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Sunday, July 26, 2015

Another gift from the past - round three!


A number of years ago, my grandfather (Happy) passed away.  My grandmother followed not too long after that and as time does, it kept rolling along!  When they moved to Alaska decades ago, my grandparents first built a log house that was snug and chinked with concrete!  It was probably not as snug as my romantic memories of it, but my memories are based on hearing stories of the house from my Aunts, my mother and from Gramma.  After the ranch style house was built, the log house became a garage, or maybe it always was a garage partly, I wasn't around for most of its life!


After the Grands were gone, the property sat empty for a while, as it goes when probate is waiting to be completed, and the log house/garage was already in a bit of a state of disrepair, it was after all more than 50 years old.  When my Aunt and one of her kids and a few of her grand kids (yes - there are a lot of us), moved into the property it was determined that the log house had to come down.  It was a fire and safety hazard, and of course all the kids wanted to explore that old building, maybe it was haunted, maybe there were Raccoon's in there (from the four year old, not realizing yet that we don't have Raccoons in Alaska), or maybe its an army fort, or a Cowboy and Indian hideout.  In reality, as much as we hated to admit it, it was worn out and the floor had gaping holes, and you had to watch where you step or you would have your foot in a gaping hole that you made!

So it was with great sadness that the building was torn down and hauled away.

I had asked my Aunt to save me some of the logs from the house to use for a project that I wanted to make for my mother.  She did and so a full year later I began a small bench from the round logs she saved for me!


None of them were quite the same size but two of them were very close, so I selected those to be the seat of the bench.  I have never worked with round logs before so I didn't have any idea how to square up the bench - I just did my best to make all the cuts the same.

I had to cut the logs in half long wise so they would sit on the base in some semblance of a seat.  I did use 2x4 lumber underneath the seat and around the top of the legs as support and to try to keep it somewhat square - one of the legs really wanted to kick out further then the rest! 

It took me about two days to cut the logs in half - using the reciprocating saw - these old logs are just about petrified!  The wood is beautiful though - weathered nicely and colored blonde where some of the bark was still on.  It mostly fell off while I was working with the logs and the underneath made a nice contrast to the weathered wood that didnt have bark on it.



The kids advised me to use the round part of the logs as the seat also instead of the cut flat side.  We all thought the wood was prettier and the seat didnt have any sharp edges that way either.


Here it is almost finished.  The little thermometer you can see was also on the garage - it is broken but it says "Teelands" and is a memory point for our family as that was the only grocery store in Wasilla for years when I was growing up (Mr. Teeland always gave us penny candy if we were good in the store and his daughter was a teacher at one of our schools) so the thermometer stayed there.

Here is the back side of the little bench.  When I took it over to her mom had the perfect spot for it - she had just finished creating a sitting area and needed a rustic little bench.  A gift from the past.

I still have no idea how to appropriately work with round wood and make it square - especially different sized logs!  But it didnt stop me from creating a project and it turned out wonderfully!  My only regret is that it took me so long to start it!  Don't wait - use what you have, do what you can, have fun and remember the great moments!

Monday, July 20, 2015

A hook for the hose!

Hose storage during the summer is one of the biggest hang-ups (pun intended) that I have here at Wicked Raven Farm.  They are always in the way it seems, but you don't want to put them all the way away each time, especially when it is this hot and we are watering all day.  The guy who does my mowing (aka hubby) has sometimes run over them, or even torn them trying to get them out of the way to mow and there is never enough hose in one area to get as far as you need to go without getting another round out of the storage area!  What to do? What to do?

Enter the simple hook from Lowe's!


I got these little "J" hooks in the landscape/garden section at Lowe's and they are about $2.50 each and are complete with the screws to hang them.


This one is hanging on the front side of our white shed.


I have a hook on each end to hold hose to go all the way out to the end of the yard where I have some Sea Buckthorn bushes, a choke cherry, and a MayDay tree that I am trying to keep alive in this drought/heat wave!

