Yesteryear
One year ago today: September 16, 2024, worse than Danielle Steele.
Five years ago today: September 16, 2020, it’s therapy tape.
Nine years ago today: September 16, 2016, cry the Texas jungle.
Random years ago today: September 16, 2007, Kissimmee, Florida
I have a treat for myself, in a way. This morning was more of what I had in mind for my retirement years—but could that be because I got no work done? Here’s the tale from the trailer court. I needed more pickets for the privacy fence. As chance would have it, I could only afford half but they turned out to be superb box lumber. Shown here, they are very smooth with the knots more that 11/1-2 inches apart. They are also slightly thicker, though I’ve never measured exactly. These are set out for drying and the rest are already in the back yard. So much for retirement.

Back home, closer inspection shows these are the best box pickets I’ve seen yet. I almost hate to put a staple though them, but I need that second fence in place, one quickly learns in central Florida it is best not to allow the City to see any work in progress. I have just eight of these beauties, that’s eight boxes. Enough to keep me inside the shed as the temperature soars again. It’s noon now and I’m inside under the fans, I have only one working A/C unit and it has been running constantly for 66 days now. And if I didn’t say, we have a juvenile raccoon in the work shed, still small enough to fit under the door.
Then an unsual score, this next photo shows two items of from this morning. That is an almost brand new Rexair vacuum, the kind with the water. Including both the carpet and mini power nozzles and all the hoses and fixtures. For $19. Again, barely used. It’s too large for me to wield around the house, so we shall see how it works for dust collection in the new saw area, which is too far away from the built-in vacuum that is not done yet.
The vacuum is setting on another gem, this is the top grade of pine wood pallet. Enough for four great boxes. The pine slats are not split and are nailed only near the ends, yielding ten, in five pairs of matching grains and width, if you can see them in this photo. Nice except all this work takes me a lot longer nowadays, just loading that pallet in the van was a ten minute operation. I had to stop twice.

Here’s a better view of the fence cross-braces, the anti-sagging feature I wish I had discovered earlier. Once a fence gets grown into place, meaning mainly kudzoo, it is too much to affix the braces, a job requiring three hands. What you see here is not random. Notice the truss-like angles and how they do not meet in the center? Those are not 45° angles but custom sliced to leave that gap. The bottom rail is raised 4-1/2 inches more from the ground than the store-bought layout. The bottoms of the diagonals rest on this rail, but are not fastened to it, rather to the posts. Live and learn, and use only bone-dry lumber.
Down south at the Pinecrest library, I found a book on how to operate steam locomotives. It’s written by this guy who worked his way up through the system, and reads like it, ho-hum. But he worked in the shop areas, not the rails, and has included dozens of pictures and diagrams of the boiler and cab interiors. Examples are the brick lining of the fireboxes most people don’t know are necessary and very clear drawings of how the wheel rims are attached and why. See, now he has my interest. The wheel rims are the only part of the engine that needed regular replacing, I did not know that.

In other news, Charlie Kirk’s media got so many messages of condolence from Israel that many began arriving the day before he was shot. Oops! In Vietnam, bank accounts without “biometric data” have been seized. And here’s a cute development, I inadvertently pasted an old copy of my travel notifications that included the Space Hippies e-mail. He’s still out there, being the consummate little pest, still playing the dive bars. What’s interesting is after all these years, he still does not realize that I floored his guitar playing every time we were on stage. It’s as if down to this day, he can’t mentally process that’s what was really happening.
The guy also has a fat head. He has a blog because I taught him what that was. Same with e-mail, same with computers and the Internet. Yet today he’d deny under oath he learned it all from me. (He hated computers and was still writing out lyrics longhand and photocopying at FedEx.) I sincerely tried to educate the guy on how duo stage presentation worked, but he was too wrapped up in himself to even hear much less listen. Instead he remains stuck on in his permanent vain-arrogant mode where he is the best and others are never more than his flunkies.
Is he a good musician? I said before, he has an incredible talent to note-for-note others. But as far as adapting that to play in a band, he never gets off the ground. The six years I put up with him was probably a record. The fact is, we got off to a shaky start because of his inability to blend and it took the first year for me to realize he never would get past that. So to this day, he judges my bass playing by his own awkward blunders before I learned to just outplay him on stage. I thought he’d wise up, but instead he presumed he was getting better. Duh. So he sends me a snarky e-mail revealing he has not yet learned his lesson.
Picture of the day.
The Terraces, Caribbean
(about $200 million.)
Remember to use BACK ARROW to return to blog.
Once noon passed, siesta was no longer optional, I am curling up under the A/C.. The one weather report you can trust in Florida is when they say “hot”. Not as hot as for leftoids losing their jobs over comments concerning the Kirk assassination. Some smart aleck posted that his new hiring policy required proof of “non-vaccination”. I zonked out. So unless we get something swell for Festus re-runs, I’m calling it a day. It was the rain woke me, and this rain smells funny. Noticed it from inside the house, it smells like mown grass, slightly.
Aha, you blinked! Now the pallet wood is stacked up ready for tomorrow’s sunlight to bake it even more dry. You see that wood with the red tinge? That’s going to be a beauty and even more so as my new thickness planer should soon be in operation.
Jack the Drummer has his ad back on the bulletin board. If it takes him another seven years to find somebody to even listen to him that will place him in his mid-nineties. Folks, the skills to put a band together are different and often opposite to playing music. For openers, you will never have a band that does it your way, something Jack more than often mentioned he was seeking. If you’ve ever wondered why so many of the successful bands have leader as a namesake, try forming a group. Diana Ross, Charlie Daniels, Marshall Tucker, Tom Petty, all I can say is I can’t blame them. They are surrounded by followers nobody heard of before them.
But, I did give it a try even if I was shy on the music part. I’m unique (so far), but not great. I reviewed the latest list of the top 100 rock bands of all time and did not recognize 8 of them, though I could later name one of their hit songs. Like Prince and “Purple Rain”. I don’t recognize bands with over five instruments as being true rock groups, especially recorded music. I also rate tunes on their adaptability to live performance with out a ton of road gear. Good luck, Jack.
By 7:30PM, after Gunsmoke, the pallet is no more. When cut, it supplied only enough lumber for two really good boxes. And I have a box to determine that by, I picked this one up at the Thrift. It as several features I would like to copy. Plus a pattern burned or placed into the wood once it was ready for finishing. Most curious was a bevel cut that allowed the hinge flaps to be completely hidden, the hinge itself recessed into the frame, and the way the bevel allows the box lid to stand open. I’ll try for pictures but the latest camera has no macro setting. It’s a precious little box, I will likely save it for the Reb. Return tomorrow, when the blog that dares will feature what may be nothing more than a cigar box. (If so, I’d still be curious why it has a “Made in Poland sticker.)

