Pop!

My regular readers will remember that I went to the auction a couple months ago and ended up with an old banjo clock. It runs, surprisingly, but is in terrible condition cosmetically. So, I’ve decided to turn it into a steampunk project, because I like that sort of thing.

One step along the way is to cut the center out of the clock face so that more of the movement is exposed. How exactly do you do that? I first went to Dunklee’s machine shop, but he said he didn’t have the right equipment and sent me to Kenny, shown below. Kenny has a 4-inch punch, which was a little smaller than I hoped for but good enough.


Kenny’s sheet metal shop is next to and behind the Jesus Superman church, and is completely invisible from the street. As it turns out, Kenny was the guy who made our stainless steel backsplash and range hood cover, but we didn’t meet him directly at the time.

Anyway, he set the brass clock face into a press the size of a camping trailer, turned some dials, lowered the cutting head, and pop! 20 tons of pressure created a perfectly round hole exactly where I wanted it. Magic.

Beauty, beholder, &c. 

Saw these stretched and modded Honda Ruckus in Hartford the other day. Lots of craftsmanship, but lots of ridiculousness at the same time.

The Moto Guzzi Eldorado is pretty much a factory product, on the other hand, but very impressive to look at. I would love to have heard what it sounded like.

But now I see


I lost my computer screen glasses a couple weeks ago. I can get along without, but it’s more comfortable to wear them. So, I made an appointment to get an updated prescription. 

But then I went outside from my desk to watch the train go by, and voilà! I kept the appointment anyway, and am now trying out multi focal contact lenses. 

And thank you for your support …

Remember the Bartles and Jaymes wine cooler ads? I think that was the first time I ever heard that phrase, and the first time the idea of “supporting” a business entered into my consciousness.

Now, the idea of supporting a business, of being loyal to a business, has become commonplace. Some businesses make a point to thank you for your support during the normal course of things, but it seems all too common to hear this for the first time when they are closing their doors.

This kitchen store in Keene was a nice place to walk through, and we have bought a few gadgets there. However, the $200 frying pans, $500 coffee makers, and so on that seemed to make up the majority of their inventory are not things we buy often, if ever.

On the one hand, seeing our local retail shops close leaves me with a sense of guilt… Each failed business, each retirement without a sale, hastens the economic decline that seems inevitable and inexorable in the region. If only I’d spent more money there…

But on the other hand, it leaves me with a sense of anger… each time these business owners failed to support their community by providing what people wanted, at a price they were willing and able to pay, left another opening for the Walmart and Amazon takeover that has surely doomed many small towns before ours.

Of course, neither my guilt nor my anger will slow the great economic forces created by the magic of the Internet and the magic of global supply-chain management. Small stores who sell the same goods as the giants simply can’t compete, and nor can those who delude themselves with higher priced “handmade” goods typically of lower quality. For the sake of the people I live near, for the sake of my property value, and just in general, I hope the remaining business owners, and the next generation, find some way to make a living that doesn’t rely on me “supporting” them out of either guilt or anger…

Urban renewal 

This sad corner of our parking lot has been transformed over the past few weeks into a lovely little garden. We’re not sure why, but it’s cool. 
The pinwheels are given out to donors by Kidsplayce, a non-profit for kids, and we find them more annoying than cute… But in this spot they seem to work. 

Proper 


Whatever else is wrong in the world, it’s refreshing and comforting to see that some people still dress to travel. 

Brimfield Market 


If I were a person who liked old stuff and also liked to check things off lists, then making a pilgrimage to the Brimfield Market woulda been something I really wanted to do. 

Oh wait… I am. 

Awesome. And completely overwhelming. We wandered around for about 4 hours, and maybe saw 5% or so. 

I’m sure a lot of business gets done, but the only actual crowd we saw was at the food court. Hmmm. 

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