Friday, November 23, 2012

Every Hand Plane Needs a Tuneup - a Reply

I did not intend to go into video, in fact I fought it...but in the end it was no use.

The problem is, I know smart, careful woodworkers who read Fine Woodworking (FWW) closely, and when they see an article from an apparently gold-plated authority--Tommy MacDonald has his own woodworking how-to show on PBS called Rough Cut, does it get any more legit?--they are liable to follow it diligently.

In this case, though, the magazine and author are the ones that ought to be liable. Exhibit A: 

http://www.finewoodworking.com/toolguide/toolguidearticle.aspx?id=35026

No disrespect intended, as both the author and FWW have inspired and taught many, but in this case some really bad advice slipped through, advice that could easily ruin a $400 handplane while attempting to improve it.

Here is my response, with very amateur production values and as one friend said, narrated by a homeless person--ouch! Another said the shop looks too clean--can't win.

Sunday, August 26, 2012

Writing desk revisited

At last: a picture that doesn't make the writing desk look bowlegged. Sure wish I could work outside like this all year, but alas, even in August it was sprinkling two hours after taking the picture.


These drawers aren't quite square because of the curving desk front, but they still slide like butter; I admit, it's quite gratifying; please pardon me while I pat myself on the back.


The little Macassar ebony pulls are scooped out deeply underneath for a secure two finger grip. Because the drawer fronts are angled and curved in two planes, the pulls are slightly recessed into the front in order to appear flush all the way around. Fussy work, didn't think ahead that far during design.


Use testing. This piece will have another home, but I want to gather ideas for building it again...which I was ready to start the day I finished!


Saturday, July 14, 2012

Where's the woodworking?

The long absence of woodworking content is raising suspicions that this blog is just a cover for pretty hiking pictures, but not so--at least not entirely. In the interest of retaining credibility, I offer these: 

Legs for a cherry writing desk, with about $1500 worth of ebony socks (based on the time they took):


Nothing else about the desk is flat, so neither are these


Blending the leg and rail--getting there but not yet sweet.


Drawer bottoms are cedar of Lebanon, such fragrance...


Really need a professional shoot for this piece, it's easy to distort the curves, as this picture ably demonstrates. The curves are softer than this suggests, and do not bow in at all. In fact this is downright horrible, but the only pic of the complete piece so far.


Don't other folks wear shavings too? This fashionable European maple headband is a handplane shaving from a cello back blank that wasn't quite up to snuff for an instrument, but made glorious drawer sides. Big thanks to John Preston of Old World Tonewood for helping with this wood!



1000 miles in 6 days


I set out this summer to walk alone some 1000 miles through the Sierra Nevada backcountry, a plan built of hero worship, inspiration, gluttony, and a hint of desperation.



Colin Fletcher wrote “The Complete Walker” in 1968, and his ideas assumed near-mythic status in my eager teen mind. At the core of his walking and writing was this:

Many experienced outdoorsmen – and all responsible hiking organizers – contend that the greatest danger in wilderness travel is one that permeates this book:

Walking alone.

They may have something too. But once you have discovered solitude – the gigantic, enveloping, including, renewing solitude of wild and silent places – and have learned to put it to creative use, you are likely to accept without a second thought such small additional dangers as the solitude imposes.”

In hundreds of subsequent pages he imparted the means—well-honed, intricate, even charming—but I imprinted on his essence: real walkers walk far, in solitude. Fletcher also wrote “The Thousand Mile Summer”. You can see it coming...

Some ten years earlier, following a precipitous one-lane descent to Devil’s Postpile in my grandfather’s giant blue Cadillac—including being run off the road once—I had imprinted on the textures and currents of the young San Joaquin River and the Sierra Nevada mountains, John Muir’s “range of light”. How can one not wish to soak in every corner of this magical and extensive kingdom? Inspiration and gluttony are eminently sensible responses.

Wikipedia informs me that Fletcher was 36 on that epic summer walk up California. I suppose I should feel better now. Humph. For several years I have noticed backpackers my age being pruned out of the backcountry, seemingly with little warning; an injury or illness, a trip with too many grueling ascents under a leaden and sweat-soaked pack, even demon golf. ALERT! Time Running Out!

And so out I went.



I chose the first leg with moderate mileage and elevation change compared to my 400 mile hike in ’09: from Tuolumne south to a quiet corner on the edge Yosemite where the Merced River arises, then north and west as it swells (and hosts a prodigious quantity of mosquitoes), and finally zig-zagging to an airy bivouac on the summit of Cloud’s Rest, 6000’ above the floor of Yosemite Valley.



Those 6 days and 60 miles were a flash flood of experiences, I’m still awash in it. That’s good, because the miles also devoured my knees; there’s plenty of time for reflection.

On the final descent into Tenaya Lake I summoned maximum grit when passing oncoming hikers so they wouldn’t stop me and call for a rescue. In retrospect they were probably occupied by their own suffering, but I was moving so slowly and awkwardly it was embarrassing. On the return shuttle bus my kneecaps threatened to burn right through the skin. I’ve been here before, just before my surgeries when I toasted my knees reffing too many soccer games. A few days of lounging and care only confirmed that I needn’t restock the bear canister with food for the next leg.

I texted my nieces Jen and Nicole about going to their favorite Irish bar in Sacramento—to learn to drink whiskey. Pub crawling in Ireland seemed like a hiking frontier still within reach, and if not the whiskey would provide a fuzzy glow, so WTF. I made a last very flat walk in the 90 degree morning air of Yosemite Valley, drank from an ancient spring for luck, had a pastrami sandwich at Degnan’s for old time’s sake, and headed out of the mountains to Sacramento.