• Plywood Boat Plans

    This is a evolving page about my plywood boat projects. You are probably here for the recent video I posted about the new & improved one sheet plywood boat. Use this information at your own risk. See full terms of service here.

    But first, would you consider joining my email list? I send out 1 or 2 emails a week about new GardenFork and stuff I find interesting.

    .

    Big shout-out to Deek Diedreksen for the original design of this boat. I think nails are better than the short screws for gluing together the boat. The back of the boat should use screws, IMO. Nails and clamps to build the sides and then weigh down the bottom of the boat and nail and glue that too.

  • OK, We Moved… GF Radio

    man with two dogs in front of apartment building

    Nicole and I talk about how we moved 50 blocks north in Brooklyn. We wanted to be closer to Prospect Park and to downsize to a small ground floor apartment.

    “We’re gonna talk about how to sell your house without a real estate agent. Hello, nicole.

    Hey, I’m so excited to talk about this. This is fabulous.

    So this has been over a year in the making, and I get very superstitious about talking about things that might happen in the future, or I’m going to do this next week. I don’t talk about it till it happens. This was hard for me because I’ve been working on it for over a year.

    Actually, almost a year and a half now. I couldn’t really make any videos about it or talk about it on the show here, so I just wanted to do a brain dump on everyone about what I’ve been up to. nicole, you’re the perfect interviewer for this, I think.

    I’m excited for it. Well, behind the scenes have been like, okay, so when can we talk about this?

    I did tell nicole and I told Erin and Will as just to keep them along for the ride, the back channel as we call it, Mr. Fireworks. We used to live in a neighborhood called Park Slope in Brooklyn. My wife and I both lived here…

    Get My Email Newsletter: https://www.gardenfork.tv/email/

    Start your Amazon shopping using our affiliate link: https://amazon.com/shop/gardenfork

    Become a GF Patron! Get cool weekly pics + The After Show https://www.patreon.com/gardenfork

    My Fav Cordless Drill-Driver set: https://www.amazon.com/shop/gardenfork/list/2NOD6P1XZLHQE

    My Stationary Bike https://amzn.to/3z0XQFN

    GardenFork receives compensation when you use our affiliate links. This is how we pay the bills 😉

    GF Sweaters and T Shirts https://teespring.com/stores/gardenfork-2

    Email me: radio@gardenfork.tv

    Watch us on YouTube: www.youtube.com/gardenfork

    Music used on the podcast is licensed by AudioBlocks and Unique Tracks

    ©2024 GardenFork Media LLC All Rights Reserved GardenFork Radio is produced in Brooklyn, NY

  • Love Waffle House! – GF Radio

    Tracy and I recap our trip to Waffle House and how we get things done around her house. What Fun!

    “Hey, everyone, welcome to GardenFork Radio. This is the remote remote edition. I’m in St. Louis with my sister.

    We’re at her dining room table. We have two rescue dogs at our chair side here, wanting attention. And we wanted to talk about thinking about projects forever, and then realizing they take about 10 minutes to do.

    Which is what we did a lot of today.

    Yeah, yeah, the gate. I hadn’t, I just lived with the gate for a long time. I, then, in the stair rail yesterday, that I thought about a long time and didn’t ever really do.

    And I thought, well, I think I can get this down, and I think I can get this paint off. And here we are. And the stair rail looks amazing.

    It’s, I love that kind of happenstance.

    So, it’s like a banister with a wrought iron holder upper things. Ballast raid. And it came off fairly easily.

    Then you cleaned it up. You took off a lot of the paint. And then putting it back on was kind of daunting.

    And I came and I’m like, well, we’ll just, it wasn’t quite lining up because nothing is square, you[…]”

  • I’m Reading A Website Backwards

    The Little Free Library is the colorful box behind the car

    I’m talking about your Little Free DVD Library, long term cold symptoms, a podcast I like, and some great email newsletters I thought you might like 

    Get My Email Newsletter: https://gardenfork.tv/email/

    Hello to my friends at Spice 320 https://spice320.com/ 

    Sinus Rinse (affiliate link) https://amzn.to/3QpwHXC 

    Reading Root Simple Backwards https://rootsimple.com 

    Economics of Everyday Things Girl Scout Cookies episode https://freakonomics.com/podcast/the-economics-of-everyday-things-girl-scout-cookies/ 

    Article on Free Blockbuster Libraries https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2024-01-19/california-woman-creates-little-free-blockbuster-for-movies 

    Bloombers newsletters https://www.bloomberg.com/newsletters 

    Start your Amazon shopping using our affiliate link: https://amazon.com/shop/gardenfork

    My Stationary Bike https://amzn.to/3z0XQFN

    GardenFork receives compensation when you use our affiliate links. This is how we pay the bills 😉

    GF Sweaters and T Shirts https://teespring.com/stores/gardenfork-2

    Email me: radio@gardenfork.tv

    Watch us on YouTube: www.youtube.com/gardenfork

    Music used on the podcast is licensed by AudioBlocks and Unique Tracks

    ©2024 GardenFork Media LLC All Rights Reserved GardenFork Radio is produced in Brooklyn, NY

  • Ways To Live Better – GF Radio

    dog next to pond

    Nicole sent me an article on 10 ways to a better life. Then we talked through the list for you.

    It’s not rocket science, just simple steps to make life better for you and your family and friends. Big thanks to Nicole for putting this show together.

    10 Ways To Improve https://www.theatlantic.com/family/archive/2022/04/happiness-research-how-to-be-happy-advice/629559/ 

    The School of Life  https://www.theschooloflife.com/ 

    Africa Angel City Chorale   https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-c9-poC5HGw  

    RadPower e-bike affiliate link https://www.avantlink.com/click.php?tt=ml&ti=843269&pw=131043 

    Master Class Info  https://shareasale.com/r.cfm?b=797461&u=1026336&m=62509&urllink=&afftrack=

