greatbear: (forearms)
The last several days have been interesting, productive, fun and relaxing. Jeff had accumulated some time off from working extra days, and he bundled them around this particular weekend. All together, he's off from Thursday through Tuesday, and our dance card had already been pretty much filled. On Thursday, we headed down to wild, wonderful West Virginia and the town of Cass to ride the restored rail line, once part of a lumber operation and now a scenic railroad. The three of us boarded the train, the beautifully restored Shay steam locomotive chugged to life and we were on a relaxing excursion through the woods and hills of the area. Scenic is definitely the best way to describe the 11-mile journey as the stout locomotive pushed the cars to over 5000ft in elevation in 11 miles. I will most likely post more about this, as I collect the pics and video. Stupid me, I had forgotten to load a fresh SD card into the camera, and I'm still unaccustomed to how fast the memory gets eaten up taking full HD video. I ran out of space halfway into the trip and had to use my cell phone for the rest of the day. We had a great time, despite the 4+ hour ride to and from the area (neither one of use had to drive). We might do this again in the fall when the leaves change, the colors would be beyond breathtaking. I bought some art as souvenirs, there are quite a few unique items made locally by hand, a refreshing change from finding touristy trinkets crafted from Chinesium in such places. The lady who rung up my one purchase was also the maker. Definitely a friendly place on the "must return to" list.

Friday we spent clearing out the rest of the vegetable garden for planting as well as doing other yard work. I also did some upgrades to the truck as prep for next month's PTown trip. We picked up various soil enhancements and I fired up the big Troy-Bilt and tilled the area into a respectable spot and Jeff planted two varieties of sweet corn in that last quadrant of the garden. Jeff was so happy to finally get this done as well. Now we just have to figure a way of preventing damage from the stink bugs and other vermin that have been problems in the past. More research is needed, and I want to minimize the use of chemicals.

We took both pooches to the groomer in Saturday morning, old hat for Kodi but a first for Snickles. While the dogs were away, we continued with the yard stuff a bit and did other things which included a nice lunch devoid of begging dogs. When the call came from the groomer, we picked up our freshly washed pups and brought them home. We cleaned up after a while and headed to the Merriweather Post Pavilion to see the Zac Brown band perform.

IMG_1373


These guys can rock, despite their country leanings. A band for pogonophiles everywhere, they played a tight set and kept everyone on their feet. I was blown away by their cover of Metallica's "Enter Sandman," especially with the lead guitar solo being played to the hilt on the fiddle! We both had an awesome time at the show despite the outrageous prices for food and refreshments. There's not much escaping that folly these days, however.

Sunday Jeff took Kodi with him to Pennsyltucky while I kept Da Snick home with me. While he tended to family business as well as getting the trailer cleaned up and ready for the trip, I worked in the garage on various overdue projects. As is usually the case in The Garage of Mayhem, a simple project took a curvy left turn and became something different. The vegetable garden is surrounded with a 4+ foot wire fence to keep the critters out, and there are four "gate" to get in and out. The "main" entrance has an arbor with a double swinging gate, the other three sides have an opening in the fence to get equipment in and out which has a section of the fence wire loosely hung into the openings. The two side openings are about 4 feet wide, the back one is a bit shy of seven feet wide in order to get the tractor and other stuff though. Hanging the wire fencing by itself was never a permanent solution, especially since we have a big, fat, nearly invincible groundhog that likes to work his way under the loose fencing and get at our goodies. We've both shot at him several times and missed. Time had finally come to make use of the rebar I had picked up earlier to make a frame to attach the loose wire to and make the garden groundhog- (and many other critter-) proof. All I wanted originally was to make a simple rectangular frame by cutting and welding the rebar together, attaching a panel of wire fencing, then placing this on the ground against the openings in the fence. Well, the simple rectangular frame looked rather plain, and given the size of it (80 inches wide, 60 inches high) and its location opposite the main entrance, I decided to make it somewhat of an art piece instead. Here is what I came up with, before the wire fencing is attached.