We are also using them at the school garden to hold our hoses there.  The above photo shows only one hook up (drill battery died).  You dont have to have a power drill to hang these up - its just faster!


Here is a hook on the garden mailbox.  Now I have all the tools and the hose right there where the berry bushes and huglekulture are.


Here is the opposite side of the shed.  I am also putting hose hook on a 4x4 post  to plant near the driveway for that side of the yard.  I probably have 500 feet of hose on the farm so it really has to be convenient and easy for me to get hose where I need it.  I think any hook that is large enough to hold hose will work for this - even the ones that are for hanging baskets on.  They make some really pretty hook set ups so I know you could find some that will work where you need a hook for your hose!



Tuesday, July 14, 2015

Put a ring on it- An ultimate upcycle!

This is the shop where we run our business, Ace Water Wells and Pump Service here in Alaska.  It is about 20 miles from Wicked Raven Farm and from the office here at the house.  It is a great business, but it does qualify as in industrial outfit.  As such, there are often some parts and pieces that show up at the shop and aren't really useful for the drillers so.....

I try to take them and make an upcycle out of them!  Of Course!  The rings in the below photo are the rings that protect the steel casing that you can see in the above picture just to the left of the shop on the rack (sorry it's not a better picture).  Our casing comes from out of state and often as it travels, if the rings aren't in there the casing becomes dented and not as round as we would like.  it makes it difficult to work with if it gets too dinged up in transit.



But once the casing is at the shop and the rings are removed, there really isnt much use for them from a drilling perspective.  The potential is there for it to become a landfill item, which I could just not abide.  So I grabbed a big handful of them to use here at the Farm on the shed that was really a blank wall except for the Green Man face on it!


The 6" terra cotta pots fit perfectly inside the rings!


So with my trusty drill, some galvanized screws, and those 6" pots I set to work making the front of the shed a landscape trick!


They only took 1 screw each to hold them up and I was able to score some 3" herbs from Lowe's for $1.00 each since it is a little late in the season!  Voila - the wall became wonderful and really made the shed less of a blank area.  My only change to this project would be that I would not tilt the rings and pots this way and that.  I love the whimsy but it makes it really hard to water them without standing there for a bit and adding a little water at a time.  Maybe I should leave more space in the pot between the plant and the top of the pot - that could work too!

This project will also work if you attach the rings to a 4x4 post, or a fence rail.  Anywhere really.   And you could put something floral/flowering in the pots if you wanted.  I want to be able to bring the pots in when winter comes so I can continue to use the herbs - hence the herb choice.

Check out what might have come in your packing - or look around for what might be wasted otherwise and see if you can make a landscape trick out of it!  Stay tuned for another industrial upcycle coming soon... based on a Pinterest idea even!

Have fun!  

Friday, July 3, 2015

What about that bathroom cleaner!!!!

I am not a big fan of bathroom cleaners!  I'm a fan of a clean bathroom but I hate the cleaners themselves.  The smell of the cleaners makes me gag most of the time - of course so does the smell of a nasty dirty bathroom!  Yikes!  So far my best option has been Mrs Meyers Clean Day Lavender scent - it doesn't make me gag but it almost ruins lavender for me!  It does seem to clean well though also which also is very important to me!

So where am I going with all this?  I had some time to sit and read today (What?????)  Yes I did and I was reading my Mother Earth Living magazine and came across this page with these tips on it:

I was especially intrigued by #5 - so today I tried it!  It doesn't say how much to use so I used about a tablespoon for each bowl!  It was amazing!  It really worked!  Clean sparkly bowls - at least the part that had water in it!  The part that didn't I will have to spray the peroxide on and get it sparkly too!  And no weird smells!  No gagging!  I never thought I would say that my toilets were sparkly.  Once again  - I am not posting pictures of my toilet - just not going there!  And once again - you're welcome! 

I haven't tried any of the other suggestions but I have peroxide on the grocery list because I will be definitely doing the underarm treatment too!  Ill let you know how that goes.

For the full article see Mother Earth Living.com  "13 uses for Hydrogen Peroxide"