Archive for the 'The Art of Life' Category



Plywood Downs

Published on May 3, 2008

When Sarah and I first moved to Portland, we had an apartment on SE Belmont. It was a great location, and had a great backyard for parties, with a raspberry bush within arm’s length of the picnic table I built (my first real woodworking project, and one that is still doing good service today).

Picnic Table on SE Belmont

One year, it occurred to us to have an outdoor party right around horse-racing season, and with the Belmont Stakes coming up, it seemed a natural fit to call our BBQ the “Belmont Steaks.”

Racing Ramp-Walking Cows

A few days before that first party, I was at Music Millenium on Burnside, and saw some little toys on the counter near the register, a bucket full of “ramp walkers” for a couple bucks apiece. There were horses, cows and pigs that would all “walk” down an incline … it seemed only natural to race them, and with the party coming up … Racing Cows were born. I built a simple ramp with a starting gate, and much fun was had (the pitchers of mint juleps didn’t hurt, either).

The cows, however, were lost to history, but the horse racing party lived on in our new place, modified to a Kentucky Derby celebration since we were no longer on Belmont Street.

Earlier this week, I found the cows again with some slick Google sleuthing. They’re made by a company called Rocket USA, and 12 new racing cows arrived yesterday morning. They were all the same color, so I ended up re-painting most of them.

To re-start the tradition, I also felt the cows needed a little more than just a piece of plywood and a starting gate, so yesterday I souped up the old track. I give you … “Plywood Downs.” Place your bets.

Plywood Downs: A racetrack for Toddle Waddle cows


Where in the World is Dave?

Published on February 25, 2008

I have a feeling Dave is out there somewhere traveling around in foreign countries, going to great museums and drinking good beer. Those of us back here stateside were wondering if we could get an “in the field” report of art on the other side of the ocean.
(Dave:That is if you have access to a computer that is. Hope you are having a good time!)

G


Valentine Puzzle

Published on February 14, 2008

Valentine Puzzle

This is a puzzle that I made for Brandy. I painted a piece of 1/4″ masonite and wrote a secret message on the back side. Then I cut out the pieces on the scroll saw. The secret message told her where to meet me for dinner. She was surprised and we had a great time.


No(television)vember

Published on November 26, 2007

This month, Sarah and I decided to try a little experiment - watch no televison for the entire month of November. No “Office,” no PBS, not even “Frontline.” Personally, I’d noticed that the TV was becoming a default activity. Sarah’s not so bad, but when I had a few free moments, I’d flip it on, and catch up on the DVR backlog. Most of my television tastes run to the educational, but the black box was still more of a time sink than I thought was good for me - it happened frequently that I’d sit down for a few minutes, only to find out that I’d watched four episodes in a row of “Ice Road Truckers,” (which most people probably wouldn’t consider educational, but several of my clients at work are trucking-related).

At any rate, we’ve decided to opt out this month. No television in November. NO-vember. Get it? My boss is calling it “atheist lent.”

Some extra time to do more cooking, and catch up on the pile of reading material by the bed. To write (hey, I’m posting!), to talk, and create. None of these things are really a goal in themselves, or a specific void I feel needs filling - rather, I feel I will do more of the things I value if I do less of something I don’t.

Day 1: Thursday, November 1st. Tonight is darts, so I spent the evening with my team-mates at the Horse Brass, one of my favorite pubs. I got home at 10:30, and instead of flipping on “The Office,” I chatted with Sarah about the game, talked weekend plans, and munched on some popcorn. No problem.

Day 2: Being Friday, Sarah and I would typically watch a movie at home and eat dinner of some kind. Lately, it’s been a lot of burritos, but tonight, we made home-made pasta with brown sage butter sauce. Delicious. Next time, I’d roll the pasta a little thinner, though - it swells to about double-size once cooked.

Day 3: Sarah had a work meeting, even though it was Saturday, so I got up early with her and fired up the smoker, in preparation for finishing up another batch of home-made bacon. Did some fall yard work, getting the raised beds ready for spring again. In the afternoon, went to a cool beer-tasting event at Woodstock Wine and Deli, where they poured six vintages of Sierra Nevada’s Celebration Ale. Later, went over to Dan and Emily’s to make sausage and hang out with young Will. I slipped. While Dan put Will to bed, I watched Thursday’s episode of “The Office” on his television. Feels a little like sneaking a cigarette.

Day 4: More meat smoking, this time the andouille sausage Dan and I made last night. My rustic bent is taking over - I spent a couple hours splitting firewood with a wedge and sledge while the sausage cooked. Gumbo for dinner - great.

