Workshop is clean. Morning air is like a summer apple. It is all the excitement of going back to school without anybody making you sit still all day.
Workshop is clean. Morning air is like a summer apple. It is all the excitement of going back to school without anybody making you sit still all day.
After a few hours, Chesterton’s Junk Drawer (you can’t throw anything away until you remember why you saved it) becomes Zeno’s Junk Drawer: you can’t finish until you sort half of it, and then half of the rest, and then half of the rest… Until at last, late in the afternoon, you find yourself with Occam’s Junk Drawer, and chuck all the rest of it in the trash. Such is the progress of philosophy.
Cleaning out the workshop today, and facing a little problem I call “Chesterton’s junk drawer.”
Stocking up on woodenware for the holidays before the weather turns cool and I can spend full days in the workshop making more interesting things. Got a shaving horse in a semi-spare bedroom for carving, another on the front porch for sanding, and buckets of half-made spoon-like objects.
Another storm last night makes eleven inches of rain in the past nine days. Fall greens and carrots should have gone in the ground last week, but the soil is going to have to dry out a bit before I can clean up the summer stuff.
The earliest examples of Pennsylvania German “fraktur” were illuminated hymnals, so I thought I should try a bit of music.
Experimenting with an actual scene here. Interesting to carve and there’s a lot I like about it, but the limitations of the medium make it hard to get too realistic, and I can’t decide whether it works.
Particle board, particle board
Looks just like a regular board
What is it made of? Nobody knows.
Particle board.
Is it compressed
Or is it a mess
Could it be totally worthless?
Who came up with particle board?
Degraded board, particle board.
I can’t recall the last time a news story gave me as much joy as I felt reading about the long-tailed macaques at an Indonesian temple who steal items from tourists to trade for food. That they have figured out how much various items (from sunglasses to phones) are worth to people and demand appropriate payment is especially wonderful.
It does strike me that for all the jokes about criminal enterprise and academic pondering about Macaca economicus there is a potential religious explanation for what’s going on. Consider:
If you quit bringing gifts for the sacred guardians of the temple, what can you expect?
Cradle-to-grave pollinator gardening. This spring I planted a bed of parsley, partly for myself but mostly for these little guys: black swallowtail butterfly caterpillars. There are at least ten of them out there now, bulking up.