    Start your Amazon shopping here: https://amazon.com/shop/gardenfork

    My Stationary Bike https://amzn.to/3z0XQFN

    HASfit Exercise YouTube channel is my fav https://www.youtube.com/hasfit

    Eric: Hey. How are you doing? Thanks for downloading the show. Welcome to GardenFork Radio. It’s eclectic DIY with me and my friends. Today we’re going to DIY Your brain. We’re going to talk about ten ways to be happier, with my friend Nicole. Hey, Nicole.
    Nicole: Hey. How’s it going?
    Eric: I always love when you email me because it’s something you seem to know what’s inside my brain. You know what I’m going to click on, You know.
    Nicole: I how can I capitalize on that?
    Eric: You can’t because I don’t have any money for and there we I think we kind of subscribe to the same kind of news, news sources or websites. And they have some good articles and stuff. And I thought you sent a couple of them. One is from The Atlantic, and I was like, Wow, this I have thoughts about a lot of these so I always have thoughts about everything.
    Eric: So. Did you like the. Did you like the camera operator on the show?
    Nicole: Oh, my God, she’s the best. Can she be on every week? She’s so fun.
    Eric: You know, you wouldn’t know it, but she’s like this high level executive, you know? And I hear her on her zoom calls and she can be kind of fun. But it’s it’s she’s a power she’s a power woman. You know, I’m just I’m just lucky to be with her, but she’s, you know, there’s this there’s this fun part that I get to be with.
    Eric: But then when she’s at work, she just makes stuff happen. And I’m like, how can I be like that?
    Nicole: She’s like, business camera operator.
    Eric: Yeah. So again, we and if you haven’t listened that show yet, it’s the boss talking about why we have two dogs. Because a bunch of people have asked recently, so.
    Nicole: Well, interesting. Well, I wanted to do the follow up show comparing two dogs to two children. But you didn’t respond to that.
    Eric: I’m sorry. I’ve been a little overwhelmed with email.
    Nicole: No, it was a joke. It was a joke. It was.
    Eric: Here. The dogs can’t wipe the drool off your chin when you’re 86 years old.
    Nicole: So I know right now I had two boys, so we’ll see if that happens. Here, too. We may be drooling alone. Okay, so the point of the matter is the articles from The Atlantic, it’s by. They have like a resident. He must be a psychologist or psychiatrist who writes a lot of columns. So the one that I sent you was How to Build From There, a series of How to build a life and it’s ten practical ways to improve happiness.
    Nicole: And I like the tagline for When You Need Advice that goes beyond the Danish.
    Eric: Also, the gentleman, Arthur Brooks, he has a podcast called How to Build a Happy Life, which I didn’t know was out there.
    Nicole: Oh, I didn’t know that either.
    Eric: Oh, I will link to that. So. Right. So let’s go through the list and we’ll we’ll bounce off them.
    Nicole: Okay. I mean, the first one, invest in family and friends which to me is just like instead of buying things for people by activities or, you know, experiences that totally resonates.
    Eric: By time.
    Nicole: Right.
    Eric: The reason the research is clear through our natural impulse may be to buy stuff. We should invest in improving our closest relationships by sharing experiences and freeing up time to spend together. And I’ve also discovered I’ve spoke I think I’ve talked about this before in the show. As I get older, it is harder to make new friends Mm hmm.
    Eric: And literally a couple of months ago, ah, we have some couple of friends that live across the street here. And we we have dinner almost every week and they just said, look, we need to stay friends. Oh.
    Nicole: It’s so sweet. No, I think that’s true. I think to the pandemic, there’s kind of been a winnowing of friends.
    Eric: Yeah.
    Nicole: And you had to be much, much more intentional in getting together and seeing people and maybe there are some people that, you know, you’ve let go, and maybe that’s okay. And maybe you want to, like, re-up that. I don’t know.
    Eric: I’ve had to dial back some friends that are depressing, basically. Mm hmm. I have depression, and it and if I’m around someone that’s depressed, it it makes me depressed.
    Nicole: So I’m like, right. Right now, in German, it’s called the Joyful Cries. It’s like the devil’s circle because you kind of feed off of each other right back in many, many contexts. Yeah. No, I think that’s really okay.
    Eric: It’s kind of like if you want to be a dentist, a better tennis player, hang out with people that play tennis better than you. So it might be hang out with people that live life better than you. I try and help. I have some friends that are truly hurting, and I go out of my way to help them.
    Eric: Mm hmm. But I also go out of my way to hang out with positive people like yourself. Thanks.
    Nicole: Yeah. I mean, I think it’s true. What is the annoying adage you are what you spend your time on. To that end. The New York Times has done a series about adolescents and cell phone use and causing depression. Wow. And one of the article, what the time the article is like, you know, what we all know as parents is you have to model the behavior you want to see.
    Nicole: And so I did. Because I can’t help it. It sucks me in, and it’s not a good feeling. So I did put my phone on like sleep mode from 3 p.m. until 7 a.m.. And I showed excuse me, I showed my boys that I was doing that and I was going to be much more intentional in how I use the phone around them, you know?
    Nicole: But I was like for work hours, I’m going to use it for work, but I’m just going to be much more intentional. But I think that’s kind of investing in friends and family. Like my kids would much rather read a book with me than, you know what? Yeah. Then all of us stare at our screens together, so.
    Eric: Oh, cool. Yeah. All right. Number two is join a club.
    Nicole: Well, I made my own club. The biking club.
    Eric: Yes, I agree with that. I’ve. I formed a Urban Beekeepers email list. Oh, yeah. And just for it’s where it’s for, you know, New York area, but most of us are in Brooklyn, and I. I felt a little. I was like, oh, should I do this? Should. And, and I was like, well, what the heck, Eric: , it’s just a couple of clicks and an invite.
    Eric: Email your beekeeper friends and see what happens. And it’s actually there’s like 40 people in the group now. And mainly we’re by email, but we get together twice a year. We meet in a community garden and it’s, I guess it’s the Brooklyn Beekeeper Club you know, it’s not, it’s not hard if you find a common glue, there are other people that will rise to the I don’t the word is challenge but rise to the the thing hey let’s make this happen hey, real quick here, just a reminder, if you’re shopping on Amazon, would you consider using the Garden Fork link to Amazon?
    Eric: It links to our storefront there. There are several subsections when you go to that page. I think the most popular one is the tools I use listing my most favorite cordless drill driver kit. There’s just some like aha moment tools that I’ve put on there. I recently learned about a new kind of a better, higher quality brand of electrical wire strippers that I didn’t know existed.
    Eric: And I’ve kind of beat up mine, and I got these and I’m like, Oh, these are much nicer. Anyway, there’s a link in the show notes. Do that, or it’s Amazon.com slash shop slash garden for Amazon.com, slash shop slash garden talk that really helps us pay the bills. It’s, it’s, it’s kind of a big thing. So think about that.
    Eric: Right. Thank you.
    Eric: Okay, so something happened there behind the scenes. We’re going to let you behind the scenes here. The Internet just completely died here in my basement office in Brooklyn. And then Nicole and I rescheduled and literally 10 minutes before we were going to do our call. So that was twice in the span of three days. The Internet just went out on the whole block and crazy.
    Eric: They said they were doing maintenance. If you look at the infrastructure of cable and Internet and phone and all that, it’s it’s held together with hot glue and baling wire, you know, because that.
    Nicole: Right.
    Eric: The main distributor amplifier, signal amplifier, I guess, is what it is. For our block is in a metal box under the sidewalk and the sidewalk. You know, in the winter, it gets snowy, salty water I don’t know if it’s waterproof, but it it’s exposed to the elements. And I’m surprised it works at all. But but here we are.
    Eric: We’re back. We talked about investing in family and friends and join a club. I don’t know if we mentioned want to join a club, but I am a member of the Lions Club in our little town. It’s a service organization. And if you’re looking for just a group of people who want to get things done, I like the Lions Club.
    Eric: They’re not associated with any religious organization or political organization. They’re just kind of get stuff done. People, a lot of times the Lions Club in a town runs the volunteer ambulance service. So that’s interesting. Yeah.
    Nicole: Well, yeah, one of my friends got to go to Austria on a Rotary scholarship. I think it’s a similar, I guess more.
    Eric: Yeah, I like it. And we have a blood. We have two blood drives every summer and I go to I’m a big blood donor. We talked about this, but when I go to the regular blood donor place, they have like chocolate chip cookies and the little, you know, like Oreos in that. And at the Lions Club Drive, they have homemade homemade sandwiches oh.
    Eric: And someone will always make deviled eggs. And and it’s just it’s a it’s a much homey or blood dried Yeah.
    Nicole: The children’s hospital here in DC is always looking for blood, and they actually really always need plasma yeah.
    Eric: It’s there are some restriction about who can give blood, but and be sure to hydrate three days before you’re going to do that.
    Nicole: So the last time I went, I couldn’t give because my iron was too low.
    Eric: Yeah. My sister has tried a couple of times and she passes out and one of the phlebotomist said there are other ways to give in other words, volunteering, you know, and things like that because I think they run into that all the time. And so anyway.
    Nicole: Okay, so number three, be active both mentally and physically.
    Eric: Yeah.
    Nicole: I mean, honestly, I’ve learned that during the pandemic I have endless red chair that I like sat in making my children go to school every day. And I just kind of sat there and drank coffee all day and was kind of losing it and then realized I needed to leave our home every day for an hour. It’s a trial walk for an hour and it is.
    Nicole: Yes, leave your home.
    Eric: It really I noticed during the pandemic a lot more people walking up in the woods by us. Oh, and everyone. Would you kind of talk to each other from across the road? Yeah.
    Nicole: Oh, how are you doing?
    Eric: And I bought a I bought an e-bike during the pandemic, and I liked it so much. I bought a second one because I wanted the one in the city and I wanted one in the country. And it’s kind of a heavy bike to carry, so. Yeah, but it’s rad power bikes. This is a unvarnished plug for them. I also have an affiliate link, if you’re interested below it.
    Eric: It’s a great bike. And we Nicole and I have had a couple of podcasts here about the e-bikes, but yeah, that it just gets you outside instead of taking the subway. Now I ride my bike everywhere and I just kind of get like a little energy boost from that.
    Nicole: Yeah. Somebody tweeted the like they never feel happier than when they’re on the bike. And if we could get like everybody on bikes.
    Eric: It would help. So yeah, go out there and do cool stuff. Yeah. Sounds like a familiar phrase. I don’t know where we heard that before.
    Nicole: We heard that. Okay, I’m excited about the fourth one practice or religion, because I am not religious, but I love this website, School of Life. It was started by Alain de Botton. He is an author he’s fascinating. He spent a day or a week at the LaGuardia Airport and wrote a book about it once. And it’s a great little book.
    Eric: Oh, wow.
    Nicole: Yeah. He just sat there at a desk and people would come talk to him but the idea of the School of Life is they have a website, they have a ton of free stuff. They have a ton of books that go along that explain how to meditate, how to, you know, reconnect with family and friends. They have stuff for children that help kids deal with big feelings and emotions.
    Nicole: But his idea was to take the good parts of religion because he’s an atheist as well. And and there were lots of good things like singing together, like, I miss singing with people. That’s something we did in church that we don’t do.
    Eric: Wow.
    Nicole: So anyway, I really am a big fan of of that website School of Life.
    Eric: There is a choir in Los Angeles. Who the name. I’ll look it up here at a second. They do a they do some cover versions of popular songs and hits. Right. And then there’s a YouTube video which I’ll link to you. They did the song called Africa from the band Toto, and they look like they’re having so much fun singing this song.
    Nicole: That’s awesome. I love that song.
    Eric: I’m going to look it up right now. It’s so YouTube. If you go to YouTube and type in Toto Africa Choir, it will come up Toto Africa. I can’t spot choir.
    Nicole: Singing.
    Eric: Our it is the Angel City Chorale and it’s it’s a great video there. They’re just smiling and I don’t sing very well, but they’re just like as like, oh, wow.
    Nicole: Yeah. But it doesn’t matter how you sing if you’re in a group, you know, like to sing or in the shower. Hey, my son, my youngest found out about rickrolling. Oh, and he Rick rolls us like live all the time. He’ll be like, hey, mom, I’ve got a question and I’ll be like, What do you need, honey? And he’s like, Never going to kiss you up.
    Nicole: Like, stop it with the rick rolling. Okay.
    Eric: All right, so go watch the YouTube video in the school of life. Yep.
    Nicole: School of life. I can do that.
    Eric: It’s I don’t know, I just. And also, if you are interested in Christianity, but don’t really like the dogma, consider a Unitarian church.
    Nicole: Oh, yeah.
    Eric: Uh, my, a couple are very good friends are Unitarians, and I have not met an unkind Unitarian person.
    Nicole: I agree with that. I would agree completely agree with that.
    Eric: They they’re kind of like, we’re all here and however you feel that’s okay and you know it’s they’re the most laid back on on dogma group I’ve ever met.
    Nicole: Nonjudgmental.
    Eric: Yeah I what is my religion is really meditation and being in the woods I think.
    Nicole: Okay I’m all about that.
    Eric: Headspace app it kind of lets you it’s it’s it’s it’s not it just changed my life say they go.
    Nicole: So my husband never uses Instagram. I mean he’ll look at what I post but he posted the other day he was on his like 1300 day of meditation.
    Eric: Oh that’s.
    Nicole: Great. Yeah I know. I was like, wow, that’s really impressive.
    Eric: My the Headspace app will tell me how many hours I’ve meditated and it’s a pretty big number by now.
    Nicole: Yeah, that’s really great. I like that. Yeah. Whatever you can do with great physical exercises.
    Eric: Number five, a slightly souped up version of number three above your daily walk should be supplemented with a purpose purposes a purposeful, I guess, exercise plan. This is consistent with research showing that regular exercise of all different types enhances mood and social functioning.
    Nicole: Okay, so I have a friend. When she turned 40, she decided this was her decade of skills acquisition, and so every year she’s learning new skills. So, so far she’s learned how to sail scuba knife, knife safety, not tying winter survival her family’s doing climbing now, joined a climbing gym anyway. I kind of love that I the intentionality of that like okay I’m going to learn how to do a lot of things in the next ten years.
    Eric: Yeah, I love that. What actually really helps with that is accountability with someone else.
    Nicole: Yes.
    Eric: And that’s what I need. I need someone to I like Nicole has like when are we finishing the podcast gentle text nudges, you know?
    Nicole: Well, it’s because you’re on my to do list. So I’m like, Okay, I’ve got to get this off of my.
    Eric: Oh, all right. I’m I have spoken about this before, but my favorite way to exercise is what the YouTube channel called has Fit Heart and Soul Fitness. Coach Kozak and Claudia, they are I believe they are married. They’re the most on hyped up exercise people they’re just like, hey, whatever you can do is great if you please keep with us.
    Eric: They always have one of them. Does they? The easier version of the exercise and the other one does the more challenging version of the exercise. Almost all the exercises can be done either with resistance bands or hand dumbbells or even a couple of bottles of water, just water bottles. And they have short programs and long programs and they have a Patreon account to Patreon.
    Eric: They are on Patrizio and I gave him I signed up for a year with them. I’m like, it would cost me a trainer is like, what? 150 an hour? I don’t know. Yeah. Going to a gym is whatever. And I literally have a TV on the wall in the basement with some home depot, rubber mats on the floor.
    Eric: And I just, I have a playlist built up and I just do 20 minutes and it it helps your brain and it helps your body.
    Nicole: I, I find that I’m more likely to exercise if I can make it useful. So like riding the bike to the post office or walking with my books to the library to pick up more books like I like having a goal. And then I feel like I’ve gotten two things done for one.
    Eric: Excellent. Yeah, yeah. Number six is act nicely agreeableness is consistently found to be highly and positively correlated with happiness, and it can be increased relatively easily. Huh?
    Nicole: Be nice. I guess that seems great.
    Eric: It’s not too hard. It takes so much energy to be angry. I used to be unhappy or a lot unhappier than I am now. And with the meditation, I’ve gotten much better letting stuff go. Like, there’s a couple of people on our block and some of our surrounding blocks that have nicer cars. And first of all, I’m like, What do you do in trying to own a car like that in a neighborhood like this?
    Eric: And they take up to parking spots and or previous Eric: that would have grinded on me night and day. And now I’m like, Okay, I’m not happy you’ve done that. But I believe that karma is boomerang, and at some point in our lives, that negative act is going to come back at them, that they’re going to come back at them.
    Nicole: Not going to find a parking spot.
    Eric: Yeah.
    Nicole: I know. I think that’s smart. As as Ana and Elsa say, let it go.
    Eric: Yeah, it’s really that’s what the meditation is about, is it? You know, I meditate for a 15 minutes and two, two thirds of that time, my, my brain, the hamster wheel is spinning. But there are these moments of afterwards bliss or just emptiness or calmness. And I can kind of bring that feeling back when there’s something bad going on or something.
    Eric: I know it’s starting to grind on me. I’m just like, I just it’s all a little stuff if you really once you realize it’s all just little stuff. I mean, aside from like something like Ukraine, what’s going in Ukraine, right? You know, but the day to day stuff, somebody cut you off, you know, let the guy in the Range Rover cut you off because there’s he’s got bigger problems.
    Nicole: So did you watch that movie that came out during the pandemic up in the air?
    Eric: No.
    Nicole: Okay, well, don’t watch it. But the last line of the movie is we really did have it all, didn’t we? And I think about that all the time. We’ve got everything. We’re fine.
    Eric: Yeah. Like people. I see people now and they’re like, Hey, hi. How are you today? I’m like, I’m above the grass. And they’re like, oh, yeah.
    Nicole: Yeah. Life is not a burden for me is what one of my good friends says.
    Eric: Yeah, no, it’s fine. You know? Okay, so be generous.
    Nicole: Behaving altruistically towards others rewards the brain with happiness enhancing boost of dopamine serotonin and oxytocin.
    Eric: Yes, I need all the serotonin I can get oh.
    Nicole: Yeah. No, I think that’s true. I always feel better when I do things for others.
    Eric: I had a.
    Nicole: Grocery store.
    Eric: Go ahead.
    Nicole: It’s the Girl Scout in me I like. I, you know more than anything that the my childhood in Girl Scouts shaped my behaviors towards others.
    Eric: That’s part of join in a club. Yeah. Yeah, I have a I had a truck. Well, after I bought my bike, I had a nice, like I said, foot ten speed or something. Track bike, a very nice bike, but I was like trying to sell that in Brooklyn. It’s kind of a pain. And so I put it on our block email list.
    Eric: I said, Hey, I got this checked bike. You know, somebody wants to throw me some money for it. And my neighbor said, Hey, my son is going to college and could really use a bike. And so and he’s a nice guy. He came down and he said that my son’s going to meet us in a minute here. And and I just said, you could, your kid could just have the bike.
    Eric: You know, he’s like, really go look, I go, you’re he’s probably financially stretched as it is. He’s going to need the bike. And the kid comes and I said, look, you can have the bike. I said, At some point in your future, I’m going to call you and need a favor. And it’s like, okay. All right. And literally this winter, he was back from college.
    Eric: During January, we got a big dumping snow. He texted me and said, hey, can I come shovel your sidewalk? Wow. So it it karma is boomerang, you know, so and his dad is his father. And Dan said a couple of times, he loves that bike rides all over town with that. I’m like, perfect, you know?
    Nicole: Yeah, it’s there. No, you don’t need it anymore. You don’t need in your garage or whatever.
    Eric: Yeah, I don’t you know, I don’t need the 75 bucks I would have got from someone, so. Right. Wow. I feel so good just talking about this okay.
    Nicole: Check your health of all health issues. Those that create the greatest unhappiness are typically chronic pain and anxiety. Don’t neglect your visits to the doctor. And the dentist and and seek mental health assistance if your emotions are interfering with your work, relationships or social activities. I think that’s so true. There was just an article in the New York Times about women not being taken seriously with their health issues.
    Eric: And, yes.
    Nicole: Apparently heart attacks and women can be jaw pain. And, you know, just knowing those things and being able to advocate yours for yourself when you although it’s really having those things is very scary. I understand. But yeah, I think this is good. Go to the doctor. Make it make it a regular part of your life.
    Eric: My doctor, I can email and I really like that because I hate talking on the phone. And his office manager is fantastic. And we’re on a first name basis with the office manager. And I and I just go, hey, this is going on. And boom, it happens. So it’s it can be hard to find a primary care physician that you, you, you know, work with.
    Eric: Well, but I’ve had experience with chronic pain and anxiety and it it can ruin you. It can just cause other health problems. And I have been to a talk therapist probably for four or five times. It’s it’s not that weird. It’s a little odd. I mean, I guess now they do. I’m on Zoom calls but you’re kind of in the room.
    Eric: You’re in this what I call the therapy room. And there’s always like a white noise machine outside and you’re like, so why are you here? You know, and you have to find someone that you get along with.
    Nicole: Yeah, I think that is the key part. I mean, I, I definitely know there are more there are many more flexible options than just going to the room. Yeah, I know somebody who comes to the house and, like, just goes for a walk with their kids. It’s really helpful. A little walk and talk action. But I think remembering that these doing these kinds of things is preventative maintenance because you don’t want to get ten years down the line and be like, Well, what should I do?
    Eric: If you want someone to be kind of a more, well, you should try this or kind of kick you in the head, you want to see someone who’s called a cognitive behaviorist.
    Nicole: Mm hmm.
    Eric: Rather than like a classic Freudian kind of therapist.
    Nicole: Or a social worker or also the way it was described to me was a psychologist are working on interior thoughts and social workers are working on how you respond to the in your environment.
    Eric: Yes. Yes. I have seen one psychiatrist who was way too smart for me and that other times I’ve been with social workers and it’s it’s a CCW, it’s called a certified certified certificate. Anyway, I think they’re more based in reality and working with your world. So, yeah, that’s very important.
    Nicole: Okay, I’m going to take your next one.
    Eric: Experience Nature studies have shown that compared with Urban compared with 00 studies have shown that that compared with urban walking, walking in a woodland setting more dramatically lower stress increases positive mood and enhances working memory. Wow.
    Nicole: Yeah. I think I read an article years ago that living above the third floor is negative because we need to be closer to the ground. I feel like that’s the same as like woodland settings know you need to be grounded.
    Eric: That’s interesting because I’m thinking about this now. When my urban walking, there is stuff going on all around you and in a woodland setting. Not so much.
    Nicole: Right. Much less.
    Eric: Oh, and so this is a tangent because it is Garden Fork There is a birding app called Merlin that is put out by the Cornell University Department of Ornithology and their Big Rick. As talked about this in the show, they have a yearly bird census that you can work with them, but they have an app now out that you literally turn on the app, hit the record button and hold it up to your yard or the woods, and it records all the different birds that are doing their sounds chirping or whatever.
    Eric: And then it will list out all the birds in your yard that are talking at that that 3 minutes that you recorded.
    Nicole: That’s awesome. I need to do that around four in the morning when our birds are chirping.
    Eric: Yeah, but it’s fantastic because you know, I always hear like the chickadees and I can hear the crows and the nuthatches, but there were these other birds in the yard that I didn’t even know, like a sap sucker, a yellow bellied sap sucker, which I thought was I think is kind of a woodpecker. But the app has a pretty big database that’s like a one gig file because it downloads the audio files of birds in your area.
    Eric: But what you’re also doing by using the app is you agree to give your location to Cornell University, and they’re basically creating a database of birds in your area over time.
    Nicole: Oh, interesting.
    Eric: So with with climate, the climate crisis, global warming, I’ve seen this in real life where we’re seeing animals in the yard that we never saw before, one of them being the Lone Star tick, which gives you that get bitten, you can get that meat allergy. It used to be in the south and now it’s coming up through New England.
    Nicole: So what are you guys doing about that?
    Eric: About the birds are the ticks.
    Nicole: The ticks.
    Eric: We’re just real careful. We. Well, you can tuck your pants into your socks. Our dogs both have a tick repellant on them. And we just check each other and our dogs constantly during the day.
    Nicole: I was wondering if I don’t want to do the regular spray in our yard, you know, because of the bees. But I was interested to find out if the garlic spray harms the the bees.
    Eric: Oh, I don’t know. I don’t know.
    Eric: Anyway, that was a tangent, but. Yeah. Nature. It’s called Merlin. It’s from a Cornell University Ornithology lab. It’s a big file, but, man, that thing is fun. It’s really well designed because as you’re recording, it starts scrolling out the birds it’s hearing. And then, like, when the nut hatch gets its little thing, the nut hatch name lights up on your phone.
    Nicole: Oh, fun.
    Eric: So that was cool.
    Nicole: All right. Totally going to get that with the kids.
    Eric: That’s awesome. Nature nature. All right. You want to do number ten, Nicole?
    Nicole: Socialize with colleagues outside of work day to have shown that work friendships increase employee engagement, which is associated with both happiness and productivity for workers. I believe that the move to remote work during the pandemic has inadvertently lowered the true compensation for work for millions, explaining in part, the so-called great resignation. Bonding with your coworkers is a way to take it back.
    Eric: Oh, yeah, I, I, you know, the camera operator is an executive in a big company, and she has many employees and she just is now back at work part time, and she’s traveling the different offices. And what was lost in the remote work was what I call that coffee machine chat, you know?
    Nicole: Yeah. WaterCooler. Yep.
    Eric: Oh, you know, you know, Joe is having a hard time at home or, you know, oh, Dan did this really brilliant thing, you know, so I don’t work in an office. I work in my basement. I have two Labradors as coworkers. They just wag their tails.
    Nicole: Yeah, but you socialize with them outside of work.
    Eric: Yeah, we do. We’re going to go have a beer after work.
    Nicole: No, I mean, it’s the same here, but I will say that I have I have intentional, intentional groups, so I have my writing accountability group and we make a point to meet every week at the same time to talk about our writing and to write together.
    Eric: Interesting. It’s I actually have started a little YouTube group, some some people that I know that are also on YouTube. And I don’t know if it’s called a mastermind group, but I, I started it. I’m not very good at organizing, but maybe I can get one of the other people in the group to make us meet on Zoom or Skype or something.
    Eric: Once a month, just to kind of talk about YouTube because YouTube keeps moving the goalposts. Right. And just sharing what we find is of interest. But yeah, just see if people go out for I think people drink less now, but you could and I think maybe people roll their eyes at something that the human resources department has created some sort of ice cream, social or something or like a spa like.
    Nicole: Yeah.
    Eric: Well, it’s like, hey, let’s just go have some let’s take a break at 3:00 and go have some coffee. You know.
    Nicole: I think it is sometimes one thing that Brant finds is that once you have kids coming home, like going to a happy hour isn’t as easy, you know?
    Eric: Yeah.
    Nicole: Especially before the pandemic, like, and when they were really little like I was like watching the clock, like, okay, it’s, you know, it’s 601, and you’re not here. So yeah, that’s much better now, though. And of course. Oh, this is funny. I have a good friend who has like an executive job. And so I said to him the other day, it was like, Hey, if you guys do the take your kids at work day, could you, you know, take, take one of the boys.
    Nicole: And he is like, oh, god, we haven’t done that in years. But can’t just take the boys up to the attic.
    Nicole: That’s where Brian’s been working for three years.
    Eric: And years ago.
    Nicole: It was like, well played, well played.
    Eric: All right, cool. I you know, I like these kind of lists. They I like that they kind of give me sometimes a a sideways view on stuff and stuff I’ve never thought about. And it also reinforces that a lot of the stuff I do is is part of this well, on these lists, I think acting nicely as and checking your health are just so incredibly important.
    Eric: I caught my wife calls it charitable assumption. You don’t know the background of the person that’s having a bad day. Or just kind of directing anger at you. And I’ve learned I’ve gotten so much better at just stepping back and going, okay, there’s clearly something going on here. That maybe I was the trigger for. But there’s a lot of a lot of not back issues has a back story baggage I just think about that, you know, if there’s some kind of interaction in the parking lot, you know what I do now when something like that, I go, hey, I’m sorry, nothing.
    Eric: I didn’t mean anything by it. I’m really just sorry. I hope your day goes better and it disarms people. Yeah. Because they’re ready for you to whip out your phone and start videoing them, you know?
    Nicole: Yeah.
    Eric: And I usually take my hand and I take my hand and I hold it over my chest, and I just go, Hey, I’m sorry. I didn’t mean to do that. I’m sorry if anything happened here, and it works usually. Yeah.
    Nicole: Yeah, totally. Give everybody a little more grace.
    Eric: Yeah, yeah. There’s a lot going on right now, you know, it’s just you turn on the news and you’re like, oh, my God. That just happened. And so if you’re asked nicely, maybe something won’t happen.
    Nicole: I think turning off the news is always a good.
    Eric: Option for that. That’s number 11. Yeah.
    Nicole: Hey, well, this is great.
    Eric: All right, so if you are interested in supporting the show and getting more the world of Eric: , I have a Patreon account. You can become a regular donor supporter. Donors for non-profits Actually, Nicole is one, and I post stuff during the week, and we do an after show for the podcast. So we’re going to stick around now and do about 10 minutes behind the scenes with the world of Eric: and the calls.
    Eric: We consider that everyone else, if you’re have some ideas for us as topics to talk about or things that you’d like to add to this list, because we’ll revisit this. It’s radio at Garden for TV. Thanks for listening. I really appreciate it. It makes me smile to think that people are downloading and I get to be in their ears.
    Eric: So go out and do cool stuff and make it a great day. Gardening Talk Radio is produced by Garden Fork Media, LLC in Brooklyn, New York. Our producer is Sean O’Neill. If you need an amazing podcast producer visit Sean’s site. Sean in Brooklyn dot com that’s Sean SD eight and in Brooklyn dot com. Our executive producers Jimmy goes for more information on Jimmy and the custom hello books he makes visit hello books dot com.
    Eric: The music in the show is licensed from Audio Block School and unique tracks. Scott.

  • Loving My Rad Power Bike

    person and battery powered bicycle
    I’ve been riding my Rad Power ebike for over a year now. A few weeks ago, I asked Rad Power about being becoming an affiliate, and they said yes. Here is my my new affiliate link !

    I’ll be doing a more in depth talk here on why I am a Rad Power fan boy, but if you are thinking of buying an ebike, I strongly endorse Rad Power Bikes. I get asked every week to promote stuff, but I only work with people and products I actually think are good and useful. Rad Power is one of those. 🙂

    Curious about their ebikes? Check them out using my affiliate link here.

    person and bike

     

  • Ride The Subway With Me – GF Radio

    man on subway train
    Riding the R Train

    Want More of the Labs and Eric? Join My Email List Here.

    manhattan bridge NYC
    Subway on Manhattan Bridge, Brooklyn Bridge in background

    Food Truck
    Food Truck Park Avenue Manhattan

    subway station
    Union Square Subway Platform

    store interior
    Home Depot, note the skylight with brick offices above.

