Moderator: Rick
DComeaux wrote:...just don't have much confidence of it being there for the season.
Rick wrote:Love ya, Dave, but nope, no way, you ain't dragging me down with you.
Rick wrote:"God, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, the courage to change the things I can and the wisdom to know the difference."
DComeaux wrote:..
It's going to be hard stop this machine. Money is changing, or has muted conservation.
Darren wrote:Nice to discover some of those things now and not in September; there, now ya have some stuff to do
Rick wrote:...all the necessary hardware, lumber and tools are in the truck...
Duck Engr wrote:It’s never as easy as it seems on paper…
Darren wrote:For all my blind building these days, it's those Torx head deck screws with impact drill. Can keep a grip at all sorts of fun angles common to doing odd blind jobs, and usually easy to remove them if you've need for un-doing whatever you did a while back.
Darren wrote:...and usually easy to remove them if you've need for un-doing whatever you did a while back.
Rick wrote:Darren wrote:...and usually easy to remove them if you've need for un-doing whatever you did a while back.
So, naturally, a new, infinitely more exciting, one arose this morning, as Call met his first deer moments after being let out of our truck in the camp lot and did his best to remain in their company, rather than obey a whistle he may not have even heard over his own excited yapping, as he chased them down a mile long "ridge" into the coastal marsh. The first half mile of that ridge had been hayed over the years, though that portion's only been rough plowed to hold the trees back in recent ones, but I did my best to keep up through the ruts and titty-tall regrowth before giving up on that and taking a perch on an old double seed cart to continue my series of recalls through a whistle designed to be heard during major international soccer matches.
Was the longest, spookiest half hour I've spent in a very, very long time before my "partner" finally showed, this time following my trail out the ridge. He was absolutely woofed and very likely only spared heat stroke by the evaporation-cooled dew on the high grasses. But not too woofed to try to detour on our way back where I'd watched one of his deer cut over the ridge top ahead of me during the chase. Given his exhaustion and close proximity to me, my very loudest "No! Leave it!" took, but it's plain we've a new "quirk" to deal with.
(And one of my wrecked knees has ballooned to remind me I somehow really have become "too old for that shit".)
Rick wrote: Haven't been pleased that my boat's been taking on a good deal of water between my near daily trips out there. Initially checked the usual mudboat suspects: driveshaft and rudder packings and found them watertight. Then checked and replaced the drain plug I found old and worn beyond proper expansion, but learned that wasn't it, either, this morning. So I trailered and pulled it out and. eventually, found it's leaking through a 5" crack under the portable fuel tank. Probably been too hard on the little old boat while reopening trails, though I've not hit anything harder than floating turf "hippos". Not happy about needing a welder, with "a couple weeks" wait, but much better to now than in season - and that puzzle's solved.
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