added LED lights, she can do all this stuff at night too!




She's also good for running down to the mailbox when I'm too lazy to walk, and maybe even making hay... Click on the video!

Sunday, October 18, 2020

Betty - 30 days, 6600 Miles in a rented van

First of all, it wasn't me. I ain't that crazy.  Or young.  But Daughter number 1 Jami is.  Every year she goes to Saranac Lake in upstate New York to visit good friends. This year, covid19 made airplane travel and staying in hotels problematic, so she came up with the brilliant (or insane) scheme of renting a van for a month, having dear old dad throw something together to make it livable, and setting off.


Betty






Named for the beloved, fearless, and somewhat wacky Betty White, this Dodge rental van is about to undergo a fast transformation.






Since the furniture had to be installed quickly and removed even more quickly, we had to come up with a unit that could be pre-built and attached to the van framing with velcro straps.

The rental agreement was for 30 days, and not a moment more.  The Hertz pricing algorithm wanted to add hundreds of dollars to the price if she was one day late returning the van.

Here's what we came up with.

And here's the real thing.  Fresh water pumps out of the Sparklets bottle and the sink drains into a five-gallon jug. Jami's brilliant idea of plastic tubs meant secure storage on the road without the need for cupboards, drawers, and doors.
 
The white thing in front is a wastebasket

The trip was not all play.  She works mostly remotely in this covid time, so with this little workstation setup, she could get some work done using a WIFI hotspot.







The plan was for a standard twin bed to be placed opposite the cabinet, made up all the time so she could just flop in after a long day's driving, but at the last minute, sweet cousin, housemate, and fellow adventure traveler Lisa offered to come along and keep her company on at least part of the trip... .








...So the twin bed became bunk beds.


This presented a little problem, because that upper bunk really limited elbow room and the ability for two adults to move around in the van, so...





We came up with a solution. In the daytime, the upper bunk swiveled up and hooked to the ceiling beams with rope clips. Made moving around much easier.



The Master bathroom

Somehow all this needed to fit...




In this...



But she made it work.


Can you tell this is a girl's van? Hint: the rack on the door is for shoes! 😍


With Chewie for a privacy curtain...



And R2D2 for a mascot.



The two road warriors had a cozy little home.




3700 miles out


2900 miles home






          Across Lake Michigan on the ferry





Destination: Saranac Lake New York



In the words of songwriter Robert Earl Keen, 



The road goes on forever, but the party never ends.