On the weekend my Grandson and I found a video on You tube and made a wooden whistle. Now that we have a method, next time, production: we'll make whistles for all his friends. His school teacher will love us.
Having the table is the way has limited my ambitions so what have I done. I sanded to 600 grit and then carved a trivet.
It is a small space, no noise basic tool thing to do while hanging out in the workshop. Everyone needs trivets and hot pads. This trivet is exactly the right size for a French Press coffee pot.
Or a really big coffee mug.
Another thing I did while sitting around one evening is finish sanding and shaping an olive/pickle tray from oak. I laid this out years ago while I was developing my skills with my Dremel tool. While I was sitting around waiting for the varnish to dry i decided to finish shaping and sanding.
I cut the basic shape on the band saw and then gouged out the inside with the Dremel. One evening last week I sat quietly listening to music and hand sanded the tray smooth. Since the tray is curved I split a cork in half and glued it on for feet. The tray has a nice shape and is stable in use.
For portions of the last two days I have been working on two low skill, high back stress projects, wood chips. And the sump pump water evacuation system has taken the other portion of my digging energy. (it should be finished tomorrow). Chips, not finished tomorrow.
This is the remaining half of yesterday's dump of wood chips. Dump because the chips arrived a dump truck full. Eva and I moved some yesterday and I moved some more today. I have learned my limit when doing this sort of task, but it still kicks the you-know-what out of my back.
Tool for the job:
Last time we did this I went and bought the specialized tool for the job. That manure fork is the perfect tool for loading and moving wood chips around. It is another of those specialty tools that get used seldom, but....make life way easier. We tried moving wood chips with snow shovels before, Okay, but the fork is better.
Today's quick project is a glue up.
Sherlock Holmes couldn't guess what this is. By the way, the pipe clamps have been in my tool kit for thirty years. I love good basic tools that last.
Our drive way is interlocking stones, and the folks that did the work did a good job and the drive way still looks good. However it has sunk a bit along the front of the garage. If you look in the 'chip' picture you can see a maxi-scooter. I've put the ramp in place to make it easier for me to push the scooter backwards into the garage. Just a little thing, but little things can make a big difference.
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