Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Preparing for Winter IV



Finished up the leaves and yardwork this weekend. I haven't pulled the garden fence up yet but the tractor is done! Still have to change the oil and put it to bed.

I've started using what I call an oil sucker-- an oil extractor. It sucks the oil out from where you put the oil in. It works beautifully. Here is one. Here is another. You put the tube in and it sucks it out. It doesn't get any easier than that.

You still have to take care of the oil filter but for machines for which that's a minor difficulty or machines that do not have one it makes oil changes easy. The one I have is borrowed and I have to return it.

The current wine has been racked again. I plan on bottling the "white". The "red" will not be ready for a while yet. I used a white wine recipe for my mixed red wine grape juice. I tasted it last night when I racked it. It's going to take a while to mellow.

Put up the canopy over the wood-- we have four cords holding down the ground. I could stack it but then I'd still have to brush the snow off. I could build a wood shed but then I have to move it from where the truck drops it off to the shed.

A few years ago we hit on this idea. We bought a party canopy with metal struts and a cover. The truck brings the wood and dumps it and we put the canopy up over it. The original struts were cheap metal and not intended for winter use. But over the years when falling limbs and snow break the tubes I've been replacing them with steel pipe. At this point I think it might take a direct nuclear strike. Every few years we just replace the canopy.

It's been a warm fall but now that Thanksgiving is here, that's pretty sure to change.
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Wall of Idiots
Cocaine in the drinking water
Zetia and Vytorin vs Niacin
Uninsured patients die more from trauma
Ray Comfort and here

Links of Interest
Ardi
Stone tool using chimps
Post Polio Syndrome
A new species on the Galapagos
Fishing on Europa
New vaccines
Gamma rays from Cygnus X-3
Electric Vehicle Coalition
Hobbits are new human species
The Bloop of Cthulu

DIY
Stone arrowhead
Wimhurst Machine and here
Char cloth
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Lost screw finder and here
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PDFs of Make projects
2x4 Upright base
2x4 Xylophone
Green Thai curry paste
Kombucha tea
Faux stained glass
Pectin from scratch

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Miniature Woodworking Tools.



John Maki has a hobby: making classic woodworking tools in miniature. He does a beautiful job.

I've been following his blog, here, for a couple of years now. The French coachmaker's plow plane is the current project he's just completed. This wondrous object is about 31/2 inches.

Go look at his work. Go check out his gallery. Be amazed.

Humans at their best.
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Wall of Idiots
2012 and here and here and here

Links of Interest

Bacteria's role in weight gain
Making health care better
Euro urban super volcano
Missing link to the sauropods found
The Sudbury meteor impact
LCROSS finds water and here
Vertical Farms
Malaria and here, here
The real green revolution
Conservation success with the giraffe
Only goats can prevent forest fires
Lightsails to loft next year
Freshwater eels
The intelligence of pigs
High carb vs protein diets

DIY
Handplane Central

Preparing for Winter III

(Picture from here.)

We've had a warm fall this year. So far this has been a good thing. It's slowed down the ripening of the persimmons but it has enabled me to catch up on getting ready for winter.

One of the things on my list is to put heat to the shop.

My shop is a 12x12 alcove off the garage. Last year, I put up walls and a ceiling. Now it's enclosed-- sort of. There are still spaces where the warm air leaks out. The doors leak. The floor is raw concrete.

That said, it's not like I'm heating the space all winter long. I need to keep warm enough that I can work there and let it freeze solid when I'm not.

My first preference was to put in a little wood stove. Wood stoves are particularly good for this. They can put out a lot of heat in a short period of time and a small stove burns out quickly. They're cheap. We already have the wood. However, code requires too much space surrounding the stove to fit it in the space I had.

The next option I investigated was a gas stove. There are three problems with this. 1) We don't have natural gas; we only have propane. 2) Propane pegs gasoline as it is often derived from oil processing. 3) The small stoves I looked at had a passive venting from the room across a surface that was intimately connected to the combustion surface. This meant dust getting in this space was a fire hazard.

