On Monday February 25, 2013, Heaven received another special Angel named Adam Rutz. He was kind, loving, funny and a very special man to me as I was growing up. I know that he and Sandy are watching over all of us. Rest in peace Uncle Adam, you surely will be missed.
This was a travel blog - now it is an everything blog
Tom - the 50ish Firefighter
Sara - the 40ish Mother
Miles - the teenager
Helen - Holy Cow, she's almost a teenager...
Saturday, March 02, 2013
Monday, February 18, 2013
Friday, January 25, 2013
Thursday, January 24, 2013
Snow day for Helen
Helen's school had fun last Friday when they trucked in some snow for the kids to play on. She had a blast.
Tuesday, January 15, 2013
Miles' new gun
Somebody got a kit for Christmas, and put it together for his son:
It is a discontinued Traditions kit, I found a wholesaler that had some in stock. .45 caliber, just like the percussion one he has been shooting. Length of pull was OK (13"), so I left the stock alone. It fits him better than this picture shows.
The hardest part was chopping 5" off the end of the barrel. This was new territory for me, and quite scary. A new hacksaw blade, a straightedge, and I had this;
A lot of work with a file, emery cloth, and a round grind stone ended up with this:
I then had to cut a new front sight dovetail, and I had a 1/2 pound lighter barrel.
The worst part of this kit is the 2-piece stock. It fits in a smaller package that way. The nice part of it? I was able to cut the 5" off that split part to keep the dimensions of the rifle appropriate. It came with a ugly brass insert. I thought I could smooth the wood up enough to skip the joiner. I was wrong.
Ended up going with a wide brass band around the joint, kinda like a Harper's Ferry. Ugly, but it works.
Oh yeah, that lock. See the big hole in the plate? The frizzen spring was stuck in that hole, cocked up at a 45 degree angle. Looked wrong and didn't work. I filed a notch in the bottom of the plate and the spring fit better.
It came with a huge toeplate. Since it is a boy's gun, I figure the more armor on it the better.
I had no idea how they wanted to do the rear ramrod thimble, so I modified it. I like how it turned out. And there is the ugly band again.
The kit came with a couple brass washers to hold the lock in. It looked completely wrong for the period, so I got a sideplate from the Log Cabin Shop and cut it down to fit. Wish I had gotten both screws centered...
And it came with this big ugly brass nosecap that screwed into the barrel! Ugly and not correct. So I went all out and made a poured pewter nosecap instead. This was the second try...
The stain is Miles' choice. A few more coats of linseed oil and it should be good to go.
Still to do:
It is a discontinued Traditions kit, I found a wholesaler that had some in stock. .45 caliber, just like the percussion one he has been shooting. Length of pull was OK (13"), so I left the stock alone. It fits him better than this picture shows.
The hardest part was chopping 5" off the end of the barrel. This was new territory for me, and quite scary. A new hacksaw blade, a straightedge, and I had this;
A lot of work with a file, emery cloth, and a round grind stone ended up with this:
I then had to cut a new front sight dovetail, and I had a 1/2 pound lighter barrel.
The worst part of this kit is the 2-piece stock. It fits in a smaller package that way. The nice part of it? I was able to cut the 5" off that split part to keep the dimensions of the rifle appropriate. It came with a ugly brass insert. I thought I could smooth the wood up enough to skip the joiner. I was wrong.
Oh yeah, that lock. See the big hole in the plate? The frizzen spring was stuck in that hole, cocked up at a 45 degree angle. Looked wrong and didn't work. I filed a notch in the bottom of the plate and the spring fit better.
It came with a huge toeplate. Since it is a boy's gun, I figure the more armor on it the better.
I had no idea how they wanted to do the rear ramrod thimble, so I modified it. I like how it turned out. And there is the ugly band again.
The kit came with a couple brass washers to hold the lock in. It looked completely wrong for the period, so I got a sideplate from the Log Cabin Shop and cut it down to fit. Wish I had gotten both screws centered...
And it came with this big ugly brass nosecap that screwed into the barrel! Ugly and not correct. So I went all out and made a poured pewter nosecap instead. This was the second try...
The stain is Miles' choice. A few more coats of linseed oil and it should be good to go.
Still to do:
- Sight it in for a light load.
- Virtually unbreakable ramrod on order
- bought an inlay or two, must decide if I am going to put them in or not
- work on the trigger pull. It's about 6 pounds right now.
Thursday, November 15, 2012
Telephone
Just love my daughter, she is sitting here
playing telephone and she says I'm going to call my Daddy, and she dials
911. Too cute since anyone who knows us knows her Daddy is a
firefighter. Now all I have to do is to teach her she is only allowed to use 911 for a real emergency. Smart kid though.
Thursday, November 08, 2012
Halloween fun Part 4
Miles the Grimm Reaper getting ready to go to a party
Helen the Lion is all ready for Trunk or Treat at her school
Miles the ferocious Pirate at Trunk or Treat
Helen and friends doing the monster mash
Helen and her friend Annabelle from school take a little break from Trunk or Treat
It's Halloween Night and Helen the Tooth Fairy is ready to go get some treats
The Tooth Fairy and the Grimm Reaper are ready to go trick or treating
Helen the Lion is all ready for Trunk or Treat at her school
Miles the ferocious Pirate at Trunk or Treat
Helen and friends doing the monster mash
Helen and her friend Annabelle from school take a little break from Trunk or Treat
It's Halloween Night and Helen the Tooth Fairy is ready to go get some treats
The Tooth Fairy and the Grimm Reaper are ready to go trick or treating
Halloween Fun Part 3
Pumpkin Carving time
The finished products
It's not Halloween without homemade sugar cookies
Helen being silly with one of the decorations
Daddy's a pumpkin head
I don't know how it happened, but decorating ended up being done by themes this year
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