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DrBee
04-07-2006, 10:56 AM
It's just me and the kids this weekend. Hubby is out of town (very rare event) for a woodturners get together. Doesn't look like I'll get much riding in - I'd don't think I'd do too well tugging the trailer and kids behind me. Hopefully there's some good conversations here tonight!

maillotpois
04-07-2006, 11:44 AM
Okay, what's a woodturner??

I hope you have a good weekend - sometimes I don't mind having just a mom and kid weekend - but I does make riding a challenge. Any way the kids could have a play date while you get a ride in?

DrBee
04-07-2006, 12:03 PM
He and I are both woodturners (although he's MUCH better than I am). Woodturning is making bowls, platters, candlesticks, etc. out of chunks of wood - on a lathe. It's a lot like pottery, only if a chunk of clay flies off, it doesn't hurt :rolleyes:

maillotpois
04-07-2006, 12:06 PM
How cool! :) :)

Waverly
04-07-2006, 01:16 PM
That's very cool! My friend’s grandfather does something like that. He has made vase type things an other knick knacks. People bring him weird pieces/types of wood from all over. I am not sure if he does it anymore but his work is very pretty. You should post some pictures!

Jessica

DrBee
04-07-2006, 01:21 PM
It's really fun to see what you can make out of a chunk of wood. People give us wood, too. It's always fun to take a nice leisurely ride around town on the bikes after a big storm comes through - we find lots of wood that way! You get a sharp ear for chainsaws, too. ;)

I'll post some pics tonight when I have more time - kids are about ready to emerge from their "naps". Thanks for asking :)

pkq
04-07-2006, 04:39 PM
An uncle taught me workworking as a child. He was a forester with lots of land holdings, too, so he'd get all kinds of woods. It was pretty neat running the equipment as a kid. Those are pleasant memories.

Look forward to seeing pix of the handiwork. Enjoy your weekend with the kids.

Nanci
04-07-2006, 04:48 PM
My grandfather did that too, but mainly he was a cabinet maker. Which means he made desks, tables, bed frames, cedar chests, everything. I have so many pieces, and so do my sisters and our children and cousins, etc.

Nanci

Brandi
04-07-2006, 04:49 PM
It's just me and the kids this weekend. Hubby is out of town (very rare event) for a woodturners get together. Doesn't look like I'll get much riding in - I'd don't think I'd do too well tugging the trailer and kids behind me. Hopefully there's some good conversations here tonight!
Pick a subject and lets see what happens. Anything goes this week by the looks of some of te threads.

Brandi
04-07-2006, 04:52 PM
I wanna see pic's too. I knew a sand sculptor from cananda wo was good at it as well. Is tis your family bussiness? Do you and your hubby work together?

DrBee
04-07-2006, 06:19 PM
We've had a power outage for the last 2.5 hours. Nice storms passing through. The kids (especially the little one) haven't been more than about 2 ft from me. We had fun playing games and cuddling up. :) I'm getting ready to put the kids to bed - I'll post some pics in a bit. What a night this has been so far!

DrBee
04-07-2006, 07:50 PM
Here are a few pics - I'm pasting them in here, I don't know if this will work. To answer the questions - my husband is a stay-at-home dad and a woodworker. He has sold some pieces. He makes everything from rocking horses, scroll saw portraits, furniture to bowls. I just play around with the lathe.

I'm trying to attach pics, but in the preview it doesn't show up. we'll see if this works.

This is taking me forever, because the tornado sirens went off and I had to decide whether or not to get my kids out of bed. We had hail larger than a quarter!

edit: ok - pics are here. Now for the explanation.

the first one is my 2nd bowl - made of Ash
pic 2 - a small cedar bowl my husband made
pic3 - my daughter (at 14 mos) on her horse her daddy made for her. It was his first major project.
pic4 - ex of scroll saw portrait of my daughter - these are big sellers.

maillotpois
04-07-2006, 08:09 PM
Wow - beautiful pieces Fishdr! And your daughter is darling!

Stay safe with the tornadoes....

DrBee
04-07-2006, 08:21 PM
Thanks! I think the storms have pretty much passed by us now. The lightening display is pretty amazing, though. I just did a tour around the outside of the house. The water is backed up in the street as bad as it was when Rita came through (~ 6 in to 1 ft deep) and the backyard is almost completely under water. I just cleared the drain in the back (luckily the previous owners installed a drainage system) so hopefully that will help. Our house sits higher than everyone else (built for a realtor), so we're nice and dry. Can't say the same for the neighbors, though.

maillotpois
04-07-2006, 08:30 PM
Boy you're lucky.

We're on the side of a (small) mountain. The flat part of town is sunnier (we're in a redwood grove so it can get dark), and the houses in the flat part of town were way over our price range when we bought 2 years ago (million dollar tear downs). But... the flat sunny part of town floods, and has flooded several times this year.

So as long as our house stays attached to the hill we're doing okay!! (Although I don't feel comfortable letting our daughter ride her bike down the 14% grade that goes from our house to town yet.)

DrBee
04-07-2006, 08:39 PM
Yikes - that's a bit of a drop. Here, my daughter is afraid to ride her bike down the "hill" that is literally a 1 foot drop out of our driveway to the road. It's all relative, I guess. The redwood grove sounds nice - very nice - except for the hoping your house stays attached to the hill part.

pkq
04-08-2006, 02:59 AM
Y'all do really good work. You have to love the rich, dark character of wood along with the feel of it.

