December 2009 Archives

Fascia 1.jpg
This is the south-east roof-line of my house.  If you look carefully, you'll notice that the fascia is dirty.  That's because it's been on the ground.  It came off in a strong wind about a week ago.  I ignored it.  It's been nasty out, and, in case you can't tell from the image, that's a 2nd story window.  Then a soffit vent cover fell off.  Turns out that isn't a single sheet of perforated material.  It's a series of overlapping, entrained rectangles.  Further, they're only nailed at one end.  One piece of sheet metal I can ignore for a while.  Lots of material falling off, I can't.


Clearly, a large ladder is in order.  I called 3 places, looking to rent a 24' extension ladder.  Naturally, the place with the lowest cost and an available ladder was also the furthest away.  Drove over in the HHR.  I appreciate the tie-downs in the cargo-area floor, even more than I did already.  24' ladder, 8' cargo space.  Wish there was a good way to hold the hatch-back closed, without involving the relatively fragile rear wiper.  Got it home, propped it against the wall.  Nicole steadied it.

20' is way-the-hell up in the air.  Especially standing on an itty-bitty sliver of metal.  In the snow.  With wet boots.  When you've never been so high without a belay rope, a rappelling line, harness, and climbing instructor.  I've done my share of stupid things, and a few scary ones.  But I can't remember the last time I had to overcome the physical sensation of fear in order to accomplish something.  I didn't have to psyche myself to climb the ladder.  I had to order myself to move each limb, to step up or down, to release a hand grip, to move the fascia into position.  "Don't look down," doesn't even begin to cover it.  I went up that ladder "Just one more time" at least 6 times.
Fascia2.jpg Usually amazed that I was simultaneously lying to myself and that it was working.  (I take back what I said of not remembering the last time -- it was the last time I sat on a motorcycle.  I really want to ride a bike.  When I try to, my heart races, my hands sweat, and I must think about individual motions and concentrate fiercely to avoid paralysis.)  As you can see in this image, the piece I restored to its proper location had to be slipped under the higher sheet.  When the piece fell, it was damaged.  It's very light sheet metal, and it kinked (90°) in the middle and the upper end curled when it hit the ground.  Forcing it under the upper piece, one-handed, without falling off the ladder, while it flailed proved to be impossible.  I was ready to quit when Nicole suggested the obvious: cut the curled-edge off.  5 minutes with tin snips (Nicole's work, not mine.  My hand was cramped too badly to squeeze the snips -- not that I told her that; I figured she was worried enough) and the end was flat enough to carry back up the ladder and try again.

I did get it to slide under the upper piece.  The friction was enough to hold it in place while I extracted a nail from the pouch at my left hip.
Fascia 3.jpg  (Pro Tip: Carrying your tape-measure in front of your tool belt is convenient on the ground.  On a ladder, it becomes that lump that catches on every rung.)  Holding the nail in-place while I pulled my hammer was . . . unpleasant.  I was convinced I'd drop the hammer, maybe onto Nicole or, at least, have to retrieve it.  Actually pounding the nail was easier because I could lean forward, and I had a hand on the ladder.  Then I got to climb down-and-back-up a few more times, so I could drive additional nails.  The last one wasn't so bad.  I was probably only 12-15' off the ground.


Stowed the ladder.  Went back inside for hot chocolate and to give my hands a chance to unclench.  Light-weight compression gloves are good for a lot of things, and I appreciated the tactile feedback while I was up the ladder.  But they were soaking wet almost immediately, and did nothing to keep my hands warm.  Glasses were not terribly useful, either.  It's hard to look up far enough to see above & behind my head, without leaning out too far.  Hood-induced tunnel-vision has much the same effect.  Returned the ladder, and called it a day.   I don't know what I'll do if further minor roof work is needed.  I can't see hiring someone to drive 4 nails, even if the nails need to be driven 20 feet above my head.  On the other hand, I was not comfortable up there.  I'm really not looking forward to doing this again.

The Dweeb Brings a Gift

It's Wednesday morning, 5:00 AM.  I don't rise this early, anymore.  We defied bed until about 6 hours ago, so Nicole could snack prior to midnight-before-surgery.  Seconds ago I stepped into the shower, and am dripping wet.  Nicole yells, from downstairs, "India just brought a live rabbit into the house!"  I realize that I'm going outside in a very few minutes, damp, onto an ice-covered patio, likely with a rifle in one hand and a struggling, bloody bunny in the other.

Nicole sends India back outside, feeds the cats (keeping them closeted and happily occupied), throws an old towel over the now-motionless rabbit, and gives me the history as I dry & dress.  Good news: no blood!  Bad news: regardless, rabbit is clearly injured.  It righted itself, then moved several feet, but ended in the flop-roll of a damaged bunny.  Good news: rabbit didn't try to escape into the room/house-in-general.  Bad news: rabbit's position is about a foot from the outside door.  Nicole retrieves my work gloves from the basement while I check the rifle and plan.