Electric heating was the next thing I looked at. Electric has the cheapest installation cost but the largest continuing cost. We already pay too much for electricity. In addition, while electricity can put out some heat continuously, it doesn't pump out the initial BTUs very well-- something the shop requires. Besides which, electrical circuits are at a premium in the shop. I only have two coming from the house and one of those is dedicated to the greenhouse furnace.

The last method I looked at was a pellet heater. I had looked at this earlier but dismissed it because of the huge start up cost-- in excess of $2000. I'd be better off burning money. When the wood stove fell through I looked again.

I did find a pellet stove from Northern Tool, the US Stove Forester. This seems to have sufficient BTUs to heat the shop. It has a small foot print and, best of all, it's under $1000. Installation is easy-- a hidden cost of the wood stove which requires a full chimney.

I received the stove yesterday and it's holding down the concrete in the shop right now. I have the vent kit for the combustion chamber ($240) but I'm having trouble finding the 2 inch pipe to handle the fresh air venting. I still have to get a permit for it ($50).

I'm consoling myself that if it works out well and later I manage a better solution, it would be no hardship to take out the stove and put it in the house. All of the material would be the same. The only difference would be the cost of the actual installation and the permit.

Sigh. I've been saving for this. That's what I keep telling myself.

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Wall of Idiots
Destroying the world with the LHC and rebuttal
Ann Coulter. This one is particularly exploitative and stupid.
Selling cigarettes in Africa. Should it be on the Wall of Evil?
Lies about FactCheck.org
Lies from the Republicans on Health Care
Conservative lies about H1N1

Links of Interest
Growing penis tissue. No. Really.
Eyesight to the blind: Mirror neurons without sight
Planets alter the chemistry of their suns
Health care impact on climate change

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Candy corn
Illuminated signs
Umbrella light

Thursday, November 5, 2009

Preparing for Winter IIa


(Picture from here.)


Didn't get as much done as I wanted to. The Hickory and Chestnuts have not dropped all their leaves. So I couldn't finish up the tractor and put it away. Consequently, the right garage bay is still cluttered.

But I was able to clean up the yard considerably and put away the rest of the machines:
  1. Snow Blower I
  2. Snow Blower II
  3. Generator I
  4. Generator II
Why, you may ask, do we have two snow blowers and two generators.

Well, I reply. The two generators are historical. Generator I is a good generator with 220 output that I can hook directly into the house system. The second generator was the first one we purchased. It's more of a utility generator. We can take it up to the cabin and use it since the cabin has no electricity.

Why have a generator at all? you may ask.

Glad you asked that question, I reply. When we first moved into the house we were at the tail end of the electrical lines. If the system hiccuped, we lost power. In addition, the power was pretty dirty. We lost two television over the first two years. This has calmed down since.

However, we still have a greenhouse, well and furnace: all of which don't work without electricity. So, we bought a generator. That went on well for a number of years prior to the green house. We could just run an extension into the house and run the blower on the wood stove.

With the greenhouse, we had a bigger issue. We needed to run the actual greenhouse furnace-- which didn't run without electricity. At that point we bought the Big Guy: Generator I. We now have a tie-in to the electrical system of the house. So I can run Generator I, run the power directly into the house and switch on and off what we need to run.

But then, you ask, why two snow blowers?

An excellent question, I reply. This is because of the Rule of Twos. The power losses of the first year taught us a lesson: critical systems will fail and we need a backup. Thus, the Rule of Twos. Two mechanisms for a critical backup. A breakage in the snow blower in 1995 brought that home to us. We have a 150 foot driveway. I'm not getting any younger. So when the electric start died on Snow Blower I, I kept the machine and purchased Snow Blower II. We now have two of them.

Every year I change the oil, test the systems and make sure everything works prior to winter.

And, in case you're wondering, we don't consider the tractor essential. It's a convenience.

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World's greatest tree house
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CD Based drawing machine
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Burning ice and Mister Kent's Chemistry Page
Contraptor
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Wednesday, November 4, 2009

Preparing for Winter II


(Picture from here.)

Every fall we have to set up for winter. Up here in the sub-frozen north (the really frozen north starts at Maine) we don't worry too much about summer. We don't have air conditioning. We don't worry about it.

Winter, however, is another matter.