IMG_1402


The fencing will cover the lower 48 inches, with the uppermost divided rectangular area left open. Rather than being hinged, the gate has a pair of spikes that go into the ground and it gets held in place by a couple of clamps. It only gets removed to take equipment in and out of the garden and to deal with weeds. No reason why something utilitarian can't also be attractive at the same time. I have yet to make the smaller side gate frames, those will be simpler, just a square with a crisscrossing reinforcement, and perhaps a rectangular upper panel to match the big gate. I need to extend the fence posts to about seven feet tall, and attach a course or two of wire to keep the deer from jumping in and out. The deer are the worst garden destroyers here at Mayhem Acres, and they keep multiplying. Until it was cleaned out, the southwest quadrant (the bare ground in the photo) had branches and brush piled in it from last fall, and that had gotten overgrown with weeds as we neglected it and worked the other three areas. This had become home to a tiny fawn as Jeff discovered while cleaning. The fawn got trapped in the fence until our dogs began barking and chasing it. Jeff was so close to having another pet.

Jeff will be in PA with dad for another couple days. In that time I have some mods to do on the truck, fluid changes to do, plus cleaning it up. The Stratus will get a couple more suspension parts (lower control arms w/integral ball joints plus front swaybar links) to satisfy my worry that they, like the tie rod ends, might be close to failing. The replacements will have grease fittings and can receive regular maintenance, giving me some peace of mind.
greatbear: (Default)
The repair guy from G.E. came by to perform the warranty work on my GeoSpring heat pump-based water heater. He was not the same guy that showed up a couple weeks ago, I figured he chickened out, and from what the guy (his name is Bruce) told me, I was right. That makes two correct diagnoses regarding this repair, the first finding a leaky evaporator core. The guy was cool, and did not seem to feel out of place asking me for help with the repair. He even left all the covers removed so I can check on it over the next couple days using my leak detectors and such. X-D Since these high efficiency water heaters are a new thing, this was his first time digging into one, and apparently won't be his last. Last week he had attended a meeting for the repair crews to be expecting service calls for the heaters, it appears the evaporator coils are prone to leaking. I HOPE the one that was installed this afternoon was a redesign, but to my eyes the thing looks identical. Ah, well, the repair has it's own five year warranty. I'll help out the next time. LOL

Today was also the first day of full sunlight that tested the new skylights. Since the two in the living room have not been cut through into the ceiling yet, the only bright spot was in the attic. But the "sun tunnel" skylight in the bathroom will take some getting used to. It's every bit as bright as with the lights on, and my urge is to turn off the lights when leaving the room. I love lots of daylight in a space, and this took care of the only area upstairs that did not have it's own window. I love it. It was also my first chance to see the roof completed as well, and it looks mighty nice. Now I am hoping for a bigass rainstorm so I can check around for any leaks.

Tomorrow I am going to attempt to take it easy. No strenuous activity, no hardcore hell on my recently repaired spine. I'm just as sore and tired as I had expected to be, but it's not a "bad" pain. It feels like accomplishment, and feels like healing. I have at least one more session of physical therapy, and I will probably have another week or two added on, since it does seem to be helping me. If I could only get the feeling back in my lower legs and feet, I'd be a happy chappy.

I have a pile of photos to toss up to Flickr, showing the house projects of late and other stuff, perhaps I'll do that tomorrow. That shouldn't be too strenuous. :)
greatbear: (Default)
I'm exhausted. Yesterday Jeff had tix for the Indiana U-Penn State game played here at FedEx Field, that was the major event of the day. We enjoyed ourselves, Penn State won handily. The thing that got to me was the walking. The exercise was welcome, but couple that with crawling in the attic the day before. This morning, I was a sore, tired old man. I had wanted to finish up the rough framing for the skylights after the game, but my heart wasn't in it.

Today totally kicked my ass though. The crew showed up to do the roof, I installed the skylights and spent most of the day clambering under and on the roof getting things installed. Both the house and the garage have completely new roofs on them, in a single day! Jeff the Chef kept the guys on site by putting out one hell of a spread for lunch, which made for very appreciative workers. The only sidetrack ended up being the dump truck that was used to haul away the old roofing, trash and junk left from the work. The house was done first, then the dump truck was moved down the second driveway to the garage. Well, the weight of the old, heavy roofing from a 2500 sq ft house and a 900 sq ft garage proved a bit too much for the dump truck, which could not make it back up the steep driveway from the garage. I dropped what I was doing to haul the dump truck out with the Silverado after disconnecting the trailer and reconnecting it afterward. The only remaining tasks involving the hired crew is replacement of all the guttering and downspouts. The gutters have long been in need of replacement, and since this guy has a means to make continuous length guttering, I jumped at the chance to have the entire thing done and not have to worry about roofs, leaks and failed guttering for a couple more decades. I completed the sun tunnel as well, and will build the light shafts for the living room skylights after T-Day.