    Rainbow Falafel just off Union Square on 17th St. My Fav falafel sandwich.

    food stain on pants
    Tahini Sauce incident

    Having lunch in Union Square Park

    I was like, oh, I needed to record a podcast today. A bunch of stuff I wanted to share with you. And then I thought, why don’t I just share with you what it’s like to be in New York, like oral, a U R a L edition here. I’m walking down fifth avenue in sunset park. I’m going to the subway. I’m going to go see my primary care doctor, who I have not seen since before the pandemic. I took a shower and Shinola shaved, and I was like dressed like an, a well dressed like an adult. I’m going by my favorite vegetable fruit market, which I’ve posted pictures on an Instagram before. And I mean, it’s literally around the corner and this guy is not yielding to the pedestrians in the crosswalk, but that is not unusual here. Here we go.

    Some people are wearing mass most aren’t, I mean, a New York city has a 70% vaccination rate, which is just fantastic. You can get a vaccination in the pharmacies here then there’s, there’s one, two, there’s, three pharmacies within a couple of blocks of my house. So there was a vaccination van up in the park this morning and, you know, it’s just like just making it available to everyone. And I just missed the signal here. So I gotta, we’re going to make a turn and go down to the subway. We’re going to take the R train to the express. I’m going to go into Manhattan. We’re going to take three trains and that’s not, you know, I’m going to take a local to the express, stopping, going to go express over the Manhattan bridge train stunk over the Brooklyn bridge, but there’s going to be a dedicated bike lane on the Brooklyn bridge pretty soon.

    And that will be cool currently or as a bike and pedestrian lane. And it’s just a big mess because it’s not very wide, a lot of tourists and the people who ride their bikes are a little self-righteous on the bridge. And then there’s joggers who think they own the thing. And I’m still at the crosswalk and I know the light’s going to change, but I’m inching across anyway here. Cause that’s what we do here. I’m not good at standing still. And even though I have arthritis in my feet, I still think it’s important to, I just like to move fast. The camera operator can walk faster than I, and I do have to stop sometimes cause the pain, but I, you know, from what I understand with arthritis, it’s important to move because it gets the lubricating fluids moving in the joints. So, oh, this is another one of those little forgot, five hundreds here. There’s a, I’ve seen a, not a huge, but a big increase in, well, I called generically smart cars around here and a few electric cars actually, because you can park those things anywhere. Well, I mean the smart cars there’s there are some people who park and they’ll take up two parking spots because they don’t want anyone to get near their car because then it’s just like, you know, dude, here’s a gentleman has got a trash barrel on wheels. [inaudible]

    He just hit a hole in the sidewalk. There there’s a business improvement district on the avenue. And I think it’s through a tax, a commercial tax of some sort, it’s a nominal amount of money, but they, then there’s a nonprofit called ready, willing and able, I think it’s from the DOE fund. And they help people who need a leg up who are perhaps homeless or living in a, not the greatest conditions and maybe have some health issues. And they start cleaning up the avenue. It’s the merchant shopping districts, which is fifth avenue is one of those. So that’s great. You know, and then it’s, oh, there’s a Tesla right there. That’s a red one.

    I’m curious about, I need an electric car that has a big hatchback cargo space and surprisingly, a lot of them don’t. So anyway, so, oh, now there are city bikes have moved into the neighborhood. There’s those bikes that you can rent by the hour or by the day. And a bunch of those have sprung up here at the stations. I’m curious how they, there are, some of them are electric assist and some of them are pedal only. So I’m going down into the subway station. So I have to put on my mask. So if you just hold on for a minute,

    Mask is on and I got to get my a card out now.

    All right, where inside the station now, and we’re going. So you have to think about where you’re going to get off to transfer to the next train. So I want to be in the back of the train because at union square, I’m going to transfer it to the six train and you got to put the back of the train at union square for an R Q R N and then walk, I don’t know, a hundred feet or so a couple hundred feet to the Lexington avenue line, which is the four, five and six. And I’ll take a six local to 32nd street and park avenue. And so the train just came, so I just missed a train, but that’s not the end of the world. I mean, you really can’t, but actually there’s an app now there’s countdown clocks on the station platforms for the next several trains.

    And it also gives information about whether there’s a delay of some sort. But so I think I have a few minutes. I, I walked past the countdown clock without looking at it. So oh, they have some sort of some sort of a coronavirus advertisement vaccine advertisement on the countdown clock right now it’ll pop back. So yeah. So we’re going to a local train go. One-Stop almost invariably, as in as express train with a few minutes go zip to Atlantic avenue and then the next stop will be, well, it depends. It could be DeKalb avenue or Atlantic avenue. No, it’ll be, I’m going to in the Broadway line, which is the yellow, the end or Q trains. So one stop at the DeKalb, right where I got my vaccination in Brooklyn and then over the Brooklyn bridge to canal street and then 14th street. So it’s really fast.

    I saw my neighbors, you know, there’s happy people here. So I wanted to talk about some of the shows I’ve been watching on Netflix. I’ll just move away from here. And maybe you can hear me better. One is called call my agent, which I was reluctant to watch because it had it’s in French and it has English subtitles. And I’m like, I’m not going to put up with this because you know, typical American who expects everything to be in English. Right. And I mean the first show or two is a little, a little like what’s going on here, but it’s really good. It’s I mean, there’s some in jokes, which if you were French, you would understand from what I understand. So

    That was a pre pandemic announcement about the if you see something, say something basically from that’s been going on since since the towers fell, that’s just yeah. If you see like a suitcase or a knapsack just sitting there and it’s no one’s, you should tell someone about that. And that has happened. I’ve seen where they’ve, they’ve shut down areas because there’s just a bag and, you know, 99.9% of the time it’s someone forgot their bag. But there was a while ago, someone that tried to detonate a pipe bomb at the one of the subway stations, we’re going to just unhappy people. And they think that violence will solve things. And I guess that’s a human, I got Rick radio, Rick could comment on this, but anyway, I’d like to focus on the good in people like my neighbors here, who are I’m going to presume that they are Muslim from perhaps the Arab state, just from how they’re dressed and what they’re saying. But you know, just, just super nice people. It looks like it’s a family thing. They’re going to go perhaps into the city to go. There’s some amazing spice stores on Lexington. One’s called [inaudible] stands, which has, I mean, anyone from any kind of culture I think can go there and find the spices and ingredients they’re looking for. There comes an express.

    This is our local train across the platform. There’s four subway tracks. The two center ones are inbound and outbound express and the outer ones are local. We’re on the inbound or Manhattan bound, our local train track. And this is a bay Ridge bound, our train on the far opposite track, which is what we will ride on the way home. And there they go. That’s the subway. They’ve got a really neat voice announcements. Now on the trains that you can hear they can pipe in special announcements from a dispatch center and it’ll play on the train. You can hear them clearly. When I first moved back to New York after college, that didn’t happen. It was just, it was the late eighties and the city was on the upswing, but the subway system, well, what’s not so, so call my agent this French show that we have fallen for the camera operator and I was pretty good on PBS. I don’t remember the name of the show it’s on PBS. It is a show about an entrepreneur women who starts a, this baking company based on her grandmother’s biscuit recipe. And it’s it’s really good. It’s kind of following her through starting the business and I’m going to look it up here. This skit show. Let’s see what happens. I can’t spell here comes an express. The other way.

    That’s a Manhattan bound and express train. I don’t know where the art is. This should be here by now, the countdown clock I’m going to have. I can’t see it from here. I see it, but because my eyes are shot, I can’t see it. It looks like about five minutes. That’s a little long. It’s a little unusual anyway. How she rolls is the PBS show it’s broadcast on PBS and you can also get it on their website and app. I’m part of their, I signed up for supporting them. I think it’s $6 a month. It’s called passport mean much like joining Netflix or a masterclass or something like that, or Hulu or apple TV. And for the $6 a month, you get access to the back catalog of all their programming, like frontline and Nova the Ken burns documentaries. So when you can’t sleep at night, you can go down to the TV room or even on your iPad, you can watch it with the PBS app, but it’s called how she rolls. And it’s just the struggles of running a business and then the pandemic hits. So it’s it’s a little bit like chef and the farmer. If you remember that, which I thought was also an excellent show in PBS. So, all right, I’m going to hold off here until the train comes and we’ll get some recording of the train.

    All right. We’re run the express platform now. [

    Some people, I mean, even though New York city is a great place, you kind of have to watch out for people that might be prone to cause trouble. So if you see them getting on a car, don’t get on that car and get on the deck, you know, run out 20, 50 feet, got on the next car. So a w train is going to come here on one minute, enter a w W’s run Ws run on here too. Right? I it’s been a year since really riding on the subway. No, it’s an N alright. W is also run, but I thought they ran local in Manhattan, but anyway, the end goes through Manhattan and then goes up to a story which is used to be a big Greek neighborhood is changing a lot now. So, all right. And one minute we’ll have an express Broadway line express train we’re at 36. We’re going to go to two more stops in Brooklyn here. We’re going to stop at Atlantic Pacific street and then Dickow and then DeKalb was right at the base of the Manhattan bridge. We’ll go to the Manhattan bridge. Okay. [inaudible]

    Back of the train. I want to get off of the back of the train.

    All right. That was Atlantic avenue.

    So we’re on the Manhattan bridge now and somebody kind of noisy

    canal street. Next stop is 14th street. [inaudible]

    14Th street. I was wrong about the train stopping at the cow, but it’s been awhile. So it’s about noon,

    All right. I thought there was one of the, they had these performances in the subway. I thought that’s what that was. All right. We’re going to go over and get the six train though.

    All right. 33Rd street.

    So if you look up park avenue south from here, or this is park avenue, actually you can see the MetLife building, which used to be the Pan-Am building. And my father did worked on all the air conditioning for when they built the Pan-Am building. And he has this I’m sure. He, I don’t know if he worked with, he must’ve worked with the company PR guy, because he was good at this, but there’s this really cool photo I have of him standing in the middle of park avenue with the Pan-Am building in the background. And it was very much my father kind of like getting someone to do something for him, for some self promotion and that, you know, that was him. It worked, I have, it’s a great photo. So, all right. Half a block from the doctor’s office.

    All right, Don, with the doctor, I didn’t think he really wanted to hang out. And then in the doctors what’s called a treatment room. I dunno one of those, you know, it’s got the tape, the table and the blood pressure machine and all that. And there’s a deli here that is, I’m going to take a picture of it. [inaudible] Well, there’s some people standing here, so I don’t really want to take a picture cause it would look weird. But I mean, they rent real estate by the square foot here. And the deli is wedged in between two buildings and it’s about five feet wide and about 10 feet. So I am really hungry and we’re going to dinner, backyard, dinner, barbecue thing tonight. So [inaudible], I think I’m going to have to eat something healthy. Not that that’s a bad thing. So food trucks, there are two food trucks right here or food carts as we, cause they’re not full trucks, they’re actually trailers. So let me look around here. This will, this smells really good. it’s dangerous. [inaudible]

    So I went back and took a picture of the, a little hole in the wall deli there for you. I’ll I can’t put the pictures into the podcast, but I on the blog posts the post on the garden, fork.tv website for this podcast. We’ll have the photos there. So, so I’m on 32nd. Believe it or not. There is a home Depot in Manhattan on 23rd, between fifth and sixth. So I’m going to walk over. I was just on park. I’m going to cross Broadway and I’m going to hit fifth. Wait, what am I doing? Oh, I haven’t been in Manhattan in a long time. I’m going to walk west. Oh, so I mean, I’m on fifth, I’m hitting fifth now Broadway’s on the other side. So I’m going to go down a couple of blocks of 23rd and I want to get some brackets that my local hardware store does not carry to hold some of my garden tools in the backyard. I just want to put the I’m going to get them up there. Just kind of leaning against the fence. And I’d like to get them up off of there and just try and tidy it up. So if he could hurt it, but that was someone who was not happy and yelling on the phone.

    There is a lot of noise in the city. This is fifth avenue is a lot of traffic, so there’s just a lot of stuff there has been, there is definitely less people on the street and it’s one 30 right now. So that’s some people’s lunch hour and I’m seeing, I’m seeing guys riding these city bikes that looked like they’re construction workers. And it’s a little weird, but anyway so the city is not as busy as it usually is pre pandemic, but oh, and so my, my father-in-law sends me these links on from msn.com, Microsoft news.com you know, msn.com. And they’re not always, well, they’re just a little anyway. So one of them is the city, New York city is facing economic collapse and it’s not, I mean, yeah, there’s going to be some hurt. It’s going to be hurt everywhere coming out of a pandemic.

    But, and then some of my friends are sending me pictures of this flood in the subway. And I’m like, well, okay, first of all, the subway is underground. It’s rained for five days, you know, wow. Just found some tourists. You know, rain has to go somewhere and one stairwell floods out of 435 stairwells are hot. However many stairwells there are in the subway system and it goes viral. And everyone thinks that the whole subway system flooded. They’re like Eric what’s with the subway system. So the internet is wonderful and the internet is horrible. As we know, cause I just rode the subway. It works just fine. That was a beer truck that went by another beer trucks honking his horn at people he’s driving a little fast. All right. So little more walking. We’ll get to the home Depot [inaudible]

    So we’re at 23rd and fifth is that the flat iron building is right here. Some guy just asked me for onto my eye. Some marijuana smoke, smoke smoke is the key phrase there. And the home Depot is about a half a block. Also the original Eataly is right here as well, which is I mean I could go crazy there and buy all sorts of stuff, but I have a fridge full of food. I have to cook. I just went to the grocery store. A lot of actually a lot of chain restaurants are showing up, especially in Manhattan. Starbucks are everywhere, even like a little subway sandwich shops, but home Depot is a few stores down from here. [inaudible]

    All right in and out of the home Depot, I got some of those springy kinda clampy things that you can put like a broom and it’ll grab onto the broom or a rake. And it’ll hold that on the wall. There is a lot of people in Manhattan that dress fashionably or dressed, wearing barely any clothing. It’s just a thing here. So I’m going to run. We’re going to now go, this is a recurring sound in New York, the ambulance trying to get through traffic. And sometimes people don’t get out of the way maybe because they can’t hear the, I dunno. All right. I just had my falafel sandwich and union square park and my falafel sprung a leak and I got to Haney sauce all over my pants. So not the end of the world. First world problem. I got to hop on the train here. [inaudible] Definitely a lot of tourists around, but it just feels good. It feels like almost a normal, which I love

    all right. I’m at my local station. It’s interesting how

    I basically stayed within 10 blocks of my house. And then just going to a different part of the city kind of reminds me that we’re getting back to normal, which is so great. It’s so nice. And the falafels are good. You just gotta watch out for the little bit of tahini sauce, explosion, olive it’s just looks like I got joint compound on my pants. So a little different for the podcast, but I thought, well, what the heck? I mean, all I can do is try and let me know what you thought. It’s a radio@gardenfork.tv. I’m going to do a little bonus show for the garden for patrons. So go out and do cool stuff. Make it a great day.

     

  • AirPods Pro For Hearing Aids?

    Rick joins me to talk about the Mind’s Eye, Log Splitters, and using AirPods as hearing aids. A fun mix for GardenFork Radio.

    Rick has been using AirPods as an affordable alternative for hearing aids, and tell us how he uses his iPhone with these small earbuds to dial down the noise in public places and hear stuff again. Purchase them here. Rick tells his story about using the Apple earbuds as hearing aids at the 26:00 minute mark in the podcast.

    But first we talk about The Mind’s Eye. This conversation started from an article in the NY Times.  It’s something neither of us thought much about until we read the article and then it was a wow moment for us. I’ve always thought we all thought kinda the same. That’s not the case, we learn now.

    Cambodian Shiva Head
    Cambodian Shiva Head, Public Domain Wikimedia

    And that log splitter and my hand. I never thought about a safety release for log splitters until my hand got caught in one. Funny how you think about stuff when your hand is jammed between a log and a piece of steel. Watch me and my log splitter here.

    The good news story about the high school graduate and Waffle House is here.

    Welcome to GardenFork Radio. My name is Eric. I am the host of the show. I’m here with my co-host Rick. Hello, sir.

    Rick: Ah, hello, my friend. How are you this morning?

    Eric: No complaints. If I, if you can get up and walk and talk you’re you’re ahead of the game, right? Yeah. Yeah.

    Rick: I say, if you walk, if you wake up on this side of the grass, you know, you got it made,

    Eric: There is a, I think there should be more of an appreciation just for the little things in life. You’re like, I’m trying to be better at being in the moment rather than letting my mind race around all the time. So I was, I was looking at clouds this morning and like last night I was driving down the road in the country, in the country and I thought I’ve seen this view. I’ve driven that road for 20 years. And I’m like, wow, if you were experiences for the first time, it’s a beautiful road. And I just realized that you’re not, you just need to stop and look at the flowers, you know? Yeah,

    Rick: Yeah. And appreciate what’s going on around you.

    Eric: And all right, we’re going to go on a tangent already here. So welcome to the show. Thank you for dying. But there is so much doom in the media, even though the vaccines work we’re getting out of the pandemic, there’s still so much doom that there are still good things going on in the world. And I’m going to link to an article in the Washington post. It’s called the inspired life. And a gentleman, a young man was a senior in high school and he worked at the waffle house. And on the day of his graduation, his manager knows that it’s graduation for the local high school. He shows up for his shift and manager’s like, what are you doing here? You’re supposed to be graduation. I got a single, a single mother, no father in the picture is like, well, I don’t have any money for the clothes. I don’t have the money to rent a cap and gown. And I’d rather work at the waffle house. So coworkers heard the story, people eating at the waffle house, heard that story and they teamed up one person, went to the store and bought him clothes. One person ran to the high school and rented the cap and gown. The manager drove him the graduation and took him to his graduation. And people in the restaurant contributed money to buying the clothes. And that’s a beautiful story.

    Rick: It is. Did they dock him for his time? Come on.

    Eric: So not all his GardenFork all about, Hey, there are good things in the world. So welcome. And that was a good thing.

    Rick: Lots of good things in the world. And people have been focused too long on the things that aren’t going well and and really letting them override their judgment of what’s going on, in good in the world. One of the things I recently experienced as soon as she, who must be obeyed, got her back. So nation, she was on the first thing smoking out of here. Oh yeah, yeah, yeah. And she takes this road trip up to from Texas. She flew to Texas to Texas, up to South Dakota with a friend to deliver some she partying dogs and they had a flat, they drive the blue highways that a car parallel to them, the main through arteries and the interstates. And they were driving the blue highway and they had a flat, well, here are these two old women who out there with this flat and they struggled and struggled, struggled. Then the, of course the the lug wrench isn’t long enough to really give her it never is. And so, you know, they they’re, they’re farm girls farm and ranch girls. And so they walked the ditches on either side, well, one going forward, the other going back until they find a length of pipe and they slide the pipe over the over the lug wrench handle to give them more leverage. And one of them stands on it and breaks the lug nuts loose. And I said, that’s a farm girl for you.

