Rock, Ride, and Rooster
Or maybe it's a problem with me. Hard to tell.
Work on the new stone is underway. The first round of sit-and-stare, points the way to what needs to be done. At first I wanted to do something with a lot of open work and detail, but there are several large cracks in the stone that could make that a risky proposition. I know I want a curve in that straight vertical edge. I know I want every surface machine smooth, nothing rough, or "natural", except for the overall shape of the rock I started with.
Time to break out the angle grinder. This is my least favorite part of the job. The grinder is fast, but it's messy, noisy, and always trickier than it seems like it ought to be. So here we are:
Before:
After:
Tune in next post for more of this stuff.
Anyway.
Sunday the bike gang got together to do the Foothills Ciclavia ride in Pomona, La Verne, and San Dimas. These are some darn cool events. The cities involved sponsor an all-day street party for the public. They shut down about twelve miles of surface streets for bikes and pedestrians. There are food trucks, entertainment, booths for all kinds of organizations and causes, some vendors, bike repair, and even a farmer's market.
Takin' a break in San Dimas. (ht Penny)
We broke out the stretch bikes, and wore the club shirts, but not our vests. Not so long ago we'd have brought the club vests, and we'd have joined up with riders from several different clubs for the cruise. But not today. We saw no other clubs, only a couple of other guys on stretch bikes, and maybe one or two riders on classics. Things change. Me, too. The foothills route was (take a guess) hilly.
Not very long ago I'd have pulled the long incline easily. Now it's uh- less fun than once it was.
needin' a break. (pics ht Troy)
OK. Now the rooster.
First, my good camera broke, so I had to use the cheapie. Here's our kitchen rooster:
I'll note here, that the kitchen rooster is actually painted green. The picture had all kinds of glare, so I P/shopped it black.
Before I was born (1952), my grandfather cut this out with a jigsaw, from of a piece of 1/4" plywood, as a gift for my grandmother. It was on the wall up behind the stove in my grandmother's kitchen back in Dearborn Michigan. She brought it with her when she moved out here after my grandfather died, in '66. When she and my mother bought this house in '72 the rooster went up on the wall behind the stove here, where it is today.
Last Sunday at the bike ride I spotted this on the chimney of a house in San Dimas:
Compare:
I looked in Google images for "rooster silhouette."
There are zillions, but I found no perfect match for this one. Note missing toes on the hind foot on the black one. It fell and broke long ago. So where did the pattern come from?
'Tis a mystery.
So, the news of the day continues its never ending journey from bad to worse. I’m wondering when “worse” runs out, and what kind of awful thing follows. The morning tour through the bookmarks gets depressing as hell. But just like in the newspaper of yesteryear there is still the comics section.
Vox Day has got a darn good comics page going. I've been following a few of these stories, and they're all kinds of fun. It's a great break from the toxicity.
ARKHAVEN
Main Page
Here are links to some of my favorites The links open to the index page so you can start the stories at episode one. The installations are short.
Avalon: Crime drama serial with super-powered “specials”.
Something Big: (my favorite of all these) The UFO’s have landed. Earth is in ruins. A former bank robber, and a gang of feral kids plan a heist on the aliens.
Vegfolk Tales: A fun, quirky fantasy, laced with satire. Young mushroom finds himself in an alternate story universe.
Invasion 55: Aliens attack a remote airbase outside a tiny Nevada town in 1955. This is classic fifties B movie material. An absolute blast!
There is a lot more over there. Check Rebel Dead Revenge for over-the-top weird, or The Saga of Evil Monkey Man for wacky, crazy fun.
Have a great day, y’all.
JWM