Bobby, I was watching Irma coverage and all the information is on Florida, but I wondered what would happen in S. Carolina. It sounds like you are headed to safer grounds. Be safe and I hope all is well when you return,
Dwight
Dwight
Bobby, I was watching Irma coverage and all the information is on Florida, but I wondered what would happen in S. Carolina. It sounds like you are headed to safer grounds. Be safe and I hope all is well when you return,
Dwight
Made it through the storm lost one huge tree that just happened to land on my just finished just painted fence. Lost one sheet metal panel off of the barn but expect to fix. Still have some that I did not get up. Plenty of flood water in the cottage and the sand bags did nothing. It appears to be coming up out of the ground and seeping in at the sill. The house is on a slab and I have an overhanging roof that goes out six feet from the side that leaks. The ground below it is dry and all of it makes no sense but as the house walls are mostly block if it ever gets bad enough to destroy my laminate flooring I will tile it and be done with it! Anyone know if persimmon is good burning wood? I now have a lot of it. I can't imagine what would have happened if we had gotten hit with this storm at full force. Thanks for the prayers. Bobby
Glad you're safe!
I think you'll find persimmon to burn very hot and not a lot of ash.
So sad to hear Sarah has more trials to go through.
Bob would tell you you're tempting hurricanes by taking the shutters down.
Dry a bit of that persimmon to make tool handles, like for wood chisels. I bet you'll like the results.


Bobby: i agree that you should save the persimmon if you have some with good grain cause it wasn't cheap to buy or use for my golf clubs back when gas only cost $.29 per gallon. might make some great handles like Andy said or maybe something a bit nicer depending on what size pieces you have.
i'm saying my prayers for your bride (Sarah) and i hope her operation is as successful or maybe even more successful than Lyndon's was cause he's still around and doing great.
i think you missed my question on how common is it for you to KICK A COTTONMOUTH snake?
Also keep those quotes coming as you have time.

Bobby
I hope everything goes well for Sarah.
I can tell you that having a new stomach made for her should go ok (with a competent surgeon). When they made my new one they also removed 10cm of my Oespohageus, so my stomach is now not only 25% the size of a normal one, but it's also between my lungs above the diaphragm. Just takes a while for it to all settle down again. The first time I sneezed after the op my stomach sneezed as well due to the compression - quite disconcerting let me tell you!![]()
Good luck! And glad to hear Irma didn't cause you any great problems.
Lyndon
Down Here - and at work!![]()
Bobby! Is Maria coming for a visit?
I hope not! I just spent the whole day yesterday climbing ladders with a chain saw cutting up the persimmon tree one section at a time in order to keep it from crushing the rest of my fence. It still needs to be finished and the limbs hauled off. The wood is real nice but very wavy and not straight for very long. Maybe some hammer handles or ax but mostly small stuff. I may get some bowls out of it though. As far as lumber not so much.
All of the twists and turns are what made persimmon so valued in wooden golf clubs back before metal drivers. If you can turn something from it I would love to see pictures (or it didn't happen). I cut it into logs and burned them whole in the fireplace. Now I am missing the persimmon bread my neighbor made with them every year.
Kenny this is one of the things I did yesterday with the persimmon. The other is a carvers/woodcrafters mallet which came out nice but is locked in a paper bag with shavings to let it dry slowly. The picture is of a mortar in the rough that I am keeping moist to see which way works best. I will make the pestle when I am sure it is dry and not cracking warping etc.
Kenny this is one of the things I did yesterday with the persimmon. The other is a carvers/woodcrafters mallet which came out nice but is locked in a paper bag with shavings to let it dry slowly. The picture is of a mortar in the rough that I am keeping moist to see which way works best. I will make the pestle when I am sure it is dry and not cracking warping etc.
Great turnings, Bobby!
Are you painting the ends of the wood to slow checking? I've got a saw log out in the woods my woodcutter left and I need to get out there and paint it.
I did paint them with spray paint as it was all I had but several coats. I only did the large ones so far as I plan to mill them by the end of Oct. Pictures of the tool rest brazed together again.
Bobby: when you braze cast do you heat up the cast first and then either stick it in the sand or an oven or BBQ heated up so it cools down slowly or do tell? a lot of discussion is on this vise repair 101 thread about brazing and i've yet to do some at all much less on 100 year old vises so just wondering how you are able to do it. nice work
speaking of work i'm building a little (hee hee) mailbox stand that jumped from cedar 6x6's to 8x8's since i have some. since i have already installed the 5.5 inch supports i'm having to cut out some of the cedar so the supports can be inset and i can't recall which box or bucket all my chisels are in since i moved in some new cabinets and bins in my garage. i'm doing it with a router and a skill saw and planer and wondering if you might know of an easier idea cause it's hard to see the line to cut with my router. i've done one and thinking i'll use the skill saw to make the cuts on the edges and then router out the middle and across the top. tips??
cheers and have a great day!!
got another good quote before i think of one or do a search?