Glad you survived the storm. TN has been hit pretty hard again. I was born and raised in Louisiana. I miss the violent thunder storms but I do not miss the flooding and humidity. Good thing you bought a house on high ground. Flooding really sucks!

Waverly
04-08-2006, 05:33 AM
The pieces are gorgeous. I wish I had some sort of talent like that! We had some bad weather about 4:30am that freaked the dogs out, but not much really happened at my house except a lot of lighting. Other parts for the state were hit harder though.

Jessica

DrBee
04-08-2006, 06:16 AM
Thanks for the complements - I'll pass them on to my husband. He's a biologist, but when he decided to stay home with the kids, he found that woodworking was a hidden talent.

Hopefully all of us over here in the southeast made it through the storms last night. It's 20F colder today than it was yesterday. Yikes!


I was born and raised in Louisiana.

pkq-where in Lousiana? I went to grad school there (USL) and my husband is a south Lousiana native.

solobiker
04-08-2006, 06:19 AM
HI there, love the pics. I too am a woodturner. I have made bowls and several wine stoppers. My next project will be to turn some pens.

DrBee
04-08-2006, 06:20 AM
solobiker - that's funny because our next endeavors are winestoppers and pens. Let me know how it goes!

pkq
04-08-2006, 06:58 AM
fishdr, I grew up in Florien then lived in Lake Charles for 18 years. Graduated from McNeese in Lake Charles. USL is now University of Louisiana. Don't know when the name changed but it's been in the last 8 years. They tried to change it during the 80's but the entire higher education system rose in opposition thinking it would detract and confuse people about LSU. I went to McNeese because Lake Charles is near Holly Beach, wiped out by Rita, and near Toledo Bend Lake. My uncle had property both places and I had keys to everything.

solobiker, why not post pix?

DrBee
04-08-2006, 08:49 AM
yeah solobiker - I want to see pics! Hubby's learning how to do segmented bowls at the turners workshop today and is getting some good advice on the pens.

pkq - I received my dr from USL the year it turned to ULL (ooh la la) - 2000. I still call it USL, though. My hubby is from LaPlace (over by NO). I have a friend that works for NOAA that is in charge of wetlands/coastal areas in western LA. He said Holly Beach was completely leveled. I did some collections in that area during grad school - it's hard to imagine. Let's hope this year is better.

pkq
04-08-2006, 09:12 AM
If you want to see photos of before and after Rita of Holly Beach, I have some at a photobucket account http://s11.photobucket.com/albums/a173/pkq/Holly%20Beach%20-%20Hurricane%20Rita/. My uncle's camp was front row. We fell asleep at night watching the oil rig lights twinkle with the waves. High tide, in those days, always came underneath the camp and often crossed the road behind the camp. They put in breakers to prevent coastal erosion, hauled in sand, and the results were amazing. It's really hard to imagine Holly Beach gone. I'd gone there since the 60's.

I've heard of LaPlace but never been there. Been to NO a number of times and Lafayette more times than I can count.

Did you ever do the canoe trip in the Atchafalaya Basin? I tried to do that several years running but it never materialized. Imagine it's gorgeous back in the swamps.

DrBee
04-08-2006, 09:28 AM
pkq - wow that is devastating. The real shame is that the damage caused by Rita has been completely lost in the chaos that Katrina left behind. From what I've heard, they can't even get contractors to come in and make repairs because they are all working in NO - and being paid very well. It's so wierd to see the pictures - having been there. I can only imagine what it must be like for you.

I never did get the chance to go canoeing in the Atchafalaya. We did do some in Lake Martin - some nice egret rookeries there. My postdoc lived in the middle of the Atchafalaya. The pics of her house are amazing. She literally has alligators in her back yard.

pkq
04-08-2006, 09:40 AM
Lake Charles, Cameron, Sulphur, etc. are having trouble getting contractors. Materials are not easy to get either. My niece's family is still living with her mother. Some friends should move back in next week. You probably won't hear much from SWLA because the people just roll up their sleeves and get to work w/o much complaining. They are pretty independent and self-reliant. It's just a part of life, to them, you have to live with. I have photos in a powerpoint file of SWLA post Rita, which is hard to imagine. Water in places I've never seen water.

Believe it or not, occasionally gators will show up in Sulphur and Lake Charles. They are pretty harmless though. In all the years crabbing in the bayous near Holly Beach and skiing the waterways of Lake Charles, one never bothered me. They simply floated on by with those beady little eyes. :) Pretty cool!

DrBee
04-08-2006, 10:05 AM
I don't know if you've ever been on the ULL campus - there is a small cypress swamp right smack in the middle of campus - alligators and all. We used to sit on the brick wall by the union and eat lunch (that's how I met my husband). We'd feed the alligators pieces of our sandwiches. Funny - only the biologists would sit on the wall. The gators used to lay eggs in there - never produced anything though.

I'd love to see the power point file - could you email it to me?

pkq
04-08-2006, 10:20 AM
I've been on the USL campus but not since the 80's. I have vague memories now.

I pm'd you to get your e-mail address. Will be glad to send the file to you.