Living in the heart of it.
Living in the heart of it.
G'day and Happy New Year to one and all.
Thought I'd post some pics of my new home in Alice Springs.
This will be my refuge from it all for at least the next year.
We've had plenty of storms in the 5 weeks I've been here and the whole region is green covering that amazing ochre background.
Anyway...
The workshop The view The Yard Out of Town And a nice week of 38DegC Days to go with it!
Cheers
Thought I'd post some pics of my new home in Alice Springs.
This will be my refuge from it all for at least the next year.
We've had plenty of storms in the 5 weeks I've been here and the whole region is green covering that amazing ochre background.
Anyway...
The workshop The view The Yard Out of Town And a nice week of 38DegC Days to go with it!
Cheers
Craig
I'm not the sharpest tool in my shed
I'm not the sharpest tool in my shed
Re: Living in the heart of it.
Hey Craig Happy New Year to you and yours as well
Your new digs look comfy and clean and your pretty well set up already...38c can become tiresome quite quickly but the nights are a good time to work.
Cheers
Kim

Your new digs look comfy and clean and your pretty well set up already...38c can become tiresome quite quickly but the nights are a good time to work.
Cheers
Kim
- DarwinStrings
- Blackwood
- Posts: 1873
- Joined: Thu Nov 13, 2008 10:27 pm
- Location: Darwin
Re: Living in the heart of it.
G'day and same to you Craig, Looks comfy down there in the centre and 38 don't sound too bad if it as dry as Alice usually is. Does sound like you been getting a few desert rains though.
Jim
Jim
Life is good when you are amongst the wood.
Jim Schofield
Jim Schofield
Re: Living in the heart of it.
Hmmm, might be a great opportunity to check out Desert Oak for fretboards? Enjoy Alice, it really is a spectacular area.
Re: Living in the heart of it.
Looks spectacular. Much greener than the last time I was there. And 38 is just about right. Getting to over 40 ever single day here in the sheds at work, and humidity through the roof. I envy you Craig.
Re: Living in the heart of it.
Thanks guys.
I forgot to mention that I did end up getting my small bandsaw here, but not my pedestal drill.
Kim - the evaporator unit on the wall next to the workbench makes the workshop the nicest place to be during these dry hot days, if only I can convince the kids of this truth!
Jim - The humidity build up to the storms I've mentioned has been pretty bad (for us ex-canberrans) and on a couple of nights the storms didn't come. My wife is allergic to humidity. It makes here abuse her husband. Relentlessly.
Steve - I know there's Mulga to the north, gidgee to the south east, Ironwood all around and heaps of Willow Acacia in peoples yards all over. Most of the nearby land is either Aboriginal Land Title or National/Nature Park. I've just got to find those bits of land "in between" that I can scrounge on. Or find the right contact. I've visited the Botanic Gardens here several times already to try and recognise the different trees, but realistically I figure any dead wood I find that's big enough to use will probably be a Desert Acacia of one type or another & therefore a good hardwood to use. I'd even like some smaller pieces for plane bodies and maybe even try to get binding strips out of branches.
Allen - I don't envy you.
I forgot to mention that I did end up getting my small bandsaw here, but not my pedestal drill.
Kim - the evaporator unit on the wall next to the workbench makes the workshop the nicest place to be during these dry hot days, if only I can convince the kids of this truth!
Jim - The humidity build up to the storms I've mentioned has been pretty bad (for us ex-canberrans) and on a couple of nights the storms didn't come. My wife is allergic to humidity. It makes here abuse her husband. Relentlessly.
Steve - I know there's Mulga to the north, gidgee to the south east, Ironwood all around and heaps of Willow Acacia in peoples yards all over. Most of the nearby land is either Aboriginal Land Title or National/Nature Park. I've just got to find those bits of land "in between" that I can scrounge on. Or find the right contact. I've visited the Botanic Gardens here several times already to try and recognise the different trees, but realistically I figure any dead wood I find that's big enough to use will probably be a Desert Acacia of one type or another & therefore a good hardwood to use. I'd even like some smaller pieces for plane bodies and maybe even try to get binding strips out of branches.
Allen - I don't envy you.