As for Gunsmoke, the recent showings indicate the serious westerns are over. No quick draws, no barroom fisticuffs, and only token appearances of Matt, Kitty, or Festus. Tonight’s feature performance was about saving a falsely accused drunk, almost totally soap opera. The old lady owns the town except for the saloon, which is owned by a lady who won’t sell because one of the old lady’s two sons is really hers, which is why the old ladie’s husband gave the saloon to the other son’s real mother, who is protecting him by framing a drifter for a floozie he accidentally killed, but not before she shot him through the shoulder, whence Matt finds the bullet in the door jamb. Like I said, soap.
I’m not into the audiobook, “Holy Ghost”. If you are curious what I think is wrong with the police in America, this is a good source. My contention is that the police, right now, know exactly who 99.99% of the bad guys are. They also know that most first-time offenders are just ordinary people caught in extraordinary situations, think Rittenhouse. To solve the majority of crimes, the police therefore know precisely who to look for, and what’s more, to catch them all they have to do is watch closely until perp steps out of line.
So why not do that? My answer is “Hollywood”. You see, nabbing the bulk of known petty criminals is boring. No shootouts, no high-speed chases, no trips to the stripper bars. Yet, if the police would focus their insanely huge budgets toward arresting the known bad guys, crime would sink to a fractional level. I remind the reader I am a half-redneck. That is, while I do think people are free to donate their own money, but should be shot if they try to donate mine.
This book is a revelation of how cops break the law when they can and bend it when that doesn’t work. There are no suspects but the city cops have arrived and on a campaign to “interview” every person in town. The purpose? To get their phone numbers, employers, political views, and sex partners on file—all information that myself and the Constitution say is none of their business, even if they have a warrant. But it is the oldest scam, police claim it is to “eliminate” you as a suspect, the exact opposite of your right to be presumed innocent.
Ah, but listen to the pundits, if you have nothing to hide, why not tell them anything they want to know? Ask anyone who lives in a police state how well that worked out for them. The police have no right to your information but that will not stop them from putting the squeeze on you if you don’t “cooperate”. I’m on disk 3 and the cops are now going after some “Nazis” who they know damn well are innocent.
ADDENDUM
Well, there is something with that $71 travel budget this month. Remember the trip to Clermont and to see that disappointing “island grove” area? I found a publication saying ten of the sleepiest towns in Florida are in that area, call it 50 miles west of Orlando. Upon opening the books, I see we have $86. I’m thinking.
Certainly, I’d say a budget, properly applied, makes incredible difference. That’s why I’m mildly fascinated by the Merkhava “tank” pictured last day. I meant what I said it was no really a tank. Some reasons are that it cannot be upgunned to the modern 120mm cannon, but only the 105mm. But this combination of tank armor and gun make for a exceptional personnel carrier. I notice the armor is now some form of slab, probably Chobham, replacing the hull front and the turret seems to be a lighter design.
Israel is proof a smaller number of better trained and equipped foot soldiers is repeatly better than big numbers. This makes each soldier more valuable, so getting him into action and back out again makes good sense. He’s only of use when applying force on the enemy. To an enemy who is more concerned with religious fanaticism the vehicle looks enough like a tank to cause panic. The Israelis are gaining two advantages. One, they don’t have to budget for whole new tanks, and two, I think they have around 200 or 300 of the old Merkhavas, and they never throw anything out, those guys.
I have not yet studied the Trophy system. It works like a super fast shotgun when it picks up a missile traveling toward your vehicle. It looses off a missile of its own on the trajectory that sprays the incoming with pellets. As missiles aren’t armored, the kill rate is estimated at 95%. I’ve seen the tiny hexagon hatches on new Merkhavas, but never any action. It pops up, fires, and retracts in a split second, with tank crews often unaware until later there was an attack. I’m afraid to ask about the price.
Last Laugh