    Eric: Yeah. We call that a cheater pipe that works. I actually keep a, what’s called a breaker bar in my car with the correct socket, a six sided socket for all my lug nuts. And I keep a five-pound sledge with the spare tire because your metal wheel can fuse onto the not the re well, yeah, the rotor, cause it’s, it’s usually just breaks. And the rust basically fuses the two metals together and you can Jack up your car and side of the road, but sometimes you can’t get the tire off. You whack it with the five-pound sledge and it comes off. So breaker bar with a six sided socket that fits your lug nut and a five pound sledge save you a lot of time.

    Rick: Yeah. Now say there is a downside to live in with a, a farm girl. I will be sitting there and I am completely inept with sockets. I sit there and I, I try one and I try another and I try another until, you know, I’ve got 30 sockets sitting out there until I find the right. I finally figured out that there’s a difference between metric and, and ISA, but and she walks by and she glances at it and she says nine sixteenths. And she’s right now, she won’t do it unless she has to, but she’ll glance as you that’s 3, 8, 9 sixteens. She just has that eye, that gift. Whereas I sit there like a monkey, just twisting each one on and off till I get one that bits sort of, well, that,

    Eric: That, that parlays into what we’re going to talk about today,

    Rick: Ah, of the mind’s eye, you’re saying yeah, imagination. Okay. I

    Eric: Like how, and I got you off that rabbit hole and the subject,

    Rick: The trial, when you kept, you know, kept me from getting myself beat up. When I leave the room here after she, who must be obeyed, hears me talk about her. Okay. You know, you, you sent me this great article, cool a belt from the New York times work times that I had never thought about. And I love articles about the mind and how it works that I had never thought about. And it’s called, can’t see pictures in your mind. You’re not alone. And it’s by Richard Chase. And once you kind of go ahead and, and talk about it a little bit.

    Eric: Well, I was confused by it because my mind is incredibly visual. I think of numbers and math visually. I think of it in a graphic sense. And I’m always visualizing how I’m going to shoot videos or how I’m going to build something or fix something. And there are evidently people in the world that can’t, their brains are wired, such that they can’t, or don’t do that.

    Rick: One of them, I had no idea that other people were different for me. Come on, Rick. I do not. I don’t, I have a, I have a very weak minds. I occasionally I’ll see a flashing kind of a gray scale or something, but I don’t play movies in my head. Wow. it, it, now it explains what was my, my problem in school when I took physics and I could more or less work the problems, but you know, these guys I was in class with, they’d say, okay, now if you take this, you put it over here and you turn it upside down and what do you got? And I said, yeah, you got another problem. And they could in their minds eye, as they were manipulating the numbers and the the equations can actually turn we were doing Newtonian physics and they could turn, you know blocks and spheres and stuff in their mind or reverse the way they were rotating and that kind of thing. And actually kind of see it as they were manipulating the numbers. And I just, I could see the numbers, I could do the problems more or less, but I just didn’t, they didn’t mean anything to me, the way they spoke to spoke to those guys.

    Eric: Yeah. Like I, I’m not good at multiplication, but if you need to estimate like estimating mortgage payments, I can just do it in my head. Oh well. And I think of it all as blocks and chunks and it all breaks down into tens, tens, and hundreds and thousands for me and just moving zeros and I moved them all visually. And are they colored? Yeah. Yeah, yeah. See

    Rick: That you actually have something. I was aware of that a lot of mathematicians like Fineman did they, they actually could envision numbers as colors and this called synesthesia. And they would, as they were doing the equation or multiplying or whatever, each column, each number would change colors and it helped them keep track of what they were doing so that they could do things in their head. A lot of poets they think were synesthesia it’s, I don’t know if that’s a word where they could taste the blue or they could hear orange, it had colors associated with it and, or the other way they could taste a one you know, really strange little things. Sometimes they could smell numbers. I had no idea what that means, but because I’m not wired that way, but it’s just a little, it’s not anything wrong with you.

    Rick: It’s just a difference in a way of being, and that’s what this is. The medical term they come up with, this is an affinities Asia not being able to have kind of having a blind mind’s eye. And I, I do that. I, I, I can recall things. I can plan things. I can create things with words, but I just don’t have a if I, if my wife has gone, she must be obeyed. I have trouble picturing bringing a picture of her into my mind. I recognize her when I see her in a picture, but I cannot picture her in my mind. Wow.

    Eric: So, and this is not a medical deficit. It’s not a deficit, it’s just a different way of being

    Rick: Well. And they think, and I found this, it helps me one reason, I think I’ve always been drawn to things like police work in the military and whatnot, where occasionally things get a little dicey, but, you know, it could be flying or driving a boat or anything else are scuba. If you can visually see something terribly dangerous, imagine it happening at flashes before you, it, in some ways cripples you from being able to do what you have to do in the very moment, you know probably a lot of doctors, particularly emergency room doctors, nurses don’t have that flash of all the things that could go wrong and, you know, screwing up and that kind of thing, that I can only deal with the problem in front of them, which makes them superior at what they do. Because they’re, they’re not crippled by the the emotions that go with brilliant images.

    Eric: Wow. I wonder if that might explain people with anxiety

    Rick: You know, the opposite of this is a hyper hyper fan. Hey, you show Tasha. Yeah. Fantasia, hyper Fantasia. People who are overly stimulated by pictures in their mind. And it sorta cripples them sometimes not all the time, but and you know, that it could have something to do with that. We’re not doctors that we have to point out. This is a terribly difficult thing to study because it requires people to self-report. Yes. they’re just now getting to where they can do a few studies [inaudible] and whatnot. Apparently. they’re doing something with they have you imagine a bright white triangle and people that are hyper or fantastic Penn tastiest. I can’t come up with our their pupils will contract just like they’d seen a really bright light, whereas those that are a fantastic Fantasia tests, whatever they are. They don’t react their peoples don’t react because they’re not imagining a really bright light. So I don’t know,

    Eric: I’m going to read just a paragraph here

    Eric: As a cognitive neuroscientist, Joel Pearson from the university of new south Wales who has studied, studied mental imagery since 2005 said hyper Fantasia could go far beyond just having an active imagination. It’s like having a very vivid dream and not being sure if it was real or not, people watch a movie and then they can watch it again in their mind and it’s indistinguishable. Hmm. Wow. So that’s not me. I know. I, I can separate the two.

    Rick: Well, and you know, one of the things I think may be a benefit to being emphatic and to not being able to pick yeah. Not being able to picture things in your mind like that is a, an ability move on after a trauma. They think that may be one of the real benefits which is true in my life. I think I don’t anguish and suffer over past defeats or disappointments, or I don’t relive them the way my wife who obviously has a very active inner eye mind’s eye does. And so you know, I think I’m able to move on a little bit faster.

    Eric: I like to be able to do that. I have these cringing cringing. Why did I do that dumb thing moments? And they are like watching a movie in my brain. It physically hurts.

    Rick: Yeah. And I noticed it when it comes to past dogs we’ve, we’ve known. And for me, you know, they, they were here, we enjoy them, they’re past and I move on and I get another dog. She kind of comes up with the you know, it’s, she gets, I call it nostalgic, but you know, a little morose about, oh, I remember Sydney, you know, she was such a sweet dog and young, and you could just see her playing the, the images in her head. And she actually mourns the Mo for again, I think,

    Eric: Yeah. I could see that. So that’s right. We will link to this article. I thought that was, as soon as I saw it, I was like, this is something that Rick would like, and we could talk about. So I liked that I’m always

    Rick: Interested in the the mind and how it works and the things they’re finding out about it. And also, but here’s the thing there’s no right or wrong about this. It’s, it’s just a way of being and you know, different minds. Actually they’re finding out most minds, no two minds are exactly alike and that’s, that’s good

    Eric: Much like yourself. I try and buy locally as much as possible when I’m working on a project, I get onto my local, locally owned hardware store, which is one of the funniest places in the world to go crawl around and buy what I need there. If they don’t have it, then I go to the big home improvement store, the orange store, the blue store. And if they don’t have it, then I will go online and buy something. And sometimes I end up on Amazon, if you are shopping on Amazon, much like I do. Would you consider using the GardenFork, radio there’s horns honking outside? How am I supposed to do a promo with the ho can you hear the horn? So anyway, here’s what I’m thinking. If you’re going to use Amazon, would you use the link in our show notes? It’s amazon.com/shop/GardenFork, amazon.com/shop/GardenFork. Start your shopping on our page at Amazon, we get a little finder’s fee, helps us pay the bills, and I had you get a big, thank you from me. All right. Amazon.Com/Shop/GardenFork, and the horns have stopped. No, it just went again. All right. See ya.

    Eric: I learned something this weekend. Would you like to know what it is please? There’s no safety switch on your log splitter. Oh, really? What did you do? I got my hands stuck between the log and the Eric and the end of the log splitter. And my friend was running the hydraulic part, you know, and then when I started screaming, he had a mild freak out as to which way was forward and reverse on the hydraulic piston. And I got my finger back out. So

    Rick: Were you wearing gloves?

    Eric: Yeah, I had gloves on, but that doesn’t really help much when the log is smashing your, your finger. Oh, wow. So, okay. So I

    Rick: Thought about that, you know, I did just now going back to our main topic, I did have a little friction of, oh my God. You know, and I get that occasionally around knives blades of some sort I’ll, I’ll get a quick flash of oh boy, that’s dangerous. I just got one of those with you, just a, a shiver of Friesian or free zone.

    Eric: Yeah. It, thankfully it wasn’t on the wedge end of the split or it’s on the flat steel part that the log presses against as the, you know, the pistons driving the wedge and then the log hits the back. It looks like a super duper L bracket, essentially. It’s out of steel. And my hand was in, I had put the log down and my friend had engaged the piston to bring the wedge down sooner than I thought. And I didn’t get my hand out of the way. And my one finger got stuck, but then, and so I’m like, I’m like I, you know, I’m calling my wife. I’m like, okay, we gotta go to the emergency room. You know? And so luckily I think everyone should have these in the freezer. They are a flexible freezer pack. I used them, I got them from my physical therapist for my back.

    Eric: And they’ve been sitting in there for years, but they are when they’re frozen, they’re still flexible. Right. It’s a plastic, it looks like a ugly plastic white bag, but I wrapped my finger with that. And we drove down to the emergency room and there’s a new one, actually only about 15 minutes away. And by the time we got there, I’m like, you know, I can bend my finger. It’s not tingling. It’s not searing pain. It’s swelling up. The it’s not turning purple. The nail isn’t broken. And then I thought, if we go into the emergency room, they’re gonna, I’m going to have to wait. I’m gonna have to go to, they’re going to get an x-ray, they’re going to say, well, there’s no skin break. And then they’re going to look at the x-ray and say, there’s nothing broken. And then they’re going to refer me to a hand expert and I’m like, let’s just go home and ice. The thing, that’s what I do. So how

    Rick: Has the tip of your finger turned black and blue? No,

    Eric: It’s it’s pink that the fingers a little swell. I’m not saying avoid the emergency room. Okay. But the way American medicine works is it gets complicated way too quick, I think. But anyway, I just took a Advil or ibuprofen for the swelling and I just iced it. And then I got to at the drug store, they have a finger splints that are flexible metal with these Velcro strips. And so I wrapped it with a compression bandage and then I put the splint on there to keep me from bending it. Right. And it’s, it’s still swollen, but I can move it. And in the splint I wear the splint more now. So I don’t jam my finger when I, like I was walking the dogs and I opened up the front gate and I, I whacked my finger on the gate and I’m like, oh, that’s why you wear the splint, you know? But I signpost here. You gotta be really careful when you’re working with one of your friends and a splitter or a piece of machinery like that, because you’re, sometimes there’s a rhythm, but the person, my friend I was working with, we don’t quite have that, that rhythm down. And so I think I’m just going to dial back the, he wanted to help split wood. I’m like, okay, well we could, you know, we could do this. I actually really would prefer that one person put the log on and the other person run
    The machine. Right.

    Rick: Well, how was it working this time?

    Eric: It didn’t work well because I got my finger smashed.

    Rick: Okay. But I mean, he was writing the machine and you were putting the log on. Okay. Well,

    Eric: We were kind of, we hadn’t set a rhythm, we hadn’t really set any, okay. You’re going to run this. I’m going to put the log on. You know, it’s almost to the point that if you, if you could put the log down and then say clear, and then they could engage the splitter. But I mean, there be cut with other friends, mine. It just becomes a, like a choreograph to dance that you keep repeating, put a log on, move your hands away. The other guy engages, you know, and then when you split the log, both logs, you know, splits in half and then you can decide whether they’re going to split it again. And so anyway, just be careful.

    Rick: Yeah. You know, it’s funny because, you know, you’re always you know, putting on your chainsaw, chaps and a helmet and the face garden, ear protection, and, you know, putting, you know, wearing gloves and everything. I mean, you’re Mr. Safety. And then to have that happen to you just shows even when you’re really super conscious of things that can go you know, you still get caught occasionally.

    Eric: Yeah. It’s kind of funny because in hindsight, I think a chain saw safer than the log splitter.

    Rick: Well, maybe, maybe I had a neighbor who was up in a tree trying to trim things and with a chainsaw and fell out of the tree and the chainsaw landed about three feet from him when he fell still running. And he had he was one of those guys that thought safeties were for sissies and he had a, not wired, but he’d roped the

    Eric: Oh, we disabled the brake,

    Rick: He disabled the brake. And so the thing was still spinning as he fell through the air holding it and did just luckily landed away from him. We have a lot of accidents like that in my neighborhood. I’m a little worried about some of the people that live here. Guy not I think last summer didn’t want to pay someone to and this guy is 70 years old. Didn’t want to pay somebody to power wash the outside of his two story house. And so he’s up there doing it and falls off the ladder and lands on the the patio table, glass table. And of course it, it collapsed and it kind of saved him, but if there’d been an umbrella in it, it probably wouldn’t have saved him.

    Eric: But yeah. So I tried to use the power washer on an extension ladder once, and I’ll never do it again

    Rick: Well mean, but you’re the guy I keep coming back to this. I had the flame thrower on the roof hanging onto the gutter

    Eric: And I see gutter that’s in Brooklyn, or you do everything in Brooklyn. So

    Rick: Yeah, a little, little frightening to think about that.

    Eric: So we were talking before the show and we will actually have an after show for the garden for patrons, but a kind of apple, apple earbuds as a kind of, sort of hearing aid.

    Rick: Yeah. I have flown airplane shotguns. I have done all kinds of things. My life, my hearing is kind of caput now particularly in some vocal ranges and I have trouble at restaurants, me too. It, they just get so loud and I can’t hear voices anymore. So I resort to trying to read lips, which I’m pretty good at. It turns out most people do that when they can’t hear well. And I bought a standard set of AirPods for the apple iPhone, and I got to reading, it turns out the air pod probes, which were about a hundred dollars more have special circuitry built in. Then you control through the accessibility tab on the on the phone. And you can tune out background noise loud radios or music in the, in the store or in the restaurant and boost voices.

    Rick: And it tuned jerk AirPod pros so that you can actually hear conversations. We were out last night. The first time we’ve eaten out since the pandemic about 18 months. And I had read about this and I, I went back and got, I turned in the the ones I bought and got the AirPod pros instead. Oh, cool. And, and they work like a champ. I mean, they’re not real air hearing aids because hearing aid is a technical legal definition. There are definitions for that, but they’re an hearing assisting device and you can fool around with this and actually boost your hearing and in social situations are in, in noisy environments. And I just thought, let people know because it’s worked wonders for me.

    Eric: That’s fantastic. So I’m wondering, I maybe have the answers. Okay. So first of all, I run, apple has amazing assessability built into its desktop and mobile software. And you can, there’s just a whole section in the settings too. You can defer, instead of, if you can’t use a mouse, you can use other different devices to use the, you know, the keyboard and Papa. So the sound that the is being played into your ears is that being picked up by a microphone in the phone or a microphone in the ear buds,

    Rick: Well, you can do either, but the way I was running, it was a microphone in the earbuds. There’s one in each one that helps with noise canceling because it picks up the noise and then it plays a canceling noise inside the earphone. It’s, it’s kind of hard to picture if you don’t know,

    Eric: Well, I have a visual mind, so I know how it works. It’s it plays, you know, the, the noise has a certain sound wave and the, the software plays the opposite of it and it cancels it out.

    Rick: Exactly. Very good. And so then you boost in certain ranges and it’s kind of a directional too. And so it boost in certain rain, voice ranges or vocal ranges, sound ranges or, or decreases in those ranges and you can set it and it works very, very well to enhance table conversation in a noisy environment.

    Eric: How cool is that? I love

    Rick: Science. I love technology.

    Eric: You know, who we both love is a GardenFork, a number one fan Kevin.

    Rick: Ah, that’s true. You know, we haven’t had Kevin on a good while have one.

    Eric: No, I don’t know if we’ve ever had Kevin tell you the truth. They met

    Rick: In this, in this Kevin low black dogs, right? Yeah. He’s been on, yes.

    Eric: Kevin is yelling at the podcast ride anyway. I was talking, well, I can’t

    Rick: Picture him in my mind, but I I’m pretty sure he’s okay.

    Eric: He has two dogs that he does trainings with and he is on Instagram with them.

    Rick: Ah, so he’s got I think their skipper keys aren’t they, one

    Eric: Is a small one, one looks like a German shepherd, but isn’t

    Rick: Okay. Is that a melon wall or just, I just, yeah. Kevin will

    Eric: Tell us all this because he’s yelling at us. Anyway. I was talking with Nicole and the previous podcast. Nicole was wow. Just amazing information with her. Very inspiring two books, several kids. And then it goes to the core and gets Bluestone, you know, but anyway, we’re talking about trucks and the cost of them. And Kevin wrote, I just read that Ford is coming out with a new ranger, which is the smaller pickup truck starting at $20,000. It’s built on a car chassis, like the Ridge line. So that’s the Honda Ridgeline and love the show as he always says, Kevin, but that trucks are incredibly expensive. Part of the reason I think is that I’ve read that trucks are the most profitable part of any card card manufacturers line, because it’s what I’ve read. People just like to drive them. I sold my truck. I just didn’t think I needed it, but it also reminds me similarly, the Ford Falcon and the Ford Mustang where the same car chassis, if you can remember those cars, the

    Rick: Original, yeah. I, I actually drove a 61 Ford Falcon three in the tree for, for a good number of years. Run forever. They’re made of a metal, metal dashboard too, but

    Rick: Oh yeah. No seat belts and that enormous a steering wheel because you need leverage to to move that manual steering around. And D have you seen that the Ford has got an the all new electric F-150 coming out? Yes.

