Sunday, September 30, 2007

Bouldering Grouse

My college friend Paul and I headed up to the Grouse slabs to do some bouldering today. It was a simple plan: we were going to boulder, head back to Alta to use my new compass to find the property lines and then crash in the cabin. Unfortunately, my crappy memory had other plans, and I managed to forget the keys to the cabin in my car and didn't realize it until we were more than halfway to the crag (Chloe called and asked if I had remembered them). To Paul's credit, he wasn't visibly phased by this development and we still had a great time bouldering. I hit a few dynos which had shut me down before and sent the way overgraded #21 in the new supertopo guide. We were both a little surprised to see patches of snow along the trail and near the landing so several boulders.


After some compassing and chainsawing of paths, we made a fire pit (no access to the cabin=no hibachi!) and grilled up corn and steak while drinking some SNPAs: A great way to end a day of bouldering

Sunday, September 23, 2007

The Saw

After last weekend's cutting board debacle, I went to Adaro in San Leandro and finally took the dive into the world of dismemberment and hospital visits: I bought a chainsaw. I had been avoiding it for a long time because, quite frankly, chainsaws scare me. My dad had used one extensively during the building of our cabin and it had been a source of some pretty near misses. In shopping for a saw, I recently discovered that the saw that he had bought was about as dangerous a saw as you could hope for: non-low kickback chain, no chain brake, no chain catcher and no rear handle. And it was too small and underpowered for the jobs he was using it for. It's a credit to him that he used it so productively and without maiming himself, but I have to wonder if that Stihl dealer didn't have something against Japanese people.

I bought a mid range Stihl saw (ms270) with the new anti-vibration system and an 18" bar. More importantly, I bought the chain jamming Stihl chaps as well as combo hardhat/face screen/ear protection. As per Stihl requirements, the guy at Adaro showed me all of the features, fueled and oiled it up and answered all of my questions.

So today I got to try the saw out for real: After playing the saw like a banjo as the Stihl website recommends:

I started by sawing into some rounds to make sure I could control the saw well and then moved on to cutting slabs for cutting boards. It took around three minutes per slab, so that's an improvement!



The saw is particularly good at cutting down saplings, so I was able to thin things out *a lot* near the cabin. It even makes limbing and bucking easy, although limbing seems like a good way to take a chain to the head.

Last weekend, Chloe and I found a huge tree that PG&E had cut down which looks like a cherry. It's hard to tell exactly what it is because it has been down for a while, but it looks like the "cherry" that we have seen on the property and is also right next to several other living "cherries". I put cherry in quotes because although its leaves and bark look like cherry trees, and some of them produce a small number of mini-cherries, these things generally get to be around 40-50 feet tall, which seems strange for a cherry. My guess is that its a Wild Cherry:Prunus avium.

In any case, the wood looks very nice, and I really hope it is Wild Cherry, because we have a wild cherrywood (Merisier in french) table that we bought in France which we really love. One of the reasons that I bought the saw was to be able to do some rough milling of this and other trees, so I got to work





The boards were a little warped, but I was getting the hang of milling by the end. The ear protection really helped with Kenji's constant jabbering, too.

I also ended up milling a big chunk of oak from a fallen tree. It is a live oak of some kind, and I'm fairly certain that it's a Canyon Live Oak. The wood looks beautiful and seems relatively termite-free.

The ultimate goal is to use the milled wood to make a French farmhouse style table. We weighted the cherry boards down to try to flatten them, so here's hoping it all turns out well. I'm planning on quartering the live oak chunk and using it for the legs.

Tuesday, September 18, 2007

asian flush

Have you ever noticed that many asian people turn red when they start drinking? It's a genetic condition caused by an "atypical" (read: mutant) aldehyde dehydrogenase, which causes a buildup of acetaldehyde in the body. Acetaldehyde, being somewhat toxic causes the flushing and other nasty side effects, including wicked hangovers. Being the lucky fellow that I am, I'm the only one amongst my half asian friends who got this special gene, so in high schoolcollege, people would see me red eyed and pink and usually assume that I was enebriated when I was just getting started (just kidding, mom!). Actually, getting red and splotchy after drinking a beer or two is enough to put you off the whole drinking thing entirely. So it was with much interest that I saw a blog entry about how the asian flush might be an evolutionary adaptation to prevent alchoholism. However, anyone who has been to Japan can attest to the fact that asian flush isn't much of a discouragement to most of the male populace there!

Saturday, September 15, 2007

A hard fought cutting board

Today I had the misguided idea that, rather than waste all of the beautiful Black Oak that Roy the Arborist had felled for us, I was going to make a cutting board out of one of the rounds. I have it from several reliable woodworking sources (one of which isn't the Internet! Can you believe it?!) that the best way to cut the wood is to quarter saw it. Not having any power equipment with me, I started cutting it with our twenty five year old 30 inch Sandvik hand saw. Two hours and a whole lot of cursing later, darkness fell and I started up the lamps and continued sawing. What I ended up with was a malformed and ugly chunk of wood that wouldn't sit down flat on either side. After three hours of sawing. I brought it back to Berkeley for some planing wih Kenji's fancy Japanese tools and managed to correct a lot of the misshapenness, but I'm still not completely satisfied with the result.

Tuesday, September 04, 2007

baby room!

baby talk alert
Before we left, we asked my mom to start her work in the baby's room. We had recently had our neighbor build a wall to make a little enclosed space for our soon to arrive daughter. The saga of the wall is a scandalous tale of trust betrayed, massive cost overruns, and general dismay. Privately, I now call this five inch thick structure the "multimilliondollar wall"; during the course of "the project", our room lost two windows and one wall, took two months to complete and increased in price by twofold. Awesome! Anyway, I had just painted the wall (no, not Gold, but tempting) so mom was ready to go. She worked the whole weekend and we came home to find that she had already finished a great mural!


We had a little extra wall space, so Chloe and I added a little bit as well:



and I installed the nice wool rug that mom bought for us and the baby.

Monday, September 03, 2007

hiking to the American River

On the recommendation of Russell Towle, Chloe and I took the Stevens trail down to the American River. The hike down was easy (isn't it always?!), if a little hot. If anything, the slow rate of decent in the last half was maddening. The sweeping views more than made up for that minor drawback though.


Once at the river, we waded in


and were both surprised by how warm it was. Schools of fish congreated around the small clouds of bugs hovering just above the water

The hike up was kind of painful. Even though we have happily and with relative ease hiked thousands of feet in elevation in not very much time, this felt like a real slog to us. The combination of the low to mid ninety degree temps, the lack of shade and the slow gradient, chloe being 7 months pregnant and my being in appalling shape made it seem more painful than it would normally I think! All in all it was a nice hike, but I can't really recommend it on a hot summer day -- even leaving the car at 9:30 AM as we did. 5.4 miles round trip according to the GPS.

Sunday, September 02, 2007

Alta!

We drove up to Alta this morning and hung out for most of the day. After stopping in Colfax and almost (oh so close) buying a Stihl 270 chainsaw, Chloe and I reinforced the dryrotting pilings of the cabin with pressure and preservative treated wood,


and then I got down to the serious business of chopping up one of the felled incense cedars. The arborist had cut down two cedars -- one living and one long dead. I started on the wet wood and got rejected by the sap laden dense wood; it took all of my effort and a big lumberjack swing just o put a dent in these things! By contrast, the dead cedar was really fun to split -- the rounds were light and practically leapt apart with any of the axes. The best part was the strong cedar smell though; it felt like I was in a japanese Buddhist temple. Heres me getting into the spirit of things in a moment of Zen

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