Craig
I'm not the sharpest tool in my shed
I'm not the sharpest tool in my shed
- Taffy Evans
- Blackwood
- Posts: 1064
- Joined: Wed Apr 30, 2008 6:54 pm
- Location: Charters Towers North Queensland
Re: Living in the heart of it.
I lived in the Alice for 30 years, doing guitar work for most of that tiime. Never mind the heat you have seven below to look forward to in winter at times.
Taff
Re: Living in the heart of it.
Now that I'm used to.Never mind the heat you have seven below to look forward to in winter at times.
Didn't have heating in the canberra workshop either.
Met a guy today who knew you Taff. A Dutch Organ maker by the name of Fred Bohm. He even spoke highly of you!
Craig
I'm not the sharpest tool in my shed
I'm not the sharpest tool in my shed
Re: Living in the heart of it.
Looks like you have more space than in your old workshop mate. Well done though we miss you in Canberra still so don't get too comfortable there.
And the cutaway is coming along nicely. Are you gonna put up some progress pics for us?
Cheers
Dom
And the cutaway is coming along nicely. Are you gonna put up some progress pics for us?
Cheers
Dom
You can bomb the world to pieces,
but you can't bomb the world to peace!
but you can't bomb the world to peace!
Re: Living in the heart of it.
Also noticed you had your new binding jig built.
Have you used it yet and how did you go? Did you make a donut to ride on the top and an adjustable stop to prevent it drilling a hole on your table if it slips off the top? Hard to see from the picture.
I think this style makes far more sense than the other jig with the big swivel arms and lazy susans. And takes up much less space.
Happy binding ledge routing.
Dom

I think this style makes far more sense than the other jig with the big swivel arms and lazy susans. And takes up much less space.
Happy binding ledge routing.
Dom
You can bomb the world to pieces,
but you can't bomb the world to peace!
but you can't bomb the world to peace!
Re: Living in the heart of it.
Sorry Dom, missed those last posts for some reason.
Progress on the Cutaway (& the non cutaway twin)......slow....as usual
Yeah, I finally made the binding router jig.
Used 4 of those ball bearing draw slides as the runners.
Used a plastic chopping block to make a new baseplate & donut.
Located the drawer runners so that their "friction stops" stop the router before it smacks into the table (umm, I think that was intentional
)
I hate routers, but I have to admit I've never had better results before.
The channels were clean & crisp with no tearout at all.
The only problem was - I didn't think about doing the cutaway so the jig body is too wide to fit.
Wiil need to add a block behind the router to project it out & away from the jig body, but in the mean time I just did the cutaway channels by hand.
Was woken at 5.30 this morning by chainsaws and trucks reving & reversing (beep, beep, beep, beep).
Blearily wandered outside to find a crew removing a large gum from the streetside next to our house.
They were using a mobile crane to lift large sections of the tree onto the street for further processing.
I watched as the last 5m of dead straight trunk was loaded onto a truck for removal.
Ran to the workshop, grabbed a guitar body, back to the street & using sign language & such, indicated that I would like to rescue any nice timbers they cut down in future from being chipped & turn them into instruments.
Turns out the guy I stopped was the boss, owner of a mill, & said he has 60 logs currently ready for processing if I want to come & have a look. I even heard the word 'mahogany' at one point
Made a date for Saturday morning!
Then went back to bed
Progress on the Cutaway (& the non cutaway twin)......slow....as usual
Yeah, I finally made the binding router jig.
Used 4 of those ball bearing draw slides as the runners.
Used a plastic chopping block to make a new baseplate & donut.
Located the drawer runners so that their "friction stops" stop the router before it smacks into the table (umm, I think that was intentional

I hate routers, but I have to admit I've never had better results before.
The channels were clean & crisp with no tearout at all.
The only problem was - I didn't think about doing the cutaway so the jig body is too wide to fit.
Wiil need to add a block behind the router to project it out & away from the jig body, but in the mean time I just did the cutaway channels by hand.
Was woken at 5.30 this morning by chainsaws and trucks reving & reversing (beep, beep, beep, beep).
Blearily wandered outside to find a crew removing a large gum from the streetside next to our house.

They were using a mobile crane to lift large sections of the tree onto the street for further processing.
I watched as the last 5m of dead straight trunk was loaded onto a truck for removal.
Ran to the workshop, grabbed a guitar body, back to the street & using sign language & such, indicated that I would like to rescue any nice timbers they cut down in future from being chipped & turn them into instruments.
Turns out the guy I stopped was the boss, owner of a mill, & said he has 60 logs currently ready for processing if I want to come & have a look. I even heard the word 'mahogany' at one point

Made a date for Saturday morning!
Then went back to bed

Craig
I'm not the sharpest tool in my shed
I'm not the sharpest tool in my shed
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