    Eric: Yeah. I’m seriously looking at, if anyone owns an electric car, would you let me know radio@gardenfork.tv? I just that’s our next car.

    Rick: You know one of the things that really attracted me about that is it can provide 15 kilowatts out. So you can power your house temporarily, or at least parts of your house with your energy and your Ford truck. Or if you, if you’re on a job site you can power equipment using the battery on the Ford. You know, my Prius prime the prime part is extra battery in it. And we get about 30 miles on just straight electricity before the engine kicks in. And then the hybrid system takes over and we have gone so long on a tank of gasoline that I’ve thought about putting in gas stabilizer. Yeah, because we, we don’t drive that much really. So

    Eric: I can’t really ruin the gas by adding stabilize. Like I, I keep two, five gallon plastic cans. What are they? Those approved, annoying gas cans in my garage. And I put stabilizer in there before I add the gas at the pump. And then sometimes I’m like, did I add the stabilizer? Did I, I just put more around, it’s two ounces for five gallons, I believe is the right I use, but yeah. And also I become a fan of seafoam, which absorbs water in your small engines. So yeah. Have at that, I mean, for cars that would be heat, H E T it’s that it comes in a yellow plastic bottle. It’s in the, in the Northeast, you have to use in the winter cause you don’t want your fuel lines freezing. But yeah, I would definitely do gas stabilizer. Yeah.

    Rick: But, you know, we just, we hardly burn any gas at all because we don’t go very far. Maybe it’s just because world and retired, I don’t know. But, and you know, with the pandemic you know, we pretty much stay close to home.

    Eric: Would You be interested in kind of getting some behind the scenes, photos and thoughts and just that kind of stuff that I don’t really feel comfortable putting out on social media, but I still want to share with like the garden Foreca crew, you can do that if you want to become a patron of GardenFork. It’s a really easy thing to do. I asked for $5 a month, if you want to support the show here. And also the videos, that’s like a fancy cup of coffee a month, you know, what do you think in return? I post basically if I take a picture of something I’m like, oh, maybe the patrons be interested is I posted it to the app. You also get an email as well with a picture of it. Or if I do a little recording, all the after shows that we do in GardenFork, radio, just the behind the scenes stuff. And knowing that you’re kind of like the Medici family to me, you are making this all happen, which I really appreciate. So [inaudible] about that is in the show notes below or go-to dot com slash garden for all right. Thank you again. Oh, one more thing. I, we have some new patrons I wanted to thank it’s Carrie, Katie, Natalie, and Mike Pete. They are all now getting the behind the scenes stuff. Kind of like the picture of my finger after I smashed in the log splitter. All right. Back to the show,

    Rick: My tomatoes and my okra are just growing like mad, the best crops I’m going to hit probably ever have ever had up to this point. Oh, fantastic. Yeah. I know

    Eric: That tomatoes have been, I just stopped growing tomatoes. I just buy them from the farm stand down the road. Why is that? We, I mean, in our little town, it’s called the blight. I don’t know what the technical term is, but there is a, I think it’s a fungus that comes up from Southern new England. It just they’re like, oh, the blight has come through the town. Then it’s like, oh, it comes up on the wind. I’m like, okay. But maybe it’s in my soil, but I also don’t get a lot of wind in my yard because I’m surrounded by, I have a very small yard surrounded by trees. So there’s not a lot of air exchange. It stays kind of the moisture kind of hugs the ground. And I think that contributes to the fungus.

    Rick: You know, I, we have a blight here particularly late blight is in the soil. It’s a soil soil, born fungus, and I’m beating it. And you don’t mind. I said, I was making a video. Do you remember me saying that? Yeah. Yeah. Your,

    Eric: I want to buy that little camera you have. Yeah.

    Rick: I’m not making a video because I made to delete all my video piles accidentally when I was transferring them from the camera to the computer. And it said delete. I said, sure. And then boy, it all went off the command. I thought it was just leading it off the camera, but I deleted everything. Oops. So anyway I’m working on this system and so far it’s turning out really good. You know, you put down a permeable ground cloth that water and air arrow pass through, but not light so much. And you take your torch. This is a part will appeal to you because you get to burn a hole in something you burn holes in that plastic cloth. And it seals the edges and it makes an opening in the center. I take an auger attached to my drill and auger out a a hole in the ground for the tomatoes drop in some magnesium salt which is Epson salt and some pellets of long-lasting fertilizer plant the tomato in it, and then water at the ground so that the leaves and foliage never get wet.

    Rick: And by keeping the leaves from touching the soil so far, I’ve been pretty successful at keeping the blight at bay.

    Eric: Wow. Good for you.

    Rick: So it’s, it’s working so far. Although I went out there and I’ve got some yellow leaves numb, I’m looking at them, they’re yellow and I’m looking at them with a jaundice dye. All right. So

    Eric: We don’t have any viewer mail except for Kevin. So if you would like to write us it’s radio@gardenfork.tv, and sure.

    Rick: Kevin has been on, I thought we talked about cameras At one point. Kevin and

    Eric: Maybe Kevin, anyway, you were invited on the show, so

    Rick: We’d love to have you Kevin.

    Eric: All right. So we have had a successful show here. And I kinda, I kind of forgot what we say at the end of the show, but anyway, go out and do cool stuff. There is good news in the world. Okay. Just stop watching all that bad news and think about the good stuff in your neighborhood, in your world now. And there’s plenty of it. Yay. All right. Thank you everyone. Thank you, Rick. Okay,

    Rick: Well, thank you. My friend, you gotta have, have a great day.

     

  • Flying A Video Drone In New York City & The Arctic – GF Radio

    Brian Dentz, FAA licensed NYC drone pilot and videographer, joins me to talk about his journey to being a license drone videographer who travels worldwide. Brian is also a close friend who lives near me in Brooklyn. We help each other on home improvement projects and video projects.

    Need a licensed drone videographer in NYC? Or to work in the Arctic?

    new york skyline

    I wasn’t aware the amount of work and test you have to go through to be able to shoot drone video work in NYC. Luckily, we have Brian tell us what is all involved with this. He has a beautiful drone video portfolio on his website showing some of the work he has done.

    artic ocean with icebergs

    Eric: Hey, welcome to GardenFork radio. Thanks for downloading the show. My name is Eric. I’m your host. I have a YouTube channel and this podcast where me and my friends talk about kind of eclectic DIY maker, how to stuff today. I have one of my best friends, Brian here, and we’re going to talk about flying drones as a backyard hobby all the way up to flying drones as a professional videographer, which my friend Brian is so welcome, sir.

    Brian: Hello. How’s it going? Thanks for having me

    Eric: So full disclosure on Brian and I have known each other almost as long as I’ve been married, I think. Yes. Does that mean that we’re ma we’re married, kinda. Okay. Brett and I both, we both started out working in video together and we worked for a very crazy production company, which we don’t need to go into, but but we became fast friends and we’ve stuck together since then. We live within 20 blocks of each other in New York city. We help each other with video projects and we also work together on home improvement projects. I’m indebted to Brian for helping me finish when we bought our building, helping to finish it because I was in a meltdown and Brian stepped in and saved me. I

    Brian: Don’t even remember that you were in a meltdown.

    Eric: We were getting the, the top, the rental apartment upstairs. Ready. And I remember that I melted into the floor and you stepped in.

    Brian: Okay. That’s important to have friends for sure.

    Eric: Yeah. So you know, your friends may drive you up the wallet or once in a while, which is my job. But they are handy when you really need help. So, and you’ve, you’ve never been on the podcast. We talk all the time. You’ve never been on the show.

    Eric: I think I’m telling you I’ve never been on the show. Yeah. Oh, okay.

    Brian: I’ve never been on the podcast. Okay. But I’ve been in your YouTube videos and my dad’s been in your YouTube videos. Maybe my daughter has been in your YouTube videos. It’s yeah,

    Eric: It’s a big family. So I think people are probably listening because they want to learn about flying drones and that kind of thing. And I, I have a drone and you have a drone. And how, how did you start getting into it?

    Brian: So I worked professionally for for television for corporate video this type of thing. And I work very often for a public TV station out of Germany. One of the biggest news organizations in Europe for TV, I worked for their New York office in their DC office and the Bureau chief three years, four years ago now asked me he said that he was planning a trip to Canada to a really cold part of Canada called ferment Canada. And wanted to take me as the, as the camera person, but we needed to do drone work, what I learned, how to fly drones. And I said, sure, why not? Because I’m always up for a challenge. And and it’s great to learn new things. And it was something that I honestly was a little intimidated to learn to do.

    Brian: So we bought a drone and I took it out and there’s a few places in, in, in Brooklyn where you can fly legally and and took it out and was very hesitant thinking it was going to crash immediately. But there, there really. Yeah, no, I mean like really, like I’m still a little nervous sometimes it’s, it’s, it’s, it’s, it’s kind of a bit of magic how they work. But you know, w what I learned is they’re incredible and they’re really basic operation of a drone, but the ones that are using GPS, which are all the sort of prosumer ones and up are they, they can, you know, they don’t fly themselves, but once you get the basic controls, which probably teenagers that play video games are probably even better at it, it’s fairly easy because it’s, it’s, they’re using GPS in order to constantly adjust against wind and other elements that might move it around.

    Eric: Remember you and I, we both had gotten drones. And at that point, a simple drone was over a thousand dollars, and now it’s quite, it’s quite a bit less, but we were figuring out where was legal in New York city. And we’ll touch on the legalities a little later in the show, but New York city is basically locked down as far as drones, you know, after nine 11, of course. And we went to a city park in Staten Island that was downed as deserted dirt road. And it ended up, it was a field, a runway field for a radio controlled airplane club in this beat up city park. But it was one of the few legal places that we could practice flying the drones. And that’s where I had the aha moment where I put my father-in-law had given me a drone as a present, and I put it up in the air and we could see the video. And I was like, Holy cow. And you were a little more advanced at that point, but I, it was just kind of a aha moment there. Did you have that?

    Brian: They’re amazing because you get, you know, this perspective that, that is that you hadn’t, you couldn’t get any other way. I mean, in the past before drones having a a a view from above, like that would cost hundreds of dollars per hour, if not, if not more to hire a pilot or an, or a helicopter it’s, it’s amazing what you can do for the price that’s that you can pay. Yeah, I mean, there’s also, there’s also a place in Brooklyn that, that I go to fly drones, which is basically a radar con it’s, it’s grandfathered in, it’s an old place for radar control airplanes. That’s illegal. And, and it’s actually not that far from JFK airport, but it’s, I guess, far enough. That’s legal.

    Eric: So do you remember the name of the park where you’re going now? Cause I haven’t been to that one.

    Brian: Yeah. well, it’s, it’s maybe a 20 minute drive from me. It’s called Colbert Vox park. And it has basically a grandfathered place where people would go there for their for their radar control airplanes. So because of that, it’s illegal to flight to fly in that immediate area. So it’s a great it’s right on the water. It’s visual. It’s beautiful. It’s it’s, you can see the rides from Coney Island from there. And a lot of people go there to, to fly. It’s a great for me, it’s like a great home-based testing area. But I’ve also found areas in, in Brooklyn that are industrial and low key and outside of air airspace. That is, that is controlled airspace from the local airports that I can also fly in. And that’s when you get into sort of this gray area of what’s legal and what’s illegal in New York city.

    Eric: Hey, a quick aside here, please shop as local as you can, as much as you can. If you’re going to shop online and going to use Amazon, would you consider using our Amazon store as your starting point for all your shopping? If you do, we get a little finder’s fee and that all adds up and help us pay the bills here. It’s amazon.com/shop/GardenFork. That’s amazon.com/shop/GardenFork. The link will be in the show notes as well. Thank you. So I’m curious about your first trip with the drone. So, you know, you’re, you’re this known videographer director of photography in New York city. One of your big clients calls you and says, we want to go to the architech will you learn how to fly a drone to do a high definition video? And you said, yes. So what’s it like lugging all that gear and then trying to have that gear function in Arctic temperatures.

    Brian: Okay. So the first trip that I went, it wasn’t the Arctic, but it was a place that was, we went in, in the winter to a place called Fairmont Canada, which is incredibly cold. Yeah, it’s incredibly cold. It’s it’s a mining village built for iron ore extraction. And th and it’s, it’s an incredible place that most people spend most of the time inside, but we went through to makeup to make a documentary for German TV about this, this town. And I didn’t quite know how this drone would function in this extreme cold, but I was willing to try. And it turns out, of course there’s no rain, cause the only thing that comes down is it snow and the drone functioned fine in, in very thin snow. I must say the very first flight that I did. I didn’t have the wisdom to have a landing pad cause you don’t want a drone to land on the ground because pebbles and, and, and, and grass or dirt could kick up and scratch the camera or damage it the blade. So you really want to landing that. So I tried to land and take off from, from a Pelican box. So of course on the very first time I was first flight, I broke a propeller because that’s a really silly idea.

    Eric: Is everyone, a Silicon box is one of those heavy duty black waterproof camera boxes.

    Brian: Right. And, and so my, my, my boss immediately thought I broke the drone on the very first flight. Thank goodness. It wasn’t. I was able to I had extra propellers. And then I, and then basically I started doing all kinds of flights that were really safe. So the, the safest kind of thing you can do in terms of photography with the drone video, is that the reveal. So you make sure you have something in front of you. And then, and I remember one of the first shots was this, this huge dam that generates electricity, hydroelectric dam. And there were trees between us and the dam. The drone would take off looking at the trees and then as it got higher, it revealed this massive dam. And so I saw that, thank you. It’s really easy to do because you can, because the drone doesn’t have to go anywhere but up.

    Brian: And then when you take it right back down, so it’s, it’s safe, that’s all I wanted to do with shots like that, to stay really safe. And they work really well. But of course, you know, eventually you get, you have to get pushed into being a little bit more daring and, and this drone was able to function in, in really like, you know, subfreezing temperatures with a little bit of snow. It’s still functioned beautifully. Once I realized not to take off from the top of a plastic box and try to, and try to land there.

    Eric: Actually it was broke. I think I broke up a propeller on my first try and the propellers are relatively inexpensive. I mean, I have, I’m sure you have spares in your bag as well, but I have a couple spare.

    Brian: Yeah, yeah. Especially if you’re going to go to some remote area that you need to carry quite a few spares, just so you can sleep at night. The, really the hardest thing for me for these kinds of cold climates, and I’ve been to, I don’t know, maybe four or five, very cold climates for this, for this work. The hardest thing is, is operating with my fingers because I can’t use mittens while I operate very effectively. I need to often be able to press a button, the buttons on my iPad, which is what I use for the control panel. And it’s this constant battle of, of how long I can, you know, some kind of configuration. So my fingers don’t freeze while the, while I’m able to operate the drone. And that that’s, that was a huge challenge. For some of these jobs, I mean, in terms of just actually operating it,

    Eric: I just, the shots you got were phenomenal of just kind of this, they looked like cinematic, like something out of star Wars out of this other worldly, open pit mine thing, you know, like you were on some planet in the Nebula and then, you know, the bad guys were in the, in the, in the iron ore, mine or something, but it was, it looked amazing. I mean, I could having grown up in Wisconsin, which isn’t the Arctic, but I know how cold it can get. And it’s really cold there right now, according to will our cohost. But I, it was just, that was kind of amazing. Did the, did the batteries ever freeze up? I mean, did they, did they not work as well? Cause it was cold.

    Brian: They, they didn’t have a problem. I, I try to keep the batteries. Well, I kept the batteries in the car that was running and heated. So I’d only pull them out, put them on the drone when I needed them, but they didn’t go down really quick. The way some batteries will I’m in the cold climate. They actually lasted quite a bit. But I mean, I have to say it wasn’t that I was running the drone hours at a time. I mean, it would usually be 10 or maybe 15 minutes, which should be about the length of one battery. And this, at this time, this was a few years ago. I was using the DJI Mavic pro which is, which is a great tool for sort of travel documentary work because it collapses into a little box. It’s not that much gear to schlep around.

    Eric: Do you lie awake at night? Wondering what is Eric up to now? You do don’t you, I have the solution for this. You can get those answers for $5 a month. That’s what we’re asking. If you’d like to become a contributing regular supporter of GardenFork through our Patrion program. Is it called? I don’t know. We use this site called Patrion. It makes it really easy for you and really easy for me. I wouldn’t say every day, but a lot during the week I post pictures and just thoughts and audio musings and stuff. The last kind of audio talk was I thought too much information. But I shared it anyway. And so that’s what you get. If you want to wonder what does it, I’m just rambling on anyway, just asking you, if you want to support the show I’m asking for $5 a month, you get the episodes, you also get photos that I don’t really like.

    Eric: I’m not really big on sharing everything with Facebook and Instagram, but the core group of supporters who know that, who they are, they’re almost all podcast listeners actually. Anyway, so I share that with you, when you become a patron, it’s really simple to sign up. Patrion has an app that you can put on your phone or your iPad. And every time I post something, you will get an email notification. And also if you have notifications turned on for the Patriot up, you get a little Bing and Oh, Eric has posted a photo or Eric has posted an audio clip and you also get the after show of GardenFork, right? So that’s me and my friends after we’re done doing the half-hour of, for everyone. If we do like five or 10 minutes of I just call it the after chefs, it’s sometimes it’s something we forgot to bring up in the show. And I think it’s interesting. The patrons that have told me said that they like it too. So think about that. If you want to sign up the information is in the show notes here, you can also go to patrion.com/GardenFork. That’s patrion.com/GardenFork or links in the show notes here, all right. Back to the show.

    Eric: So you, you come back from the Arctic, you start getting other people wanting to hire you for drone cinematography. And then you, you are already aware, we were both aware that you just can’t put a drone up in New York city. So you just, you tried to get me to sign on with you to take the federal FAA, drone pilot license. So what was that?

    Brian: Well I decided that I needed to become a pilot and, and take the part one Oh seven FAA tasks. So I studied through with an online course and then a lot of other stuff as well. And and then actually passed my tests. The hardest part for me is, is this ciphering these things called sectional charts, which are these maps, which are kind of like nautical maps, but they’re meant for for airspace and for, for, for for air navigation. And they tell you things you’ll see on the ground from an airplane, airports, airspace mountains obstacles, and, and they’re there. They were designed, I guess pre-digital, I’m, I’m pretty sure pre-digital, and they’re very hot and they’re incredibly dense with information. And I still find them very hard to decipher all the information which, which they have in them.

