Might not be around for a while

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BoB, I have some what the same issue- looks like it is coming down to blocked/ restricted plumbing. Calcification of arteries has shown up in a chest scan have more in-depth scans coming up in about a week, covering the lower 1/2 of me and over all($$$$) plus a stress test ( yuck). I can go about 50 yards and then I have to rest do to pain issues in the same areas as you. I am 73 never had any problems of this before , but they stuck me on blood pressure pills due to being some where in the 140- 180 range 1.5 years ago, its down to where they want it now, and now this.
 
The clean up at the tree loppers yard continues. Yesterday I sold my two shipping containers and the buyer who was from the country picked up one of the containers using a home shop made tilt-a-trailer and will be coming back to pick up the other one next week.

Both containers still contained some lumber and poor quality slabs and as the tree lopper is away I got the buyer to help me empty the container with the least amount of timber in it so he could take one away with him. I skipped going to the gym that morning as I knew moving the timber would give me a good workout which it did.

I used this container for 17 years but only put small amounts of timber through it as it's very difficult getting timber (especially slabs ) in and out of it. I used the other container mainly to store gear.
Container5.jpg

The buyer is just getting into milling, those boxes on the back of his truck are a spanking new 10" Lucas Mill!
Container6.jpg

I still have a few bits and pieces of milling gear to pick up but otherwise it's basically the end of an era. A little sad but inevitable given my health conditions.
 
Other sea container is now gone, I've picked up my CS gear, mills, log rails etc so it's all over. There is still one link left to the Tree lopper Jeff and that is I'm letting hang onto my cant hooks for the last few jobs he has to do this month. Do I miss it - sure do. I've printed out a couple of milling photos and stuck them up on the walls inside the house so I can look at them every day. The B&W one is of my dad (middle of Photo) and his felling partner taken in 1958.

JoBlake.jpg Bobsnew-millingstylea.jpgOct58.jpg
 
Glad to hear that you are finding peace within your life Bob . As a young 70 yr old , i too have slowed down recently . Both my youngest Son & more recently my Daughter have been diagnoised with cancer . Prostrate for the boy & brain tumor for my daughter . Surgery & then secondary radiation & chemo have provided a good long term prognosisin within both cases . I personally still keep doing meaning full work around the shop , however have to admit that lifes trials & tribulations tend to eventually slow you down lol . Forunately both my wife & i are relatively healthy . Your down sizing & redirecting your focus on new interests is healthy & can be monentarily rewarding . I enjoy hunting & fishing with my wifes involvement & support . We annually travel to our hunting & fishing camps , pick berries , buck up blowdowns & sit by the fire pit & enjoy a setting sun over the lakes North ridgeline on a cool fall evening . I certainly hope you continue to travel & find further inner peace & contentment within lifes adventures , be strong brother !
 
I hit like because there isn't a not like button. Condolences if a little late. Loss dulls to ache which leads to a part of your heart walled off for that person never forgotten
 
You guys weren't concerned about the big snake under the log ? :<)
Erik.
Ha, I first posted this photo in 2010 and also did not mention the snake. This generated many concerned posts on the forum but I continued to say nothing. Eventually a forum member hinted it might not be real and that is indeed the case. When I confirmed this I posted that we put it there to scare the real snakes away. The area where that tree was milled is riddle with 2 highly poisonous snakes (Dugite and Tiger) both being in the top 10 poisonous snakes in Australia. The reality is that these snakes (unlike some like the Eastern Brown) are quite shy and as soon as a chain saw is started up they will usually slither away. My dad who felled big Karri and Jarrah trees in this country for 13 years rarely saw snakes when using chainsaws. He did see many more in the early days when using axes and cross cuts saws .

The snake was bought by the land owner (Jeff) who had a dog that was a Rottweiler Beagle cross and it hunted snakes. Dogs who hunt these snakes have short life spans so Jeff decided to set up a snake avoidance program for his dog using rubber snakes and this was one of many that he had around teh property. The program was a complete failure because the dog ignored the rubber snakes and kept bringing home dead ones. Miraculously the dog lived to a ride old age and died of natural causes a couple of years back.

