Anyhow, She won't eat so she gets to teach the little one the joys of the spoon. They are both happy that way and I can eat my supper while it's still hot.
I am a big user of the plastic spoon, but I have washed the same one for a year and…
I like Wendy's spoons. They have nice plastic spoons. Well worth washing!
Reshared post from +Aaron Smittay
I spent last week at my folks, taking care of some chores that they couldn't…
Lots of wood cutting, cooking, shoveling, and the like. I have ran a chainsaw more in the last week than I have all my life.
It feels good to be able to help my folks out after all they've done for me. I just wish that they where healthy enough that I didn't need to!
The weather up north has been pretty bad. I don't remember ever seeing the roads as bad as they where. I am SO glad I took the time to put my good snow tires on. Nothing like waiting until March 1st to install your snowies!
I think I got enough chores done that they can rest and get healthy for spring.
We finished the trip with a day at the Mall of America. Let the girls have some fun at the amusement park.
In album Week at the grandparents
Mmore wood, ready to go to the house. I did over half a dozen trips like this. The wood trailer is stuck behind a hundred yards of 3 foot deep snow.
Julie was SO EXCITED when she saw Dora. “DADO DADO DADO DADO” she kept saying. However, she just wasn’t having the photo op.
I picked up my birthday present from my wife! She knows me so well. She gets me 100 year old stuff. How awesome is that?
My saint of a wife cooked, and cooked, and cooked. Freezer meals. Meatloaf, lasagna, spaghetti sauce, chicken noodle soup, chicken pot pies.
I’ve never seen roads so bad. There is over an inch of packed snow-ice on everything that isn’t a major highway. Some spots the snow banks on the side of the road have to be 15 foot tall!
I was shoveling sidewalks. Well, where they ought to be at least. This was over knee deep for me. Other spots I was shoveling, I step off, and go waist deep – and never touched bottom.
Cutting wood. My dad has the process down pretty well. No bending over, no working too hard. Haul the long pieces in, drop them into the saw horses, cut them to size, load them into the truck. There is a wood splitter by the tailgate for the oversized pieces.
My wife and old man conspired to get me a birthday present
I can't find a name on it, just the number 100. It is missing the leather drive belt, probably eaten by mice.
Once I cleaned the mouse nest out of the blower, everything seems to work. There is a slight hop in the big pulley, should be small enough that the leather belt can 'eat' it.
I think the cover may be a drain cover.
Anybody have an idea of the rough age of this guy? I've found a few pictures just like it online, but with no info.
I think my wife and father did a pretty good job on this forge.
I ordered a copy of the POCKET REF 4th edition by Thomas J
A sharp knife, some scrap leather and an hour, and I have a handy little reference that should stay nice for a long time and not need to be recharged!
In album POCKET REF Leather Cover
The finished book cover. I decided not to dye it black. It took me an hour to make, start to finish.
Flipping through my new favorite book! The case opens up so I can take the book out. Should keep the cover nicer, longer.
The bits and pieces I need for making a cover for my Pocket Ref. A piece of leather out of a ‘scrap leather’ bag from a hobby store, a sharp knife, a cutting mat, Neatsfoot Oil and Dye.
The leather was an assortment grab bag. I was lucky I had a piece that was big enough I could make something work. There was another piece with a color I liked better, but I couldn’t get something I liked cut out of it.
I used the cutting mat to mark the cut lines. Just slide it along on the edge. Visible marks on the suede side of the leather. I also oiled the finished side at this point so the oil has a chance to soak in before I dye it.