    Brian: I think most pilots today use all kinds of electronic navigation devices to, to, to, to configure where they are. And, and, and it is, it is, it is a major requirement on, on the FAA part when those seven tests. And I had to recently after two years after passing the test, you’ve got to take another test to basically keep your license in, in in good standing. And I did that again, and it was in, and it was, it continues to be difficult for me these sectional charts, but I mean, at the same time, you know, it’s a good challenge.

    Eric: Showed me the sectional charts of New York city. And it looked like you took a highway map, a Topo map, and then some sort of aircraft map with a whole bunch of other stuff on it with numbers and circles and straight lines. And I love maps and I had a hard time to ciphering it, but basically it’s showing you air space and what you can do in that particular airspace related to air other airplanes and what kind of airplanes can fly in, what parts of that airspace?

    Brian: It, it, I mean, in many ways it’s a three-dimensional map map is a flat piece of paper, but it needs to show the, the realities of all the elevation, both mountains obstacles, buildings, and, and, and, and other kinds of things on the ground that, that rise up as, as, as well as airspace. And it and what airspace you’re allowed to fly in depending on what class of airport there is, which which, and then airports have the, they call it an upside down wedding cake in terms of the bottom. The bottom is whether the plane lands and then it gets wider and wider as you go farther out because planes of course have to fly into land. And so you have to understand this and be able to decipher essentially as, as a drone pilot, where you can legally fly and then where you need to ask permission from, from who to get permission to fly.

    Brian: And there’s ways of asking permission immediately on the spot. And then, and then in some airspaces, you have to ask online through an FAA portal and you know, in the, in New York city, there’s another law, which dates back to 1948, which is called section 10 28 aggregation. And and it, and it was, it’s a, it’s a law that was made obviously pre drone. And it basically forbids pilots from taking off or landing in New York city with the exception of airports heliports and such. So that exists that law exists and in, in theory covers the whole city of New York. But when you look at, at sectional charts, or like most people do look at different apps that will show you where you can fly in New York city. You’ll see that there are large sections of the city that you can fly in, but then you have this law to sort of consider as well. And then of course there’s laws that you can’t really fly over people. And, and anyway, so, so it’s quite kind of a gray area in New York city. And I, I do fly in New York city and I do even fly in Manhattan in very controlled, limited circumstances.

    Eric: Right. But your, what you’ve done I think is amazing. So, I mean, it’s not only for a television news program or for like a TV or movie thing. You’re also doing it for real estate and didn’t, you have to like some structural engineering company hired you to survey a building.

    Brian: Yeah, I, yeah, so I had a couple interesting jobs recently that had a lot of fun with one of them is a architectural rendering company out of, out of London called, should I mention the names or, or doesn’t matter,

    Eric: It doesn’t matter. It’s just, it’s a neat story, more than anything.

    Brian: Sure. It’s an architectural rendering company called [inaudible]. and they needed three 60 photographs of different elevations off of the top of a building. And they also need perspectives from across the street, but from high op sort of were looking at the building from across the street, but unfortunately the perspective you would need is actually where the building was. So I could give them a reference pictures, but not exactly what they need. but I, then I learned how to use an app. what does that app

    Eric: I use it

    Brian: Right. Thank you.

    Eric: It’s in the show notes, but it’s a pretty amazing it’s a third party app to control your DJI drone.

    Brian: Yeah. And, and I, I hadn’t used it basically, cause I didn’t need to use it before, but it turned out to be really, really effective in, in in three 60 photographs. And, and I did like experiment after experiment using the, the thing is the inspire two, which is a larger drone that I own. You’re not, it doesn’t have three 60 capability within the DJI app. So I’m Lici is what it’s called. Yeah. So I use the Lici app, which, which will operate with, with the inspire to, to get through 60 pictures and then, and then use it and then working with a photographer friend of mine who does architectural photography. He did all the backend stitching and we did test after test of a test, figuring out what would work the best, which lens to work, to work with.

    Brian: And basically for the top of a building, they needed two different elevations. Cause that’s where they’re going to build on top of this building. And they want it to be able to make rent renderings of what the views out the windows will be when it, once it’s built at different times of day, depending on the light. So it was a lot to learn for me. And they turned out to be happy with the result and I saw some, I’ve seen some of the renderings and they look pretty neat. And that was, you know, in, in, in downtown Manhattan, in Tribeca. And so, because I can fly someone’s roof because it was outside of outside of any controlled airspace in, in Midtown Manhattan while Trump was president, you couldn’t fly within quite a few miles of Trump tower or because, because for security purposes, and that was just something that you simply have no flight no flight zone.

    Brian: Yeah. And but now that’s no longer in effect. But anyway, so that was a really fun challenge to take on. And then a few weeks ago I was hired by another company, which is like a national, they do all kinds of drone related work, and they hired me to do a construction survey, which basically means there’s a big construction site in New Jersey, in Elizabeth, New Jersey. And I flew the drone over, took a series of photographs of the state of a construction site, and then this sort of three 60 video of the site as well. And I think every three months they’re going to want an update. And this is for the architects and the developers to look at this material, to see what what the status is and that everything is, is, as it should be in terms of the development of their, of their project.

    Eric: I, you showed me that rendering that you did of that building and Tribeca on that. It looked amazing. I mean, it basically looked like across the street from this building there wasn’t another building and you just kind of stood on a ladder and took a photo.

    Brian: I know, but th but this is like the, the amazing work that people can do with Photoshop. And, and that, that the, the renderers at, at V1, we’re able to do basically there are these lenses that, that are, are that for architecture, that, that changed the perspective that can make, you know, instead of lines being like in, like in a perspective curve, it can straighten them out. And they were able to do that with pictures that I was able to take. I mean, it’s hard for me to look at the pictures that I gave them in to see what they’ve were able to create and to, and to sort of make sense of that. But I’m not a Photoshop person. I wish I, I wish I was, but that’s a hard program. Well, it’s just deep, you know, it depends how deep you need to go in into it,

    Eric: Everyone for the after show for the garden for patrons, Brian and I are going to reveal our deep, deepest thoughts about each other. So if you’re patrons stick around for that, okay, I’m scared. So before we end the show, if I get these they’re kind of spammy emails all the time, and I see this stuff on Amazon or online of, I have a DJI drone, but there are these third party brand drones that look very enticing and are so much less expensive. Is, do you know anything about those? Is that worth a couple of bucks? Or should they stick with a name brand if someone wants to buy one?

    Brian: Yeah. I mean, I, I’ve also gotten some of these emails and, you know, for a hundred dollars, you can, you can buy a version of a Maverick DGI basically. Yeah. And I, I wouldn’t want to try to do it professionally. And certainly the, anything goes wrong with the drone. It’s not a huge financial loss, but do you have to consider also, like these are, these are flying. These are flying lawnmowers and, and, you know, I, if you’ve ever seen what a, what, like a finger that gets into one of these propellers, you know, what it can do, it’s not something you want to see. So, so, you know, I would be hesitant to mess with something that isn’t tried and true that doesn’t have any kind of, any kind of I mean, you’d have to do a lot of testing.

    Brian: I certainly wouldn’t fly something like that in the city, but I mean, I have to say there are other companies that are making amazing drones that I haven’t had the pleasure to test. I mean, outside of DJI, other other, there’s a company called Autel robotic, which is making some pretty cool drones that I’ve read about. And I’m really interested in, in getting into thermal video as well. We’ll talk about that. Oh yeah. It’s really thermal and mapping and, and this is not something I’ve done, but I’ve been reading up on it and, and investigating it. Unfortunately, all the ones I have are really specific for photography, but I’d have to buy all like all different drones as far as I can tell. But it’s, it’s really interesting because emerging, like emergency services are using drones for like like in locations with fires to be able to see if there are people in the fire in buildings when there’s a fire, or to see where the fire is coming from also for search and rescue, and this is using thermal thermal thermal video, as well as for inspection purposes, like to see, to see if if a building is tight in terms of, in terms of installation.

    Brian: So there’s, there’s all kinds of interesting things that are being used as well as solar inspection, thermal thermal video, thermal video equipped drones are being used for, which is something I’m really interested in as well to get into. But you

    Eric: Know, solar panels on my roof,

    Brian: I know I can take yours, but I think they’re primarily good for massive fields of, of solar panels. And they basically fly these drones over them. And, and they’re able to tell like what panels have, what issues. And usually these, these cameras on these drones have a thermal camera and a regular video camera that are both wearing at the same time. So you have a reference, and I’m certainly not the professional that can explain that much about this, but it’s a really interesting field. And certainly has,

    Eric: I am kind of a, been doing a deep dive with a friend of mine. Who’s an engineer. So he has that kind of brain into LIDAR mapping. And that’s really neat stuff. And I probably don’t know if you’ve told me this, but there, there are old wagon wheel trails around my house, upstate that we found with the LIDAR mapping. Did I show you those?

    Brian: You, you mentioned it, but how did you get a LIDAR image from the ground

    Eric: They do with well, but my question, they do it from airplanes and the, the, the state of Connecticut, Matt, I don’t know if it’s the federal or state agency did publish as a LIDAR map that you can look at online has the whole viewer, but I’m wondering if, what the drone, you could do, small scale, you know, a hun you know, a hundred acres or 10 acres LIDAR map that would be like super duper high resolution, you know, to the point that you could find, well, you can see stonewalls in the S the state line road map, but, you know, if you were looking for a particular outcropping, I just was curious if you had had any experience with that.

    Brian: Yeah, I I’m, I’m pretty sure it, you know, there’s some drones that you can put different cameras on, and there are definitely, they’re definitely cameras that are LIDAR equipped that you can attach to these drones. I don’t know that much about that. I, I have, I have, I had the, the experience of being in a German military airplane over over in the Arctic that was doing a LIDAR mapping mission of the permafrost. And, and basically it was shooting a scene for this documentary. And and it was really interesting watching. And then, and then I actually did an interview asking them in English and they would respond to me in German, which I don’t understand. But they, they were able to fly from pretty high up and using their, their LIDAR penetrate in the permafrost. And they were, and they were creating a map, which they were then they could, they could somehow tell the state of the permafrost and then doing this over and over, they’d be able to see the changes of the permafrost, because there’s huge concerns that permafrost that has remained frozen for hundreds of thousands of years is, is melting significantly. And this is one way to study this

    Eric: For the climate crisis.

    Brian: It was really neat.

    Eric: It’s a fascinating, but it’s, it’s, it’s basically because we keep putting warm stuff in the air. No, but that is neat. I I, you know, if anyone else has experienced with LIDAR, I’d love to hear from you it’s radio@gardenfork.tv, just it’s very cool. So, all right, so we should wrap up here. I’ve got Brian and I are going to stick around for a little after show chat about our personal feelings. And but if you want to find Brian, I’ll put his contact info in the show notes here. Your website is fig PI media, correct? Yes. So like figs, like the fruit fig pie and pie like you eat, and then media fig PI media.com. You can find Brian there, some great videos and photos of the work he’s done there. It’s pretty cool. So, all right. Go out. Make, do I just ma I just screwed up the end of the show. Anyway. Thanks for listening. We’ll see you next week. Thank you. GardenFork radio is produced by GardenFork media, LLC in Brooklyn, New York. Our producer is Sean O’Neil. He is an amazing podcast producer.  Our executive producer is Jimmy Goots. For more information on Jimmy and the custom hollow books he makes visit hollowbooks.com. The music in the show is licensed from audio blocks.com and unique tracks.com.

     

  • When You Can’t Unclog A Toilet… GF-Radio

    Try as I might, I could not unclog a toilet, the project transformed into installing a new toilet. What fun. Will and I talk about the new power assist toilets and then a deep dive into wifi mesh networks vs access point routers.

    If you want to unclog your own toilets, do not cheap out on a toilet auger, buy a good one. Here’s a mid-range auger on Amazon.

    After my talk with Will about mesh networks, I reviewed the available models and picked up this Linksys mesh system, it has good reviews.

    More: Toilet Repair how to replace a broken toilet flange

    Listen to more toilet talk: Thoughts On Toilets & Yellow Jackets- GF Radio

    Eric: Thanks for downloading the show. This is GardenFork Radio. This is me. My name is Eric. It’s a Amy eclectic DIY show. It’s me and my friends talking about what we think are interesting things. Today we are going to talk with my friend will from the weekend homestead about toilets and Wi-Fi routers. So very exciting. Welcome, sir. How you doing, buddy? Do you hear the Labradors playing in the background?

    toilet

    Will: I was like, wow, that’s a interesting ensemble you have with you today.

    Eric: So this is very pandemic recording. My my wife is on a very important zoom call presentation and our chairs are not very far from each other in the office. So I’m relegated to the kitchen to record the show. And I have my ancient USB headset from the beginnings of GardenFork Radio. So if the show sounds a little tinny on my end, that’s, that’s why.

    Will: I think you sound awesome and it’ll be great.

    Eric: Well, and I, during the week have a little back channel, text messaging thing going on, and I was dealing with a clogged toilet that I’ve never the most clogged toilet ever, and then will runs a resort in Northwest Wisconsin, so that involves people and people have to use the toilet. So we have a lot to talk about with toilets today,

    Will: When you own 14 toilets, you get pretty good at them after a while.

    Eric: So I my dilemma was there. The toilet, we have a, it’s a low flow, compact toilet. It has a it’s a 10 inch rough-in rather than a 12 inch rough-in toilet, which means the flange where it comes up through the floor is closer to the wall than usual. And it clogs every once in a while, and this time it clogged and I used the plunger and that didn’t work. And then I used my toilet snake, which is a long pipe with like a J hook on the bottom. And you turn a handle above and a springy auger goes through. I could get the auger through, but it still wouldn’t. It would barely flush. And I got to the point where I was like, it’s cheaper for me just to go buy a new toilet. So, but we can talk later about my theories about it, but those are, that was my big dilemma. What w what’s your most recent one that we can actually talk about?

    Will: Well, the thing that I figured out was when you have as many toilets as we have on the property, because all the cabins have toilets and the shower house has multiple toilets, the bar, the restaurant, all these different places. When we first bought the place, we had standard toilets in all of the locations, and I’m like, we’re constantly dealing with clogs or issues, or somebody does something kind of silly and tries to flush something that they shouldn’t like Rob broccoli down the toilet. And then it gets stuck. You know, not saying that that happened, but it did, you know, and so we kind of went through this whole process of, okay, how are we going to solve this? And I did a bunch of research and that’s when I came across these high flow pressurized toilets, which aren’t like the toilets you’d see at a gas station where, you know, they’re, you know, industrial looking, these look like regular toilets or tanks, but they have a cartridge inside of them that make them pressurized. So we gave it a try on a couple of the cabins and my service calls went down by 75%. So immediately we switched gears and switched out all of the toilets to these types of toilets.

    Eric: Wow. See, I’m very curious about this because I actually, when I went to go replace my toilet, I went to the home improvement store and they had some of these cartridge toilets. And my concern was our well has some sediment in it. And despite me using a sediment filter, for some reason, some sediments still gets into the system. And I thought one of these pressure cartridge things probably has tiny holes and moving parts and the sediment might clog that and break it. So I went with a traditional flush toilet and it works quite fine, but I was very intrigued by the cartridge. It looks like a little black plastic tank within the ceramic tank, right?

    Will: Yeah. It sits in the back behind the, the inside the tank area and you’re right. It has a regular flow end point and there’s a small filter or screen that goes into the cartridge. And then the cartridge space itself is actually relatively large. It’s essentially a compartment that as the water fills up, that cartridge, there’s compressed air inside of it that gets pressurized and then it stops. And when you flush the toilet, it’s basically a, a flush assist it’s called or a power assist that air helps push the water out of the toilet. Now there’s two good things about that. One is it gives a lot more pressure to push any material out of the toilet at a higher speed. But then the second item is it actually uses less water because of the pressurized nature of it. It takes less water to push whatever materials out. So we went from toilets that are flushing it 1.9 and gallons to toilets that are flushing at 0.75, or, you know, one gallon per flush, which ultimately controlled our water usage on our septic system.

    Eric: Is there like a bladder inside the pressure tank, like a, like a well water pressure tank in my basement has like a big rubbery balloon that the water pushes against. And then the pressure in that bladder presses the water back out?

    Will: Yes, that’s exactly how it works.

    Will: If you’re familiar with how pressure tanks work for toilets or for Wells and things like that, or even an air compressor, you know, just pressurized air behind the water, pushes the water faster through the same normal mechanisms that would be inside of a toilet. So let’s say your water in your house is at 40 pounds of pressure. I can’t remember what this runs out. If it’s 65 or 70 or something along those lines, I’d have to look it up. But ultimately that extra pressure means less water and more force. And when, I mean, it’s kind of funny because when people flush the toilet, it looks like a regular toilet, but then when you flush it, it sounds a little bit like an industrial toilet. And I’ve had some people make comments that when they flush the toilet for the first time, it scared them. So, you know, they’re like, Whoa, this thing, you know, if you’re sitting on it and you flush the toilet, it’ll pull your pants right off.

    Eric: So that was another concern of mine was just how loud it was. Cause I’m like, you know, if you’re you get up at night, you don’t want to wake up the whole family. Like, Oh yeah, Eric just use the toilet. And it’s 3:00 AM. You know,

    Will: Say that that is one downfall of this style. Toilet is there’s no discreteness with regards to flushing. It, it it’ll let you know that you’re flushing it. And pretty much if the bathroom door is closed and you’re in the house, you can kind of hear the sound. It’s not like an industrial commercial one. You’d see, like in a restaurant or in a, you know, a place where like, you know, the one in the gas station where it’s just ridiculously loud. It’s not that bad, but it is probably twice as loud as your standard toilet flush.

    Eric: Interesting. So I we, I talked at the beginning of the show about the rough-in size of toilets and usually the toilet, the, the pipe that comes up from your septic system, sewer system into the floor of the bathroom, the center of that is supposed to be usually 12 inches off the wall. So you have, what’s called a 12 inch rough-in toilet, but I guess in older homes, and I’ve run into this in Brooklyn as well. There are, the flange comes up a lot closer to the wall, and then you use a 10 inch rough-in. And the toilet I had with it was a 10 inch rough-in, but I realized I didn’t need, I think I bought it by accident because I have a T the flange is 12 inches off the wall. And I think at the time I was like, well, I bought this one it’s going on.

