1/2 Cup
Member Emeritus
Andy thank you for the explanation of your Agricultural Terraces. I have never seen anything like that.
How old would they be?
How old would they be?
Andy's back! Now let's bring back the WPA! Welcome back!

Thanks, Bobby!Flintstonian propulsion? ;-)
Hi Andy
Great not so short storyIn my head your London/cockney accent
Is all a bit **** Van **** / Bert the chimney sweep , gawd blimey G’vnor.
Good sized logs, have you anything in mind for them?
Regards
Steve![]()

The lower one was the highest he had ever seen. Sounds like a great line/idea for a song.
Welcome back Andy, glad to hear you are doing well. Sad to hear your wife went through what she did in Houston. Continued prayers for the both of you.
Andy thank you for the explanation of your Agricultural Terraces. I have never seen anything like that.
How old would they be?

Andy, I'm surprised you feel like you were in the wrong place. There's no good place for a Grand Mal seizure but at least you were by Sharon's side in the hotel room. If she had one while you are in the shop or out tending the herd, you might not know right away.Dang it if she didn't have another major seizure in the hotel room in Houston. Talk about feeling like I was in the wrong place. But she got through it and the rest of our trip was uneventful.
MD Anderson is great, everything is good there. I'm OK too.
I'm perfectly fine with being the other Bob but it would help if you called Stewart Shorty Stumpy (or Shortstump) so I know you don't mean me (it's my other CB handle)...
You're stumped? May I call you Stumpy?
They were apparently built in the 1930's and included the water outlets as part of the system. I see a few mortar repairs but for the most part they are going to make 100 years without and particular attention. Good engineering. You are also in the water control business.
Next to the house I have terraces which are on porous stable land and they have no outlets. They are designed to hold the water and help it soak in. These with the outlets are a tighter but productive soil and are designed to safely drain the water. The soil is twenty feet or more deep here, while the ones by the house have rock 3 to 5 feet down.
Here's an aerial shot.
![]()
The green line is a fence. South of the fence is a terraced bottom field, with no outlets. You can't see the terraces in this field, just the the results of mowing. The blue line is the stream, the yellow highlights each terrace (8) and the red indicates the approximate location of the stone outlet structures. The blue dot on the top terrace (left) may not have an outlet, I think I've counted seven plus the big one. The right one is the lowest highest one.
This is a SE facing field and would make a great 16 acre orchard or vineyard as it slopes nicely to let cold air fall away.
I'm done dreaming now.
Thanks for sending me off on this little trip.![]()
It feels good to go to work everyday and know you've helped someone out but it REALLY feels good doing something like that. Neighbors and friends helping each other out is really what it's all about. Doesn't get much better than helping someone in need.A young man I know is having a tough time of it. He and his two brothers are trying to find jobs and having difficulty doing so. He is delivering pizzas (not particularly lucrative when you add wear and tear on the car) to make ends meet and called today. He had hit a deer. Not too bad.
Andy, I'm surprised you feel like you were in the wrong place. There's no good place for a Grand Mal seizure but at least you were by Sharon's side in the hotel room. If she had one while you are in the shop or out tending the herd, you might not know right away.
Really glad to hear you are OK.
I'm perfectly fine with being the other Bob but it would help if you called Stewart Shorty Stumpy (or Shortstump) so I know you don't mean me (it's my other CB handle).
Andy: so it sounds like maybe you want a vineyard after you get you fill of melting metal and forging? But you don't drink or did you mean you just don't drink BEER?
happy to hear you made it back safely from your trip to Houston. also sorry to hear your bride had another seizure which is probably never a good place to have it. thankfully you were there to help though.
I'm enjoying my Saturday and hope you enjoyed yours.
keep up the great work and fun posts!!
Grizz: sounds like a fun trip. Be careful on some of those roads in the south cause you can loose a car in the pot holes if you get off the main roads.

Andy thank you very much for the detailed explanation
It is an irrigation system of the likes that we don't have out here at all.
Those older installations were certainly well engineered to last![]()
It feels good to go to work everyday and know you've helped someone out but it REALLY feels good doing something like that. Neighbors and friends helping each other out is really what it's all about. Doesn't get much better than helping someone in need.