Day 10: Where did the days go? We’ve settled into a nice routine coming home after work and reading in the living room - I’m guessing that’s what we’ve been up to. Went to see a movie at the Hollywood Theater tonight - Into the Wild. I read the book in high school or college, and the film adaptation accurately captures the feelings I recall having when I read it originally. Amazement at the courage required to let everything go and blow in the wind, but at the same time incredulous at the stupid risks McCandless takes - jumping headling into extremely dangerous rapids, never having kayaked before. Walking into Alaska with a .22 and no experience eating native plants … but it is hard not to be buoyed by his adventurous spirt and youth. Great soundtrack, too - my mom e-mailed to say she bought it. Something is wrong with the world when my mom is buying Eddie Vedder albums.

Day 16, 17, 18: Sarah and I take Jasper to the coast for a long weekend. We rent a little cottage in Manzanita that doesn’t even have a television, just a small wood stove and tiny kitchen. So tiny, I’ve seen RVs with better. Typically when we go to places like this, we watch a few movies on a crappy TV, but we spend the weekend walking the dog up and down the beach with breaks to warm up and read and play cards. We cook wild salmon and mustard mashed potatoes for dinner. Very relaxing to be away from the internet for a few days, too.

Day 20, 21, 22: After a short work week, it’s Thanksgiving prep. time. To the grocery store for recipe supplies, Dan and Emily’s to pick up a Turkey to brine, make pumpkin pie and apple pies from scratch (no cans involved). We even made homemade butter to go with my signature beer bread. Thanksgiving is spent at the Painters. There’s a football game or two on, but I’ve never been a big fan, and the rotisserie turkey and home-brewed cider is much more interesting. After quite a few ciders and a lot of food, though, I do settle in to watch “Christmas Vacation” with everyone else, one of my favorite holiday movies.

Day 23: Friday after Thanksgiving. Sarah says she wishes we could watch a movie at home - feels like that kind of night with the cold weather we’ve been having and a cider hangover on standby. I feel like caving, but rather than replying, I keep my mouth shut instead of speaking, since if I did, I’d agree.

Day 24: The second movie of the month: The Bourne Ultimatum at one of our local “cheap theaters,” one which serves beer and hot delicious pizza. Our living room has beer, but not the pizza. After the movie, we’re tempted to turn around and see another one at 9:00, but head home instead. When we get there, it feels like movie time still, but instead, we play cards in front of a fire. Not too shabby.

Day 25: Spent almost entirely in the shop - haven’t done that for awhile. Working on finishing up the cutting board I started yesterday afternoon.

Day 26: Got home from work, ate some turkey pot pie, and headed out to the shop. I finished up a failed attempt at a cutting board in a herringbone pattern, cleaned up a bit, and picked up a carving I’d been neglecting for a long time. Feels good to work the carving muscles a bit. Think I might repeat tomorrow.

Sarah and I have started discussing what we’re going to do in a few days when the self-imposed hiatus is off. We both miss certain shows - the Office is a nice Thursday ritual - and not watching movies has been hard. If anything, I think we’ll be a lot more choosy about what we do watch. We’ve both enjoyed listening to music, cooking and talking more. And I’ve been having more vivid dreams, which I almost never do! Explain that one …

I’ve also read a ton of books this month: Animal, Vegetable, Miracle; The Omnivore’s Dilemma; The Year of Eating Dangerously; Michael Pollan’s excellent Second Nature; Sailing Alone Around the World; and most recently, Longitude. I am normally a pretty voracious reader, but this is a lot even for me.

I have toyed with the idea of canceling cable and sticking to the networks and PBS, which is most of what we watch anyway. Or perhaps being ruthless in what we record on the DVR - you can rack up a full recorder pretty quickly, and generate quite a bit of digital guilt (try erasing a Holocaust documentary, and you’ll know what I mean). Any ideas?


Just Plane fun!

Published on November 15, 2007

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Here are a couple of cutting boards that I made for birthday’s. The one with the handle has tapered pieces in it.


Stone Patio

Published on November 14, 2007

Finally I can post again! I have been having technical difficulties with Wordpress and my computer but luckily we solved the problem last night. Thanks Dave!

The following pictures are the progression of the stone patio that I worked on over the summer.

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Our back yard last winter.

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This was a trench that I dug by hand for the draining tile. There are also three footings from the old fence that I buried under the trench. That was a lot of work!

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Then the puzzle began. We found all of the stones in a big pile behind the garage. With a little power washing they cleaned up pretty good. I layed the stones over a bed of sand to help stablize and level as I placed the stones. Ethan was there to help problem solve!

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Here it is all done with furniture. It was like adding on an outdoor room to our house.

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Brandy did this nice border with rocks.