    Eric: But when I had both the clog, the toilet and the brand new toilet, which was $89, by the way, and it seems to be working just fine. On the floor side by side, I noticed at the bottom of the ball where the material that’s in the bowl is flushed out. It basically goes through a series of bands that goes, it goes up and then down to create a, essentially a water seal to keep the sewer gases from flowing up through your toilet. Right? Correct. So the backend of a 10 inch rough-in toilet, which is a more base that flushing pipe or tube, the bends are at much more tighter angles. And I think that’s what makes them more susceptible to clogging yeah. The,

    Will: Well, it doesn’t get the same momentum. So you have a longer runway in a toilet. That’s 12 inches off the wall versus, you know, the 10 inch. So that’s, that’s where you’re seeing the difference there. I think one of the things that I’ve seen in some of the 10 inch toilets, and even some of the specialty toilets, a lot of companies are going towards this power flush because even if they have to make those tighter bands or unique designs and things like that, that the power flush make sure that, you know, all the material makes it through all of the turns and twists are our sharper hole or something along those lines to get the material into the sewer pipe.

    Eric: I am, I, I have the clog target still down in the basement. And part of me wants to just break the thing open with a hammer to see what it is that clogged that thing. And I have a feeling it’s a dog toy

    Will: That happens. Like I said, somebody flushed out or they were cleaning up after the kitchen, instead of throwing broccoli into the garbage can they threw it into the toilet and then flushed it. And it was, it wasn’t what I was expecting when we ended up taking the toilet apart to find out what was in it.

    Eric: Yeah. My thinking is like, it was the middle of the night, the one of the puppies where they, they, cause they are just mischievous. They, they drop something in the toilet and one of us was up in the middle of the night and you know, it was dark or whatever, and you flush the toilet and boom, it got lodged in there. And so, I don’t know, I think I’m just going to crack open the back end of that toilet, just to kind of, cause you can run the smaller snake and I can get the snake all the way through the convoluted pipe, behind the ball. And it comes out the horn, it’s called the Horner that the flange, and yet it still would, the water would barely run through it when you flush it. So I broke one of my toilet snakes trying to fix this.

    Eric: So how do you break a toilet snake? The JN the LA the, the, the right angle. And so everyone that’s listening. If you have like a, a a regular snake to clean out unclog your sinks and it, you know, it has a we’ll take a little pistol grip with a reservoir of flexible cable behind it. And you grab the bat, it looks like a upside down space capsule, and you spin the bow, you spin the back-end and it slowly feeds out the coily snake wire. Those don’t work well for toilets because the wire bangs around inside the bowl and scrapes up the bowl, the metal against the ceramic. And it’s hard to get it up under the first bend. So a toilet snake looks like a walking cane and the handle goes into the toilet and up underneath the first bend. And then you can start jamming at the snake is built into the it’s an a, it’s a hollow pipe. That is actually the walk-in cablee part with that twisty handle in the back. And you slowly spin that and shove it in. And I somehow broke the, the curl end part. I have a, I have a cheap toilet snake and a really good one. And the really good one did just fine, but the cheap one I broke. So you get what you pay for.

    Will: I will have to say I I’m thinking about this in my mind of which one we have. And actually we don’t have a toilet snake and I’ve made it two years now without having a clogged toilet after we switched to all the systems. So I don’t know if I’m jinxing myself right now, but literally it’s a call that I have not had, you know, that I will say this. And I think you pointed this out too. I don’t want to sing the praises of a power flush toilet and say, there’s no challenges with it. One they’re a little bit louder, but two is, they have mechanical parts inside of them that can fail. I know between last season and this previous season we had three different mechanisms have issues with it because of the winter and the cold. And if they don’t get blown out properly or anything like that, that you can run into issues.

    Will: It’s not just like drain the tank and away you go, there’s all sorts of little valves and things they could possibly freeze up. But the nice thing is, is American standard. At least the company that we use has a three-year warranty. I called their tech support line and told them what we’re looking at. I took a picture. I sent it to them of the parts I was thinking we needed. And literally three days later in the mail came a package with all the parts and no church to me, and it was all done. So it was, it was a pretty neat experience regarding, you know, repairing these things. And it doesn’t take rocket science. I mean, literally there’s a cartridge in the middle and a couple of hoses and a couple of valves. And that’s it.

    Eric: Yeah. I actually, when I was looking at the toilets, I went down to the repair aisle cause I needed a wax ring. I always buy more than one wax ring. You just they’re all of $2. And I saw the cartridge system replacement parts and I was like, Oh, I kind of get an idea how this works now, but I actually think it’s a good idea to keep spare toilet parts on hand anyway, like the, the flapper valve and the fill valve in the toilet, there’s two or three companies that make universal fill valves and flappers and buy the expensive one. It’s all of $20, I think. But it could save you a call, a service call or a problem in the middle of the night when your family wants to use the toilet and you know, the fill valve was broken or something. So you don’t have that way. You don’t have to drive all the way down to the home improvement store. You’ve got the parts right there. So do you keep some parts in stock Melville?

    Will: Yeah, we have actually when we talked to American standard and we told them what we were doing, they actually sent us three sets of all of the innards and then also the parts we needed to fix them. So ultimately I can fix up to three before I actually have to call them back for some other repair stuff. So, I mean, they were, they were really good about it and they’re not a sponsor or anything like that. It’s just the company that we ended up picking, but you can find that company at the orange store or at the blue store right now, I’m in there they’re readily available. And the part that’s surprising me is when we replaced all the toilets they were between 400 and $500 a piece, which is a lot today. I’m actually shopping for them for the duplex that we’re doing a remodel in right now. And I was finding them at the orange store for $179. So the price on them has come down significantly in the last two years.

    Eric: Yeah. I was curious because I actually I’m in my house in Brooklyn. I have what I call contractor grade toilets. They’re they’re from Lowe’s they’re Lowe’s house brand. And I thought these are going to clog and break and they haven’t. So I’m just going to surprise. Sometimes I’m usually about, I always talk about you get what you pay for don’t cheap out on stuff like toilets and, you know, drills and things like this, but the price of a decent working toilet isn’t that high anymore.

    Will: Well, actually the toilets, the other toilets that I thought were interesting that they came down in price is the dual flush. I don’t know if you’re familiar with those where you press one and it only uses a little bit of fluid versus you press two and it uses more. Those have come down almost by 50% over the last couple of years.

    Eric: Yeah. It’s all good because we need to save fresh water. You know, we don’t it’s it’s something that we shouldn’t waste is what I think.

    Will: Well, the other thing too is if you’re on a rural setting and you have a septic tank and you have to pay for that tank to be serviced every time you flush the toilet, that’s money that you’re going to have to pay at some point to have somebody pump that out. Now, if you having a toilet for us, we were able to knock our toilet usage down by 50%, which saved us significantly over a four month period. When you have thousands of people flushing the toilet all year long, you know?

    Eric: Yeah. Also just a word, even if like we have our little house up in the country and I always in the back of my head, I’m like, yeah, I should have the tank pumped. You know? Cause when we bought it, the tank had been pumped that I’m like, yeah, but we barely use it. You know, we’re only there on a weekend in the summer. And so, you know, 10 years later I finally called the company and the two guys that came were super nice, but they were like you gotta, you got a garden hose. We can borrow. I’m like, sure. Why he goes he goes, this is pretty solid in here. And he was like, look, even though you only are here a little bit, you should have a done at a minimum every five years. So I was like, okay. And they were really good. So lesson learned there.

    Will: Yeah. It’s in our area. Actually the County has a rule that says it. I think it’s every three years you have to have your tank service. And you know, in our area tank services about 125 to, you know, $200 somewhere in there, they come out, they inspected and do everything else to keep everything going. But if you don’t do that at some point in time, you could end up with a situation where everything dries out in there and then they have to do some major work. And it’s I asked him, I said, what happens if one of these has that issue? And he said, it’s North of 14 to $1,500 to have it fixed.

    Eric: So the two gentlemen came to pump my tank and they were super nice. And they did a great job and this is up in Northwest corner of Connecticut. And I, you know, spend most of my time in the city here and they were, they were great. They were, they are cleaning up, they’re getting in the truck and I handed them both a healthy tip and they looked at me like I was from outer space. What does a healthy tip? Like I gave him 20 bucks. I gave him 20 bucks a piece. I said, guys, thank you very much. Go get yourself some lunch. Cause they had to work at, you know, cleaning the sludge off the bottom of what the garden hose and he’ll sticking their head in there and looking at it, you know? And, and in your town, do you tip people or do you, is that cause in, in the New York city area, you, you tip everybody.

    Will: I do not tip my septic company, but I also pump 187,000 gallons a year with them. So I pay them enough. They should be sending me a Christmas card, not saying anything negative, just saying that, you know, we tip people, but I don’t tip the septic guys. So

    Eric: Especially during the pandemic there are two restaurants that we’ve been supporting and I overtip the delivery guy because he’s on the front lines of this thing. I’m just like here, you know, thank you for being here. So it’s kind of karma is boomerang with tipping. So

    Will: I would have to say, I agree with you. I mean, we go to some of the local restaurants and in the area and you know, when we go in, you know, there might only be two or three of us in the actual place. So now the servers are used to having a full place and it’s hopping and they’re making good tips and things like that. And other working shifts and you know, just trying to make it by. And so we always make sure that we will try to double it if we can, you know, whatever our bill is. We’ll give that an equivalent of a tip because I mean, eating here is fairly inexpensive. So a dinner out for four people here is $28. So to give a 20 or $25 tip, it’s not that big of a deal. Wow.

    Eric: Do you shop on Amazon? I shop locally and also on Amazon and other line line stores. If I need something very specific light seat covers for the new used car we just bought, I will go online and sometimes use Amazon and garden fork happens to have a dedicated shopping page on the Amazon site now, which is very cool. It is an link page. We do get a finder’s fee for anything that you buy when you start shopping from that page. But I list their interesting items that I think are worthy of the garden fork, DIY person, it’s amazon.com/shop/garden fork. If you would start your Amazon shopping experience, no matter what you’re looking for on Amazon started at garden fork. And that would be great. It’s amazon.com/shop/garden fork. That’s amazon.com/shop/guide.

    Eric: The other day you called me because you have these long drives to the hardware store. And I was trying to fix our internet routers and you happen to know something about that kind of thing. So I’ll, I’ll tell my story and then you can be the expert. Okay. Okay. I’ll pretend to be the expert this time. So I’m a big fan of a site called wire cutter or the wire cutter. It’s now owned by the New York times, but it was started by a guy who wanted the in-depth review. He started that with electronics and they broadened in the household items fell by it’s like the Cook’s illustrated of electronics. You know, they, they, they, they buy off the shelf. They don’t get it from the manufacturer. They test it for six months and they write an article and they make their revenue from like Amazon affiliate links.

    Eric: You know, we think this one’s the best here, buy it on Amazon or target or Walmart or whatever. But the New York times bought them and they’re very good. And I wanted I’ve always had Apple wifi routers because they’re Bulletproof, but Apple started stopped selling them or supporting them. So wire cutter said to get Archer TP link, Archer, wifi router, and then it said, you can create a fo mesh network. If you buy two or three of them, it’s called, you can get one that’s the wifi router. And the other two are essentially slaves to it as access points. So when you walk around the house or the yard, you’re still connected to the same wifi name, but you might be jumping to different wifi routers, much like cell towers. So the documentation to set this up is horrible. And we are lucky in New York to have an apartment with two floors and there was some dead spots and I was trying to configure this and I finally figured it out, but then will called while I was doing it. And we had an interesting conversation, I would say. I mean, I am amazed in the last three years, what

    Will: Has changed in the wifi realm? I mean, the idea of the reality for me is we’ve built and remodeled and fixed a number of houses. We have the resort property we have. I dunno if I had mentioned this before, but we started a construction company this last month. And interestingly enough of all of that stuff, we used to always put cat five in the wall and we’re going to run cat five everywhere and put all this stuff in. And in the last two projects I’ve done, we haven’t run any cat five wire in the house because wireless has become so robust, so easy to work with and install it. It just amazes me the fact that you can stream 4k television in your living room on wifi. I mean, four years ago, that just wasn’t possible because the back bone systems were just not there. So it’s amazing where wifi is.

    Eric: So what cat five is Easter net wire. In other words, it’s that gray or white wire. So you can, you could plug into the back of a Roku or an Apple TV or the back of your television.

    Will: Yeah. Like the, the, a duplex remodel I’m doing right now, it’s a hundred percent wifi. Like, it was kind of strange, like I got in and I’m like, okay, we’re going to need these three days for low voltage. We’re going to have to run the wire. Actually, we don’t have to run any wires. We don’t need any of this. And we ended up starting to cut some of this stuff out and cap it off and everything like that. And we’re going to a hundred percent wifi. And this next one, which is a first for us,

    Eric: Do you have a, what they call a mesh wifi network? Yeah.

    Will: Yeah. Let’s talk about that. So there’s the way that you have your setup is based on the idea of having, like you said, cellular phone towers that talk to each other. The historical thing is, is having an access point in a network where you have your main network and then an access point where you’re just sharing the same name in theory, as you walk around with your laptop because of buffering and YouTube and so on, you would never notice the difference between the connections. But one of the items that happens in a access point network is the handoff isn’t as smooth as a mesh network. So a mesh network basically imagine these circles and you put them in your house. And as long as the circles overlap, kind of like a Venn diagram that ultimately you have wifi everywhere in your house in a access point system, it’s two circles.

    Will: And as you get, as you lose signal from one, it picks up the signal to the next. And it turns off the one and turns on the other versus the mesh network where they’re all talking to each other constantly and saying, Hey, Eric’s leaving me and coming to you, make sure you pick up exactly at this point. And then you don’t lose connection. So where that comes into play is let’s say you’re downloading a file and you are on an access point and you switched to another access point. When you make that switch, you might have to start that download over again versus on a mesh network. When you go from one spot to another, they talk to each other back and forth. So that then in that scenario, you wouldn’t lose your connection at all.

    Eric: And my access points are connected by an ethernet cable back to the main router. I mean, it’s not too hard for me to run wire on the walls around here. So, but do mesh networks have to be hardwired to the main, the main controller.

    Will: So a way a mesh network works is I’ll, I’ll use Google wifi as an example. They’re not a sponsor, but it’s probably my favorite wifi system. The best part is, is the price has come down on. It used to be three 99. And now I think you can get it for one 99 for the basic unit. It comes with three of these little pucks. One of them, you plug into your router with a physical wire and you put it down in your basement or your office or wherever your router is. And then you go in your house somewhere else and plug in another puck somewhere else. And then in the app, it’ll tell you, Hey, I have enough signal. I’m reaching back to the other one. I can reach it or no, move me closer and so on. And it helps you figure out where to place this. So you get best coverage. And then you plug in the third one and do the same thing. And it helps make that kind of Venn diagram that covers your entire area. The beauty of the mesh network is there’s no wires that go to those outpoints versus the access point where you run away or physically to that point. Now there is one benefit is an access point. You could put it 300 feet out somewhere where that puck probably wouldn’t reach that distance, but the access point would, if that makes sense.

    Eric: Yes, it does. Yeah. Interesting, by the way, the solution I figured out, and this is what the TP link one, and I think it’s probably for others as well is you go into the administrater for each router and you give them unique IP addresses. And I think it’s the first one is one 90 eight.one 60 two.zero.one. And the second one is dot two. And that solved the problem for me because before that, there were these dynamic IPS that they were self assigning and it was really clunky. So I just I did it manually. And I found that in a obscure YouTube video,

    Will: I, I will say this, that, I mean access points and these mesh networks can work very well together. Example, let’s say you have a house that’s moderately sized. You put a mesh network inside of it. So all of your devices work. And then let’s say you have a barn or a garage that’s away from the house a ways away, but you still want to be able to stream video out there, have internet or whatever, where you could run a wire out to that garage plug in an access point and access points work really well with mesh networks. It’s just a different tool. And the wifi toolbox is easy way to think of it. It’s not one is better than the other. It’s just, they do different things. And you just need to know which one is best for you.

    Eric: That’s exactly what I’m doing. Up at our little weekend house is that the garage is it’s about 80 feet from the house. And when I ran the new electric up there, I ran an ethernet wire as well

    Will: For us. I’m attempting figure out this spring, we’re going to bring wifi to the rest of the property at the resort. And when you’re trying to figure out how to spread wifi over a 20 acre area, that’s pretty challenging and you have to get kind of creative. So we’re actually doing a combination of mesh networks and access points have a central hub. And then there’s a wire that runs out to a pedestal where that’s the start of the mesh network and then put the Venn diagram there. And that covers that, you know, 3000 square feet or 5,000 square feet area, and then run a wire to another pedestal and make that the center of a mesh network. So it’s a series of mesh networks, interlinked on access points.

    Eric: You just need a hot air balloon floating above the campus there with a big parabolic mirror.

    Will: The thing is, is, I mean, you can hire a company like there’s a company called I think it’s called sky web that will come in and put in, you know, commercial campus grade. Like, you’d see at a university. It’s just, I, I can’t stomach the bill on that. They wanted $47,000 to put in wifi in the property and I have probably $1,200 worth of equipment. And I got the same thing. Yeah. So it’s just, you know, if you can do some research and do some stuff, I mean, their product is probably great for, you know, people have a university campus, we don’t have that. I needed something less than a university campus, but more than a wifi router, you can buy it, you know, best buy or target or something like that, you know?

    Eric: Yeah. It works, you know? Yeah. There is a grassroots group in New York here. It’s in Brooklyn. And of course I can’t find the name of it right now. And my friend of mine is hooked up to it. You basically, they have on tops of some buildings, they have connected to the the internet backbone that goes across the country. And then they have these it’s like a giant wifi transmitter and you have to have line of sight and they ping pong it from building to building to building. And this slowly going across Brooklyn now. And I am my buddy on 27th street, has it. And I’m on 47th and I’m up on a Hill. And I think I can see the is it called the site? And I think I can see the hardware on top of the building that has the main repeater on it. And I think the install is about $200 and then it’s some minimal amount of money a month, but it’s kind of the grassroots alternative to time Warner, spectrum, charter, RCN, whoever it is that bought my cable company last, you know?

    Will: Yeah, that’s a, that’s a thing. I mean, the microwave technology in a lot of the urban areas is really becoming a popular thing and, and you know, you, you don’t need much to get it up and running other than, you know, the hub point and then physically the hardware to do it, but you literally just have microwave towers that are pointed at each other and you can send that information for a long, long distance.