Her's another one we mocked up with another rubber snake.
snake.jpg
 
A few weeks back I picked up the cant hooks from the Tree Lopper's yard and so am no longer part of his milling operation. My milling gear is sitting inside my carport while I decide how much I will keep or move on. I've found it increasingly difficult standing up for more than about 30 minutes in my shop and walking the dogs for more than a few hundred yards. It's my ankles and knees that are causing me grief and am about to go see a Rheumatologist as my GP says I have rheumatoid arthritis. By working in short bursts and with the help of my BIL we have made a few things out of metal. The latest being this semi-aerodynamic trailer tool box for my 8x5 trailer. It tows really nicely with my EV and the shape does not impact the battery too much. The best part of this project was that all the materials and fixture and fittings came free out of BILs work's scrap bin as the business is closing down and - yes moving to china!

Almost.jpg

Trailerall.jpg.
 
Glad to hear that you are finding peace within your life Bob . As a young 70 yr old , i too have slowed down recently . Both my youngest Son & more recently my Daughter have been diagnoised with cancer . Prostrate for the boy & brain tumor for my daughter . Surgery & then secondary radiation & chemo have provided a good long term prognosisin within both cases . I personally still keep doing meaning full work around the shop , however have to admit that lifes trials & tribulations tend to eventually slow you down lol . Forunately both my wife & i are relatively healthy . Your down sizing & redirecting your focus on new interests is healthy & can be monentarily rewarding . I enjoy hunting & fishing with my wifes involvement & support . We annually travel to our hunting & fishing camps , pick berries , buck up blowdowns & sit by the fire pit & enjoy a setting sun over the lakes North ridgeline on a cool fall evening . I certainly hope you continue to travel & find further inner peace & contentment within lifes adventures , be strong brother !
Sorry to hear about your family tribulations. I sold our camper/trailer as there were too many sad memories involved in using that and my health is not up to camping these days. Your approach is similar to mine except I'm somewhat hobbled at standing and walking. I go to the gym and lift weights 3 times a week and feel good afterwards even if I'm a bit sore the following day. I use my shop 3-4 times a day in about 1/2 hour blocks but have to rest in between. While seated I can using my 3D printer - currently printing out disposable brass instrument mouthpieces for my elementary school music teacher daughter in law who uses the mouthpieces for her annual student auditions for the following years tuition program. The students are tested to see if they can make a mouthpiece "buzz" - some can't do this till they're older. Regular mouth pieces have to be disinfected in between use whereas the students can keep the 3D printed ones to practice.
 
Sorry to hear about your family tribulations. I sold our camper/trailer as there were too many sad memories involved in using that and my health is not up to camping these days. Your approach is similar to mine except I'm somewhat hobbled at standing and walking. I go to the gym and lift weights 3 times a week and feel good afterwards even if I'm a bit sore the following day. I use my shop 3-4 times a day in about 1/2 hour blocks but have to rest in between. While seated I can using my 3D printer - currently printing out disposable brass instrument mouthpieces for my elementary school music teacher daughter in law who uses the mouthpieces for her annual student auditions for the following years tuition program. The students are tested to see if they can make a mouthpiece "buzz" - some can't do this till they're older. Regular mouth pieces have to be disinfected in between use whereas the students can keep the 3D printed ones to practice.
Thanks for the condolences Bob , happy to hear you enjoy your workouts . I worked out with free weights seriously back in the day . I played competitive hockey all my life & weights were crucial to strength & conditioning . Today i have a bowflex , that i use a few times a week . I bike for cardio , however do miss the free weights lol.
 
Sorry to hear about your family tribulations. I sold our camper/trailer as there were too many sad memories involved in using that and my health is not up to camping these days. Your approach is similar to mine except I'm somewhat hobbled at standing and walking. I go to the gym and lift weights 3 times a week and feel good afterwards even if I'm a bit sore the following day. I use my shop 3-4 times a day in about 1/2 hour blocks but have to rest in between. While seated I can using my 3D printer - currently printing out disposable brass instrument mouthpieces for my elementary school music teacher daughter in law who uses the mouthpieces for her annual student auditions for the following years tuition program. The students are tested to see if they can make a mouthpiece "buzz" - some can't do this till they're older. Regular mouth pieces have to be disinfected in between use whereas the students can keep the 3D printed ones to practice.
Hi Bob,

Please accept my sympathies for your loss. There is nothing written or spoken that can compensate for this agonizing change. I'm rather agnostic, but have a close friend for more than half my life that is a pastor, and another who is a music minister at her church. I'm not sure where you fit in the spectrum of beliefs, but wherever it is, that is fine. In times like this, after wading through grief and finally finding a bit of light somewhere, even I try to picture the missing person looking down at me and telling (maybe yelling at) me to notice that while things are not going to return to the previous normal, s/he has just moved out of the way to let you see through a new window to your next adventures... propelled by the memories of the missing to push you forward, rather than hold you back.