Lurking but still here. Glad your trip went off well with everything considered.
I'll ship them if they're fit in a flat-rate box
Your area must not have the demand.
That would be the large flat rate box.Andy: since i've never been to OKLAHOMA that I can recall all I know of your roads is the paved raceway in front of your farm that you drive 100MPH+ on in your hot rods and when checking for pot holes you drive the SHOW TRUCK.
that said I did get off the beaten path in Mississippi about 15 years ago and I swear if I would have kept going down that road I would have disappeared and never got to experience GJ.
hope you enjoyed your Sunday!!
BTW is the hot weather treating your cows and the bull and Hershey ok since I seem to be the only one asking?
Andy sorry to hear also. We will be sure to keep you both in our prayers and pay special attention to these times. Bobby
Glad to have you back Andy, I have a growing pile of aluminum that is starting to talk back and say mean things. I think I'll have to sacrifice them if you'd be willing to accept? Sorry to hear about your wife's problems, I hope for the best for both of you.
JB
Chip, the all American hammer, enjoyed his first two days on site fitting timber doors and frames, along with his new adoptive family.
With a bit more practice Chip thinks his tea making will improve, once he's learnt the language.
jpg.gif IMG_2921.jpg (136.4 KB)
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Thanks for the visits, guys. I've not had much shop time lately and may not for a bit. But it's coming!
There's more to life than shop time. Not a lot, but definitely more.
Looking after family, friends and pets is definitely important. Oh! and I guess looking after yourself as well.
Sent from my SM-G930T using Tapatalk
Andy: if any member here on GJ deserves a day (or two or more) of rest it's you. happy to hear your critters are doing ok too.
i'm sending extra prayers for you and your bride and hope you have a few more smiles left in your lives.
have a great SATURDAY!!
Am I to assume she likes it?Lately I have been fixing up some of these Stanley #77 dowel machines. They work like a giant pencil sharpener and have different dies for different sized dowels. When the machine is stored for years the dies often get stuck in place and can be hard to remove since they spin on a shaft. I have found that a well placed smack from my Andiluminium hammer gets them moving. As they used to say back home in Carolina, "Now, that dog can hunt!"





I get you for the need to get shop time in, regardless of what it is.
I found the last three years that all the little things I did were what kept my head and heart occupied in a way that I needed it.
My mum used to use a “Grass broom” all her life and being as she was, it would wear evenly till it became my dads garage grass broom, more of a brush at that point.
Looking forward to making it to your place with Dennis and Craig.
I think shop time is very important. There are tons of ways to escape the concerns of the day, but if I can make it a productive escape building or fixing something, it makes me feel that much better.
That being said, I could use the help of Chip's brother, perhaps a brass brother if one were available?![]()
You can call me shorty or stumpy, just don't call me Bob.
Glad to hear all is well on the home front. Thanks for posting the pic of the terrace. Looks like great place to produce ingredients for Andy's Hard Apple Cider, Martin's Merlot or AM's rice wine.![]()
You're not wrong, the tractor demand/cost has really fallen here too; which is odd given the economy.
Unless now everyone can afford new equipment lol
Works good for me either way since selling isn't a strong suit.

You're not wrong, the tractor demand/cost has really fallen here too; which is odd given the economy.
Unless now everyone can afford new equipment lol
Works good for me either way since selling isn't a strong suit.
Andy, Hershey just looks fine..
That's a great score on the windows for the router.
It should solve a problem or two..
Regards
@ Farmall450
Our mortgage and interest rate went up by 0.25% yesterday from 0.50% so now 0.75% for the first time in 10years.




I can remember being on 18% against a mortgage in the early 90’s on my first home.
Even if I could afford new, I would be selective and only buy what needed to be new, anything where I could let someone else take the knock of instant depreciation, I would buy for sure.
People are strange like that though.

@ Andy, two things, clean shop should only be for your benefit
Love the cabinet idea on the 3D machine.
Craig is an IT guy and one of his hobbies is 3D printing and design, he identified old used upright Soda refrigerators as a perfect source of insulated, silenced cabinets for the printer that he runs in his office space. Because of the noise and smell, it now runs virtually undetected in his home. Cost him about $1.50 on eBay plus collection as nobody had bid on it.
He also has a $25.00 double door unit in his small garage that he converted into a dust and damp proof “wardrobe” for his family’s motorcycle kit.
I suspect you will like the way his head works.

PS. Crucible only a problem if any of it lands on the floor![]()
Andy, wonderful to see thy crucible runneth over (almost).
Perhaps, but did that many people die in the last 18 months?!
Just amazed me how Ms went from 2k on craigslist to $700
Thanks for the comment. I think it is bitumastic, but it can be a ***** to work with. We use coal tar enamel on pipelines. And cathodic protection. On my current lift I used a driveway sealer, similar material. I feel like the undercoating will also be very durable. I do plan to get an anode to install with the lift to give it cathodic protection. In his part of Oklahoma (west of OKC) there is no shallow groundwater but there will be some water seepage during long rainy spells. Which are few and far between.
We'll bed the bottom of the lift in dry concrete mix then backfill with clean sand and put a six inch pad of concrete around the top of the lift. That pad is critical in preventing the lift from tilting when you don't balance the load.
Andy,
Great to see the work and the progress. Glad that Hershey and the bull are doing good.
Dwight
Handy: I love seeing all the muffins and especially like the shiny clean ingots. i also like that you #'d each one just because.
looks like you had a good day and hope you have another good one tomorrow.
cheers (yep ice tea for me but did have a few beers today on a boat ride)
The two lower buckets are filled with ingots. They stack tighter so I can get 75 pounds and be lower than the rim so it makes a nice seat for the top bucket. Three high I might have back failure or bucket failure. And I want to use the muffins up first. FIFO.Remachining the brass made me smile.
Centre or not, that can be part of the story, perfect imperfect.
Well done.
Stash made me smile too, makes you feel pretty good, I know, having spare materials or tools, or ingots.
Crucible very hot! Hope you were suspended from a wire cable to handle it!! Be careful! Well done just dandy Andy not too Handy!
You defintley have it covered on installing.
I am not surprised that they still sell undercoating.
I really was surprised. But I'm naive.