Send Nicole to get ready.  Being late for surgery is not really an option.  Check the rabbit.  No evidence of breathing, no pupil-response to flashlight, no response to being uncovered or touched.  Rabbit is probably dead.  Re-cover rabbit.  Bring India into house and directly into crate.  Surprisingly, she's only slightly uncooperative about passing so near the rabbit.  Carry rabbit outside, into yard, away from house and fence.  Place on ground.  Use rifle to ensure rabbit is dead.  (Weird.  Fur conceals entry-wound completely.  Thought I missed, from inches away.  Lift rabbit.  Exit-wound is obvious.  Bunny is dead.  Good.)  Carry carcass well away from house, leave for crows & chickadees (Yes.  Those antic little bundles of black, white, & grey fluffy cheer will scavenge a corpse.  I suspect most seed-eaters will, especially in winter.  Fat & protein are fat & protein, after all.)  Trot back to house, slowing to cross snow-covered icy drive.  Shut the gate, re-enter the house, shed gear, safe the rifle, check the clock.  Ignore India whining from her crate, head back to resume an interrupted shower.

I should be glad for the lack of fuss.  No blood or entrails to clean from the carpet or furniture.  India ate none of the rabbit, so there will be no tapeworms.  No cats escaped or interfered.  I didn't have to restrain a struggling half-killed critter so I could finish it.  What was a simple rabbit, could have been skunk, porcupine, or even something dangerous like a rabid raccoon.  At worst, we must treat the animals with a flea-preventative.  Still, I'm unsettled and annoyed with the dog.  The morning was busy enough.  And I don't like killing things, or even guiltlessly shooting almost-certainly-dead animals to ensure they don't suffer.

Crosscut Sled for My Tablesaw

Crosscut_sled_1.jpgBuilt a crosscut sled, years ago, for Dad's tablesaw.  A crosscut sled is a platform that rides on rails in the miter-slots.  Because it rides in both miter-slots, it's more stable than a miter gauge.  Because the rear fence is fixed at 90° to the blade and, unlike a miter gauge, it doesn't swivel, crosscuts are reliably at right-angles.  The fence provides a clamping surface for things like stop blocks, tenoning jigs, miter-blocks, etc.  And the fence means less splintering of cut wood.  The fence replaces the sacrificial piece of scrap.




Crosscut_Sled_2.jpg
The sled must be custom-built to each tablesaw.  So, when I built one for Dad, I was working in his shop with his tools.  Like his bandsaw and belt-sander.   That made cutting and shaping the fences pretty easy.  I don't have either of those tools.  So I laid-out the curves using a draftsman's French Curve.  I cut them with my $20 Black & Decker scratch-and-dent outlet-store jigsaw.  Then I eased the edges with a four-in-hand

The runners are UHMW plastic.  The platform is ½" birch plywood.  The fences are 1½"-thick red oak.  The platform is under-sized for the saw.  When I started work on the sled, I sized it for the saw I inherited from Nicole's Dad.  My current saw is larger.  I screwed the fences to the platform, without glue, so that I can use them with a larger platform, later.  At the moment, the largest Item I can cut is 8" across.  It's already proven useful, though.

"The Yites are Yitted!"

Finally put lights on the house.exterior_lights.jpg

Apparently, Birds Are Lovin' It, Too

Exiting the drive-thru at McDonald's in Frandor, yesterday (adjacent to Marshall Music), I saw the biggest Mourning Dove, ever, perched in a tree next to the dumpster.  And then I noticed it was tearing at something held under it's foot.  This is not typical dove behavior.

It is, however, apparently typical of a raptor eating a kill.  (Birdchick video of hand-feeding a Peregrine Falcon)  Nicole & I pulled into a parking-space, where I could watch.  The bird was amazingly cool.  Almost immediately after I noticed it, a guy walked over to retrieve his bicycle from very near the tree.  I doubt the bird even paused eating.  Bicycle-Guy was very cool, also.  I imagine many people would become anxious or agitated, confronted by "red in tooth, and claw" up-close.  He seemed aware of the bird, but ignored it and rode off.

Raptor-identification is not my thing.  All the smaller ones seem to be blue/gray above and streaky-buff below.  ID'ing them, as far as I can tell, is mostly a matter of comparing details (overall size, paleness/darkness of mustache, where the wing-tips fall on the length of the tail when the wings are closed, etc.).  If I were to guess, I'd guess this was a Merlin or a Sharp-Shinned Hawk.

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