Winter starts up here in October. We've already had a little snow. Might get some tonight. Usually, I have everything nailed down by Columbus Day. This year is taking a bit longer.

Things that have yet to be done:
  • The Yard: Putting anything away. Drain and put away the hoses. Gather up the remaining leaves and needles and put them away. Finish putting up the grape arbor in the garden. Pull up the stakes and fence of the garden so that it's easily handled. Finish putting up the canopy over the woodpile.
  • The Greenhouse: put away the shade cloth.
  • The Machines: Check out/change oil of the generators. Check out/change oil of the tractor. Check out/change oil of the snow blowers. Put away the tractor and grass catcher.
  • The Garage: Move the machines in their proper places and ready it for use.
  • The House: Seal up the windows. Close down the outside faucets.
  • The Shop: Install the new heater. Seal up any outstanding holes. Finish putting up the foam and outer wall of one side. (Inner wall is done.)
So there is still a lot to do.

This weekend I plan on handling the Yard, the Greenhouse and the Machines. Hopefully, I'll get to the Garage.

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Idling buses
17,291 species threatened with extinction
Creationism emerges in the Islamic world
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GRB vs quantum gravity: QG loses
Mass, energy and the sun
Giant pliosaur
Pure air

DIY
Joining the Energy Underground

Thursday, October 29, 2009

Preparing for Winter I

(Picture from here.)

The weekend was mostly home stuff. I had to kill a couple of chickens-- which, I suppose, deserves an explanation.

We raise chickens for the eggs. We'd use relatives, as suggested by Woody Allen in Annie Hall, but we actually do need the eggs and the relatives just don't have the capacity.

This year, we purchased a lot of chicks, about 25 or so, that were supposed to be all hens. We raised them and sold some. Then, mid-summer, a raccoon got into the chicken enclosure and slaughtered all but two of our chickens: Sam, the rooster and Abigail, the oldest hen.

The hens went from being for sale to being our egg producers.

Chick sexing is not an exact science and we ended up, after John Carpenter's The Raccoon, with three roosters. One of them had completely kowtowed to Sam and they get along. The remaining two were kept separate. We had an idea that somebody might want them and we could give them away.

Nobody wants roosters.

Personally, I like the crowing. But I can see it can get on someone's nerves. Long ago when we first did this we got half a dozen young roosters. Wendy thought she might not be able to handle dealing with eating the birds we had raised. But after the summer of half a dozen competing and crowing roosters, she didn't have any trouble.

But now it's nearly winter. It's time. It's done.

Other pre-winter activities included: replacing the canopy over the chicken house, gathering up and mulching the leaves, making more wine-- or, rather, racking the wine that's already being made. (See here.) The "white" is now very dry. It's going to need aging but I think it'll be fine. The "red" still has a specific gravity of 1.060 so there's still a lot of sugar. I racked it but then pressed the grapes. So it still had a lot of sediment left in the fluid. So I'll have to rack it again later in the week.

Still a few more things to do until winter proper gets here. Battening down the hatches as it were.

Then, bring it on.
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Wall of Idiots
Tribes against wind turbines
The world is not cooling
Glenn Beck... again
Britons say teach both evolution and creationism


Links of Interest
More cool things about mantis shrimp and here and here
Ur Death
The 50 kiloton asteroid
The return of the Aral Sea
Naked Mole Rats vs. Cancer
Bear lore
Slap shot climate change: the hockey stick graph
Treatment for retinitis pigmentosa
Tribes against uranium mining
Bears like minivans. Bears eat minivans.
Economists vs. Entropy: Does economics violate physics?
Phantom limb topology
Pug v Dalek
Plastiquarium
Salman Rushdie Facebook Flirtation
V: A Short Film with Hardware
Most distant object yet detected
Einstein right again! Heavens not askew! Savants not agog!
The nature of evolutionary fitness
Desalination redux
Autoimmune disease vs cancer
Stem cells and infertility

DIY
Chickens in winter
Low tech tools
Sustainable agriculture
Cultivating new farmers
1000 ideas for creative reuse
Brave new world lamp
Professional water rocket guide
Tesla spirit radio
Beer
EZ Halloween Costumes
Solar power station
Phot-o-lantern