I have finally taken care of this project which started before Mom got sick, and was delayed again and again due to my own health issues. This time was do or die, and I had only a small window of opportunity to complete this before the weather got bad. I might be paying for my effort with some soreness for a couple days, but I think I managed to find the right time to do it all. This is a major accomplishment for me, and the satisfaction I feel for getting it done pales in comparison to the lifting of the burdens, direct and indirect, physical and mental, that have been on my mind for all these years. I can sleep peacefully now, especially if it is raining.

It's time for me to haul my spent body into bed. It's gonna be a busy week.

G'nite!
greatbear: (forearms)
A nice long weekend, fueled by high performance turkey in various forms (traditional on the Big Day, then snack sammiches, sliced in gravy, finger food, then a glorious turkey pot pie). Lots of accomplishments, silliness, sex, shopping, yard work, geekery... in all it was a great four days off.

Saw Goblet Of Fire Saturday night. This installment is a lot darker and more mature than the rest. I also came away feeling that I should have waited for the inevitable three-hour-long "director's cut" than get tripped up by so many obvious missing scenes. It does the series well, though. Unlike some others, I didn't see the big hoopla surrounding Victor Krum. Give him about ten years, more time in the gym and let the facial hair come in, then maybe I will notice. lol

I did the second and final phase of the leaf cleanup in the yard. This has been getting more and more involved as the years progress as the trees I planted have gotten larger and more numerous, more obstacles to work around and dispersal of the couple hundred cubic feet of grass and leaf clippings much more involved. It's done though, and I can concentrate on other things now. Like the somewhat startling sink hole that showed up a few weeks ago in the front yard. I winterized the pressure washers, drained fuel out of things not being used till next spring and rearranged the storage order of all the equipment so the winter stuff is accessible. Snow? Bring it on, babe. I'm so ready.

Spent some time checking out lots of my battery operated instruments and gadgets after discovering that the relatively new batteries that were installed in a rather expensive tachometer/linear velocity meter leaked and destroyed it. I've been encountering this sort of thing more and more lately, as item like remote controls will have severely leaking batteries while still operational. I went around pulling batteries out of lesser used stuff, finding leaking batteries in my E-bow, a clamp-on current meter and one neglected smoke detector (which was still operational!). Meanwhile, the 16 year old CD player remote still has it's original National Hi-Top cells in it, and a Casio calculator I've had since high school has coppertop batteries in it from the Mallory days. It seems that batteries, battery life and the destruction they often wreak is a crapshoot for me.

Picked up a Lightscribe DVD-DL drive for the new monster computer as well as some other goodies for it. The crazy oversized power supply that's been on backorder for it is supposed to arrive tomorrow. Major items remaining for it now are some hard drives, waterblocks, a Soundblaster X-Fi Elite Pro sound card and a pair of Nvidia-based 7800 GT or GTX video cards. I've been jonesing for a new display too. The computer habit for me is worse than being a crack addict.

The trip to the computer store was once again accompanied by my best friend John, a straight buddy of mine who goes back to 6th grade. Even though he is married (as am I, lol), we still manage to find the time to hang out doing stuff. I have another post in the works dealing with my 'coming out', and his place in all of it. Stay tuned. Both of us bought television sets for $9.99 just to say that we bought televisions sets for $9.99 (and give them away as gifts).

I have a big bunch of CDs on my 'wish list'. As the weather becomes teh suck and I find myself indoors more often, I am listening more and more to music and wanting some new stuffs. Problem is, instant gratification is pretty much out as my oddball tastes in music mean that local stores are not gonna have much of what i am looking for. Amazon and CD Baby have been getting a lot of business from me lately. [livejournal.com profile] ciddyguy has probably had his hands in at least one of my orders.

Well, it's gona be a standard-issue 5-day week with potential for overtime and other irritants. This time of year is always a pain in that respect. Nothing is pleasant at the end of the year. I guess it's time I hit the sack and prepare for the worst.

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Phil

December 2016

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