Y returned on time, tired but happy, and she's gone off to Burton Joyce for more granny duty today. So I dropped her at the tram as usual, but we are both looking forward to a rest-day tomorrow.
Yesterday I bought a bevel-cutter at Maple Framing and I'm quite glad I had lost my old one because this Logan is much much better. Once I had started cutting, 'how to do it' quickly came back to me and I only messed up one mount by accidentally cutting an inward-facing bevel instead of an outer.
Alex has been here all day repairing the large wind-damaged fence at the bottom of the garden. 2 whole sections needed replacing with new.
Vic finished his fence yesterday and I though "Whoopee a day free from banging" and then Alex turned up. His work-flow seems much quiter though. Perhaps its my imagination. He really is great; he takes everything to the tip in his trailer. And point-blank refuses to count such trips into his 'working time'.
A most useful 'comment' yesterday from our architectural-correspondent. About the technical term 'pile-driving' into the Venice mudflats. Previously I had mistakenly thought that a 'pile-driver' was the name of a punch in boxing, like a 'haymaker'.

1 comment:
You are quite right to be fussy about the order of the photos. I hope such meticulous attention to detail paid off in awards.
I am debating whether the first anniversary of the blog merits a bottle of bubbly?
Glad you got your bevels sorted out.
My mother once went to evening classes to do woodwork. She made a very acceptable, but ultimately not quite strong enough, coffee table but a friend of hers made a curb (or kerb) for the hearth; unfortunately she put one of the side bits on the opposite way to the other – a sort of distorted ‘Z’ shape!
The crocuses are pretty although, being purple, Sandra would have them out immediately (before you pick me up, I mean the flowers are purple, not my wife; she would not be able to live with herself).
Oddly, the leaves to the left of the lower bloom seem to be in sharper focus?
Alex sounds a gem. And I think he hails from Ollerton? If he is in his late thirties or forties I’ll bet he knows our Simon (Jackson) who pursues, in casual fashion, a similar line of work when not putting out fires or pulling bodies out of wrecked cars.
Isn’t it amazing the little bits of knowledge we all have missing? (although I never had chance to try 'grass', I think mine mainly date from the 1960s but I am sure that some are buried deeper in history).
Nevertheless, I was amazed that anyone should not know the original meaning of ‘pile-driving’.
Perhaps I should now explain that ‘haymaker’ is not just a boxing term as it originates from the agricultural action of swinging a fork. And ‘hammer blow’ originally referred to hitting a nail (or, in Brummagem, a screw) with a hammer.
All right, so I’m a sarky sod!
Re a recent suggestion for recipes, I don't think anyone would be intersted in Nigel Slater's from last Sunday's Observer Magazine, viz, 'cabbage on toast'. Really, it's true.
On reflection, I think recipes would take up too much blogspace - more suited to email perhaps?
Post a Comment