Loaded up the bull for his trip to the sale barn. The owner of the barn thinks he has a buyer lined up who will use the bull for breeding. He was not pleased. He even got out of our fences while we were trying to load him but we got him back in.
I really could not take time to take a picture while there were no fences between the bull and the road.
Then I went to town and got sheetrock and a dab of lumber to finish up the shop.
Our sale barn is in Pawnee, OK, and that is also the location of our Indian Clinic. My son in law is an Osage native American and had to go to the clinic today so he graciously chauffeured the bull on his big outing.
I had a little difficulty thinking backwards (even though I'm left handed and usually backwards comes naturally). I want the refractory tongue and grooves for the furnace to have a little space when the pieces are butted, and not have the tongue and groove hold the joint apart. I made the mold pieces too close and needed a larger tongue (which is the mold for the groove). I only wanted to add about 1/16". My solution was to glue a board to the tongue.
And then plane most of it back off. Worked pretty good.
Also been trying to get by a local wrecker (tow truck) company. They have lots of bent alloy wheels. I offered to buy at the going rate but they wanted to give me three burned ones.
Hey! Free is free!
Been piddling on the tractor. Had some studs which had bad threads. Got them cleaned up and reinstalled and when my hand was here we set the top back on the transmission. I need to get this out of the shop.
And he's getting the last full sheet of ceiling put up.
That was quick. And since the tractor belongs to my insulators I'd better get it done before I ask them to come insulate. And, no, they don't use the tractor in insulation work. They work in the medical field (I see them in the hospital, but they are salesmen or something) and insulate on the weekends, and they have a farm where the tractor is used. Not that you asked.
Thanks for stopping in!