Good morning!!!!

   / Good morning!!!! #92,261  
Mine may have been the last generation to benefit from real shop classes. In junior high, I started in a wood shop, and like David, I'm pretty sure my first project was some sort of book rack. The next year a new format came in, and we would build a 18" x 48" piece of house. It had a block foundation we mortared ourselves, a sill plate, then joists/stringers, a subfloor, stud walls with plumbing and electrical and drywall, and even a shingled roof. Some kids started that year not even knowing how to use a hammer, and by the end they weren't even bending very many nails. The next year was manufacturing, where the class picked a product, then designed it, and laid out an assembly line to make the pieces and assemble them. One product was salt and pepper shakers, another was sandals. Then in high school, it was back to regular shop classes. Started in the wood shop, where my crowning glory project was a 4' x 4' mahogany bookcase. It was one of the things auctioned off when I cleaned out my mother's house after she passed, and it still looked good as new. Then I switched to metal shop, and the whole world changed. Now I started making things I could actually use, like hammers, chisels, a pool cue, and a monster screwdriver/pry bar, all of which I still use. That's where I learned to safely operate drill presses, lathes, mills, a shaper, surface grinder, and even how to sharpen drill bits by hand. Those skills are still used at least weekly.

When the school board decided those skills were obsolete and dismantled the shops, they started turning out consumers instead of skilled workers. And that lack of skilled labor still haunts our economy today.:2cents:

I'm glad to see something of a revival in the various "maker" labs being set up in the larger cities. Same with the renewed interest in old cars and motorcycles, a lot of it in young guys and gals that never worked on anything before in their lives. But I'm really fortunate to have come up when I did, and do the things I like to do so much in my own little shop. Looking back, I was a geek before there was anything called a geek, but that didn't come until computers.:laughing:
 
   / Good morning!!!! #92,262  
Mowed yard for first time. Rider fired right up, with a tiny squirt of carb cleaner. I have had to use a squirt of carb cleaner to start it for the last 8 yrs, annoying, but it works. Took the jump starter out, thought i might need it.

Anyone know what nest this might be? Very small on a lilac bush. 0413191345.jpeg
 
   / Good morning!!!! #92,263  
Premium
I was looking for one the same price as the Mazda CX-5 and Toyota RAV4.
Randy, what do you put on the cars at a car show to make them shine?
This one does not ave the $599 paint protection package the Toyota port dealer added and expected you to pay smiling.
View attachment 599801

Ron, the color is panthera metal.

The Chrysler dealer I got the Dodge off of puts on a wax that is supposed to protect the paint for 3 years. It worked good on my Jeep. I found out that the wax is actually MagGuires and power buffed.
 
   / Good morning!!!! #92,264  
Mine may have been the last generation to benefit from real shop classes. In junior high, I started in a wood shop,

Wood shop was all that kind of thing I had in junior high school. I reckon I was 14 years old and still have what I made in shop class, a sewing table for my mother to keep her sewing materials in. The top is 18" square, 2 drawers 2.5" deep, all oak except the interior of the drawers.

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   / Good morning!!!! #92,265  
I made a bookcase in high school wood class. Still using it 60 years later.
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In senior year designed a drill press vise. Main body parts were made out of aluminum. That was melted and poured into molds we made. Parts were milled to use steel round guide bars and flat hardened jaws. Vise was given away somewhere over the years. Lots of learning in those classes. Sure wish they taught kids that kind of stuff today.
 
   / Good morning!!!! #92,266  
It appears that our rain is over for this spell. They broke into the TV programs many times today to keep reporting new areas under severe weather warnings. We sometimes had a heavy, but brief downpour, sometimes light sprinkles, twice had brief spells of very small hail, and pretty good breeze at times, but no real wind. Anyway, I just went out and dumped about 2.15" of rain out of the gauge. And I mopped the deck since rain had blown just about all the way through, and there was some of that yellow pollen on the deck, so it's now been washed off.:dance1:
 
   / Good morning!!!! #92,267  
2 inches should have given you a nice wash Bird, sounds good.
Ah, that's what color my truck really is...

David, the night I and my next older brother crashed our cars within an hour of each other, high school Saturday night 1966, in the rain, Brother lost a tooth, I just tore off the front of my Mother's Olds, that's all Dad. And besides, it was my date's fault.
And it really was.
She grabbed the steering wheel in a skid as i was trying to correct and around we went like a teacup until the spin ended
bouncing off a 20 foot high concrete and paver abutment. Nope, that one didn't get driven home.
There is a word called apoplectic that basically summed up my Father's opinion of the matter.
He almost bit through his cigar.

my father installed a sign right on our bedroom door announcing
to the world Haste Makes Waste. I think it was likely a military saying at some point.

Lots of flowers in bloom, azaleas kicking in, vibrant colors, just pretty to be outside.
Everything is planted so keep that rain coming.
 

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   / Good morning!!!! #92,268  
It was a leisurely trip down to get the batteries. The whole trip took me 4 hours and I found the place easily with the help of Google Earth (before I left the house). Batteries were there and the total price tax in was $840.oo for the two Odesseys. The trip to Newmarket was the same.....uneventful. The two days of meetings was boring except for the ex OPP and the ex MTO officer. The 'free' lunch was ho-hum. Coffee was good though. Tim Hortons coffee is always good.
The trip home was interesting to say the least. Watched two guys/girls get pulled over for speeding. Two separate detachments of the OPP and they each had one speeder. This was all in a 65 mph (100 km/h) speed zone. I was doing 68-70 mph (110 km/h) more or less.

It sure is nice to be home.
 
   / Good morning!!!! #92,269  
Make sure you eat a MAN's breakfast 3 eggs, sausage and toast with lots of butter !!!!!:D On my first cholesterol test 30 years ago I had eaten a big mac for lunch before my afternoon Dr. visit and mine was 450. :eek:

Drew your salad post was exclusive of salt but inclusive of oil. I don't use oil because I don't need it to add flavor or extra dense calories and because of these reasons:
What's Wrong With Olive Oil? | The Truth About Olive Oil Nutrition

I’ll eat my normal breakfast, no point in overeating just to fudge the numbers. I want to know what is real.
 
   / Good morning!!!! #92,270  
The Mans breakfast at the diner is:
2 pancakes
2 eggs
Home fries
Sausage
Toast
 

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