Tuesday, May 19, 2009

Fierce Gray Lady

"Cat adopts bunny" would be a cute caption for this photo. It would also be very inaccurate.

At 19 years old and de-clawed our predator-in-residence can still bring home protein for the family. Wasn't hard to get the bunny to lie still for the photo. No cats were harmed in the making of this photo.

Monday, April 27, 2009

The Bus Stops Here

You learn a lot of interesting information at the bus stop. The above quote was the lesson this morning. Swine Flu has certainly been on people's minds today. I hope this Slime Flu thing doesn't start spreading too. Sounds even worse.

Monday, April 13, 2009

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Dick Cheney's Back Pain Clinic

The Inquisition meets 1977 Star Wars high-tech.
Interesting choice to feature the actual apparatus on the advertisement.
Surgery please?

Monday, March 30, 2009

For the Birds



The boy and I were strolling through some shops in downtown Saturday evening. He was drawn to a pleasant, simple, little bird house. He asked to buy it.

"We coooouuuld buy it, but wouldn't be more fun to make one?"
We made two actually.

2 Bird Houses: 2 four-foot cedar fence planks, 1 package 1 1/4" brass wood screws : $7.00 per house with screws a-plenty for another outdoor project. (Brass screws wont rust, the cedar will weather nicely)

We sketched out our design and measurements together. We laid out the cuts, I operated the saw, we drilled and assembled. Hole in the door is 1 1/4" in diameter (my largest paddle bit). We drilled pilot holes for the the screws so as to not split the wood. We used a larger bit to drill 1/32 or so down the top of each hole to counter-sink the flared head on the screws so they would be flush with the face of the wood. We used both screws and wood glue.

For the swinging clean-out door (a feature we lifted from the model at the store) we used a drill bit the diameter of the shaft of our screws to drill holes in the sides. This allowed the screws to pivot freely in the side panels while screwing securely to the sides of the door.

The boy learned a rip vs. a crosscut, how to set a fence on a table saw, some spacial reasoning, how to follow a plan, how to recover from a goof or two, and how to see a project through, among other things.

He had a great time. I had even more fun than he did.