I have not opened AS for at least a decade but happened to just want to look today, and I the first posting under milling was a good old BobL posting. I miss your friendly banter / suggestions / problem solving / explanations / sharing of your milling adventures / even talk about D2 plane blade steel from some time ago. Seeing your creativity and ambition, I was thrilled to see you working on brass mouthpieces. Though my BS in Mathematics / Computer science didn't lead to a career, my Masters of Architecture gave me a dozen years working on Hospitals up to US$500m. After being the 80th and final person laid off in 2010 (weeks before my wedding) in a firm of 160, I picked up musical instrument repair - band and orchestral (I refused to work on guitars and percussion as that would have kept me from working on oboes). I had to choose between that and returning to 50+hrs/week architecture, but I had my only child on the way. I choose to work part time with things that kids spit in (Trumpets get really gross when not cleaned) so I could be home and be a dad, rather than be a missing dad. It was awesome. I taught my son to play his first note on a trumpet at 16 months. Everybody said he couldn't do it but kids this age are blowing "Zerberts / raspberries" all the time... they are playing brass instruments without the instrument in front of them. Before he was 2 years old, he played (I had to do the fingering because I couldn't even reach) a full scale on a clarinet, oboe, and saxophone. He played Sol-Do'-Do on a full sized tuba, french horn, trumpet, alto horn and trombone by himself. I have videos to prove it. His doctor said he got over his pneumonia so quickly because of his deep breathing for instruments.

All this was from a kid who's lactation specialist (Helps with breast feeding) said he wouldn't be able to nurse because he has Trisomy-21 (Down Syndrome which can cause all muscle tissue in the boy to be weak or low tone). When we weened him, she admitted that she really thought he wouldn't be able do nurse because she has never had a kid with Down syndrome be able to do that. She said that He changed her mind, and should would try harder with other kids with DS.

So many folks would not accept a child with DS, much as we fight the loss of a loved one. (I cannot accept life that way!) We of course did, and we wouldn't change a thing. After the crap at the hospital where medical professionals were arguing Yes/No on a diagnosis of DS for over a week, we began to see life WITH Henry, not life where something is missing. As every parent will tell you, their kid is amazing, and this goes for Henry, of course. In addition to his ability to play instruments (He is now 8), he can hear the music in his head, and sing it out when the lyrics are supposed to be sung... he is an empath... he knows your emotions before you do ... one day when he was about 1, I walked in the house and he signed (American Sign language was his first communication method) "Daddy sad". I stopped, and sure enough, my morning shift at work left me sad. Now he talks well, runs up and down stairs (My wife had a high school student with DS who could not navigate stairs), is learning to ride a bike, participate well in class, and is just a darned cute kid. Yes, he has a 100% chance of getting brain plaques that come with dementia at an older age, but only a 50% chance of displaying any dementia. He is far more likely to get leukemia, but 4x as likely to survive it vs. one of his typically developing peers. There are certain hard tumor cancers that he will NEVER get, but you and I may. He "Won't go to Harvard Medical School" as his pediatrician said in the first 60 seconds after we met her, but hey, that sounds expensive anyway.

I guess I ramble on, hoping that I catch you at the right time where you have periods where the memories are happy, and energy giving, rather than perpetually sad and debilitating as they are in the beginning. As I noted, an opening (A window is only functional because of what is not there... take your interpretation through eastern philosophy as you wish) comes when something moves out of the way. If we move out of the way, we don't want those surrounding us to lament the new opportunities, even though the one missing is THE ONE. We take great joy that we got to spend much time with THE ONE, but one of us was going to leave first... what do we want the other to do if we leave first? What are we going to do?
 

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