    Eric: Yeah. I’m very intrigued by it. And I’m blanking on the name. People are talking back to the podcast here. I’m sorry, I can’t find it, but my buddy has it. And I’m thinking about it. The thing is for my wife’s job, she needs rock solid internet. And I don’t know if the alternative internet is that rock solid, but

    Will: The only hangup that you run into with a lot of the alternative internets is called lag or latency. I think those are the things where if you’re playing online games where you’re ping rate is really important, or if you’re doing zoom calls and HD, and you’re the synchronizing hub for the whole thing, you know, those types of activities, you’re probably going to need something a little bit better, but for most people watching YouTube or downloading or doing Netflix, I’m guessing that service would be perfect for them.

    Eric: I’m just not. I’m thin. My brain is thinking and thinking and thinking here,

    Will: I have to run to the hardware store next week. So you can call me on Monday and we can talk.

    Eric: Yeah. So my laptop is about to run out of its battery because we were doing this in the kitchen and I plugged in the charger and it created a buzzing sound in the call. My low battery warning just came on. So I think we’re, we have a few minutes left. We’re going to do our after show for the garden fork patrons, but I think that’s enough toilet and wifi information you think. Well,

    Will: That was a lot of toilet talk. I would say

    Eric: I would love to hear from you it’s radio@gardenfork.tv radio@gardenfork.tv. If you’re interested in becoming a supporter of the podcast there’s information in the show notes, Patreon.com/GardenFork Will. And I are going to do a little after show for the garden fork patrons. I’m not sure what we’re going to talk about, but it’s always interesting.

    GardenFork Radio is produced by GardenFork Media, LLC in Brooklyn, New York, executive producer, Jimmy Gootz. If you’d like to learn more about Jimmy and the custom hollow books, he makes you can visit hollowbooks.com. The music for our show is licensed from audio blocks.com and unique tracks.com.

  • To Build A Jet Boat, Jimmy’s Story – GF Radio

    I had never heard of a jet boat before Jimmy sent me a video of a guy flying down a river in a small extremely fast aluminum boat. In this episode, Jimmy joins me to tell how he built a jet boat from a jet ski.

    Boat

    We go through a few steps:

    • Finding the right jet ski with the correct motor
    • Getting the jet ski motor rebuilt
    • Taking apart the jet ski
    • Driving the parts to RiverRat Jet Boats in Ohio
    • Working with David at RiverRat
    • Test driving the boat
    • Future modifications and things learned

    Listen to more of Jimmy and I on this episode of GF Radio.

    Jimmy first heard of the Jet Boat from an AquaChigger Video

    Find David of RiverRat Jet Boats in Tiffin, Ohio on Instagram https://instagram.com/riverratjetboat

    boat

    Eric: Hey, welcome to GardenFork Radio. Thanks for downloading the show. My name is Eric. I’m your host. I have this podcast and a YouTube channel. It’s all about eclectic DIY it’s fixing stuff or building stuff or cooking stuff. And me and my friends talk about what we think are interesting, and I hope that you will find it interesting as well. Today. I’m here with the executive producer and longtime friend of garden, fork radio, Jimmy. Welcome, Jimmy.

    Jimmy: They welcome. I love that intro music. I tell you what, every time I hear that I can’t wait to see what’s in store and this time it’s me. How are you doing here?

    Eric: I’m great. It’s , I’m S I got a big smile on my face, cause we don’t talk often enough. We text a lot, with your great knowledge and influence on the podcast. but we don’t talk as much as we should know.

    Jimmy: And it’s still funny. Cause when I hear your voice, I get, I still get starstruck.

    Eric: Well, I’m star struck today because you sent me a text of you standing next to what looked like an aluminum UFO. And I’m like, what’s that? And you said, it’s my new jet boat. And then you sent me a link to a YouTube channel and I went down a rabbit hole.

    Jimmy: Yeah, you might have to brush up on your welding skills. If you want to put one, you get, you can buy a kit and put it together, but it all just got more overwhelming. I may want one of these things for like four, five years. I just saw a video one time, this a guy named Thomas Hewitt and he’s in, New Zealand. And I think that’s where they kind of started. , yeah. And if you just Google or go on YouTube and put in a jet boat, New Zealand or mini jet boat, you’ll see them. And they do look like UFO’s as funny or, you know, some people say it looks like, , it looks like James Bond’s boats.

    Eric: Yes. Yes. So let’s just dial back for a minute. And what is a jet boat?

    Jimmy: Well, , I’m sure everyone knows what a jet ski is. And this is, a tiny little two seat, even though I’ve seen them now, they’re making them for seat and they, they, they even make them that are 50 feet long where they take people up giant rivers on excursions and whatnot. But, , this thing is 11 feet long. It has two seats and it has the engine out of a jet ski sitting right behind you. And instead of riding over top of it, it’s in the back. And so it sucks water up from underneath of the boat and shoots it out the back. That’s what propels you. And you can buy this kit and weld all these flat pieces together, bend it, weld it. And then you put a jet ski engine in it. And there’s a whole lot of complicated stuff involved with it, but that’s essentially it it’s, it weighs less than a jet ski it’s it looks much bigger, but it weighs less. Cause it’s not all fiberglass.

    Eric: Well, the video you sent me, I was like, Holy cow, it was two guys in a jet ski with what looked like a GoPro. And the one guy is driving and steering the other guy’s holding on with a rope.

    Jimmy: Yes. Like the rope idea.

    Eric: And they’re skimming over the water and able to fly across really shallow, shallow. They looked like they were in a river and really shallow parts of a river to the point at the bottom was scraping.

    Jimmy: Yeah. So the bottom is covered. I mean, this is something that you can add if you’re just going to get one and put it in a Lake. I mean, you’re, you’re kind of an idiot because if there’s one other boat on the Lake, this thing is going to just beat you to death because it’s not really meant to take, , any kind of sideward wave action and stuff. I mean, if you want to go hit some stuff, you can jump over a big wake. Absolutely. But, , it’s not meant to be out there with a bunch of other boats. It’s, it’s semi flat bottom with like a V hall front where it goes from a V to a flat bottom, and it’s got a little swim deck on the back where you can climb in and out. And it’s real basic. But essentially what you do is you take a jet ski and you just tear everything out of it.

    Jimmy: The engine, the, , all of the electronics, the steering cables, the gas tank, the, , the muffler, which actually water runs through. Just take everything out of the Jessie. I paid my, my jet ski mechanic guy a hundred dollars and he just tore everything out of it, put it all in my, back of my wife’s little Subaru. And then I drove it up to this guy in Ohio, , David, a river rat jet boats. And, he helped me put the whole thing together. So it was kind of a one-stop deal. I knew that me and my dad could weld the thing together, but then I’m not going to be able to tear the ski apart where I could tear it. I could tear anything apart, right. That wasn’t going to behave with it. Put it in here. Yeah. There’s, there’s like the intake part where it sucks up out and goes into the engine.

    Jimmy: You can’t take that out of the jet ski. you have to, that has like it’s specialized. So depending on what motor you have, if it’s a two stroke or a four stroke or Dave and a half four strokes supercharged Rotax is out of some of these big Polaris ones are 300 and 320 horsepower, just insane. people put like 20 or 40 gallon gas tanks in them so that they can go a long ways. But the way I went with mine, it’s it’s from a 1998, Cal Saki 1100, STX, which is, was like the Cadillac of a jet skis in 1998. They made a smaller version with the same engine, which is faster, but this is the big one that you can put three people on, but I just pretty much bought it for the engine. And it had, that was it. I got it for like $800 with a trailer that would hold two jets skis.

    Jimmy: Oh, wow. So, so I paid this guy, , my boat mechanic, you know, hundreds of dollars to rebuild the engine and just kind of refresh it because you know, it was 21 years old and then he kept the shell and he’s using parts of that. And he might says he might turn it back into one cause he’s got all these other parts, but, it was a fun process. I bought that jet ski in the summer of 2019 and rode the jet ski around that summer and made sure that the engine was all going right and got everything ironed out. And I learned a lot about two-stroke motors

    Eric: Cause the, the Kawasaki you had is a two stroke. It is. So for everyone listening, a two-stroke engine will burn a gas, oil mixture, and four stroke burns, just gas, four stroke engines are like your, , car is a four stroke engine. And two stroke is like a chain saw engine

    Jimmy: Motorcycle. Yeah. So older, you know, dirt motorcycle, everything is really lately going to four strokes because, , number one, they’re they’re cleaner. And, but they tend to be a little, have to be a little bigger and a little heavier. and they’re more expensive. But the, this, this motor was when I was researching and I talked to all these different people that make the boats like people at mini jet and people at jet stream, adventure, boats, the big people who really do them all up in Canada. And so what kind of jet ski shot I’ll be looking for? And they say either, a Rotax or one of these Cal sockies. So the Rotax when they, when they break, they break bad and they’re expensive and they’re finicky. But he said, this one here, this 1100 cow Saki is just, it’s small, it’s light, it’s simple and they’ll run forever. And I liked the sound of all that. And they were cheap. So these people who were building these ones with superchargers and all these gizmos and gadgets and huge gas tanks, if they get stuck, they’re not going to be able to get behind it and slide this thing off of the rock and they’re stuck on. Right. So I just figured it goes small light, nimble, you know, like Bruce Lee,

    Eric: Do you shop on Amazon? I shop locally and also on Amazon and other line line stores. If I need something very specific light seat covers for the new used car we just bought, I will go online and sometimes use Amazon and GardenFork happens to have a dedicated shopping page on the Amazon site now, which is very cool. It is an affiliate linked page. We do get a finder’s fee for anything that you buy when you start shopping from that page. But I list their interesting items that I think are worthy of the GardenFork, DIY person, it’s amazon.com/shop/GardenFork. If you would start your Amazon shopping experience, no matter what you’re looking for on Amazon started at GardenFork. And that would be great. It’s amazon.com/shop/GardenFork. That’s amazon.com/shop/GardenFork. So you brought all this up to, , the gentlemen up in Ohio and it took them like weeks or a couple of months to put it all together for you.

    Jimmy: Yeah, it took about cause you know, with Christmas, , it took about five or six weeks. I got kind of lucky because when I was the first person after watching this video on YouTube, this guy is channels called Aqua chigger. Like the bug C H I G G E R. And he just showed up with one, one day he’s goes metal detecting and venturing and goes in caves. And he had a, a kayak that had a built-in motor that he would use to get all these places. He wanted to go on these rivers in Maryland. And then one day he shows up with this jet boat and I was just like, Oh my God, that’s one of the boats I want. And he said, he bought it from this guy in Ohio. And I was excited because it was so close to North Carolina. I said, I can drive up and talk to this guy.

    Jimmy: So I was the first person to email him. And then I got him on Instagram and we were talking that night and I got first in line and it wasn’t just a week later he was booked up until March with the owners. But I got super lucky because he had already built this boat and it was built for the engine that I had because he already, as a matter of fact, he had two of those engines sitting in a shop just like mine. They’re like teal blue. You can’t miss it. And he had built this boat for, and it was for this motor. And then he just decided all of a sudden he wanted to have a four stroke, but the boat wasn’t built and designed for it. So he sold me the one that he built for himself. So I kind of thought if you’re building it for yourself, you know, you’re, you’re probably doing a really good job cause it’s for you.

    Jimmy: So I got that boat and then he started, he’s building his own. I’m watching him on Instagram as he goes through building. Is that a, what was that? I was going to say earlier, you talked about the, how the boat can go in shallow water. You can run it through zero water if there’s like a huge sandbar or like a tree that’s halfway submerged across the water. The whole bottom of it is covered in this half inch thick, , U H M w plastic. And that stands for ultra high molecular weight. It’s really danced. I mean, you can take the super sharp hunting knife and just jab into it and like pull backwards on it and just going to leave a tiny little scratch. And it’s almost semi self healing. So I’ve seen people that will they jump them over, over a bank and into another body of water or, or they’ll run it right up onto the bank, in the snow, , and just, and go like a hundred yards and we’re looped back into another bit of water. So all that really had me excited for five years. I haven’t done any of that yet. I’ve only had it on the Lake because, , , all the river’s been kind of swollen and the places where you can go put them in are still muddy. They have went and got them ready for spring yet, but it is it’s, it might be the funniest thing I’ve ever owned.

    Eric: So you sent me a picture, a little video or a picture of you with it, , on the Lake. And there were two guys in a fishing boat, Jon boat, and they, they looked a little concerned. Was there, , where they actually were they just curious about the boat or they really didn’t want the boat near them?

    Jimmy: I think it was mostly curiosity if they were, they were, it was right by the dock. So they weren’t going out, you know, a hundred yards from the dock and fishing. They were either on their way in, or on their way out, but you know what? I didn’t care. I just got a new toy and I just went, just went to rip. And that was the day that I got it. And the guy was out there showing me how to do everything. But I mean, it, it turns a lot of heads. I’ve, I’d never seen one in person and boy, when they got back off the water and we’re pulling it out, it’s a whole crowd gathered around with questions, wanting to see what it was, how much are they? Where’d you get this? W what is this thing? They were like asking questions out of order that they all wanted to see the engine. And yeah, even the, that runs the Marine that came out there and he’s like, what is that thing? He was like, what, what propels that thing? And he says, you were throwing like a 30 foot rooster tail behind you. What’s

    Eric: Going on. Wow. So

    Jimmy: He’s got adjustable trim. Oh, wow. So you can, it’s just three positions backs and the center where you’re going to run it most of the time. But if you, if you put the trim forward, it sort of dips the backend down. Yep. And it drags them in swimming. You could, you can go by and just sink someone in a canoe, which I plan on doing to my buddies on the river trip.

    Eric: I like canoes.

    Jimmy: Oh, I, I have a canoe. I need two boats. I have, I usually have two canoes and I’ve got, you know, trolling motor set up on, on my canoe. And that’s what I’ve done for years. I love to go up river because you can go by yourself. Yep. And then you come back down, there’s your truck. Well, this thing here, you can go up wherever, but, , you can get where you’re going a little bit faster. Anyway, if you see like a little side channel coming off the river, you can just, if you scouted a little bit, you can just go through. I mean, if you’re sitting still, you can probably get away with being in like six inches of water. Yeah. But if you’re just ripping, you can go through three inches of water. Wow. Cause it sort of lifts itself up and mine’s got this built in thing, the grade in the bottom, I dunno.

    Jimmy: It’s about the size of a, like a tray from McDonald’s that you get your food on, maybe a few inches more narrow. And it’s just these metal slats where it sucks the water up then. And the slats are there to keep from sucking up rocks and sticks and leaves and things. But if that gets clogged, the performance really drops off fast. So this has, this has another set of grapes that are located directly above those. And there’s, there’s this little platform in the back with two little pipes that spring loaded. And you step on that and it drives that top series of plates through the bottom ones. Like you put your fingers out, facing each other and just sort of, you know, weave them up and down through it just sort of cleans everything out. But what I’ve found out is if you don’t turn the engine off, the suction won’t let anything loose.

    Jimmy: So, , yeah, I learned that I got back into some leaves, , displace at the end of the Lake and the whole bottom just got clogged and it was freezing cold. And I was stuck in a sandbar. I had to take off my boots and my socks and roll my pants all the way up. And I finally got the thing off, but it, it, it wasn’t running very good. It was just very sluggish. So it was just like bla bla, bla bla bla. So I’m motored that way for 20, 25 minutes, which if the boat was running I’ve would have been able to go that far in about, I don’t know, 90 seconds. So that fouled the plugs. Cause I took it out again. The week later after I got the big gob of goo out from underneath of it. So that was jumping on the stomp grape, but I wasn’t turning the engine off. So it was sort of keeping everything stuck. So I’m trying to learn all this stuff before for spring come. So yeah, the guy replaced the plugs and he said, Oh yeah, they’re filed. They were just black because he said, where you idle in it for a long time. And I said about a half hour. There you go. Yeah, that’ll do it.

    Eric: No, it’s, it’s David of RiverRat Jet Boats is the guy in Ohio.

    Jimmy: That’s it? Yeah. David, you can, if you look at up, I think, I think he has a Facebook page. I don’t use Facebook, but I know he has an Instagram and you can contact him through that. Cause you can buy a kit. He actually, he has a license through, mini jet and they had this original design and this new design is built different. , the rear end is different. It’s sort of, the backend has more flotation built into it. And the bottom of it has these things I can think of. They’re called. Strafes sorta like when you have a canoe, that’s got those rails on the bottom that helps the boat track better.

    Eric: Yes. it’s called a Skeg.

    Jimmy: All right. So this has got those built into it. So it allows you to make a little bit more precise turns and the boat just tracks better. So they, he was building these, the old style boats, but they didn’t want to let him build the new ones. Well, they finally relented and now he has to, he pays them a certain amount of money for everyone that he builds.

    Eric: He has a license,

    Jimmy: A license. Yeah. And that’s all aluminum. That’s cut on a CNC machine. Ben folded and they’ll ship them to you on a big pallet and you can weld it all together yourself. There’s lots of YouTube videos. You can watch guys going from the beginning to the end. There’s one guy. I think his YouTube channel is local host. It’s weird, but he doesn’t get a lot of views, but him and his buddies showing him unpack in the crate, in a burning, a burning the crate up, out in the yard and start starting to weld on the thing. And you know, not the best looking welds, but , you know, welding aluminum takes an art.

    Eric: Oh, it’s hard. It’s hard. All right. So I’ll link to all that. cause I see the video here of Aqua Aqua chigger with his, , jet boat. So I’ll have to watch that.

    Jimmy: So that’s it. And well, he said there in that thing, which got me super excited that if you get a hold of David, a river rat and you ended buying a boat, which I had pretty much already decided, he said, he’ll send you a two hats. And I just got my Aqua chigger hats yesterday. I was so excited. I’m part of cigs army.

    Eric: Yeah. You’re the, you’re the head, the head of the GardenFork army. But , you don’t have a hat.

    Jimmy: I do have a, I’ve got two hoodies

    Jimmy: And , I got a G-Fork sticker on the back of my truck. Yeah. Yeah. Never been asked about that. I think people are a little afraid. They ask more, more often they ask about this, this jug that I have on the back that has a huge magnet in it that I always have sitting on the side of the bed. It’ll stay on there going like 70 miles an hour. People will stop at a red light and they’re like, you see them tapping on the glass or honking the horn or rolling down the window. And they’re like, Hey, Hey, Hey man, you got that thing on there. I’m like, Oh, thanks. Sometimes I’ll even jump out and pull it off and like stick it right to the side of the truck. And they’re like, Oh, okay. You gotta be good. But it’s a no, it’s fun. It’s a good, it’s a good little advertisement for my business

    Eric: Garden. Fork radio is produced by GardenFork media, LLC in Brooklyn, New York, executive producer, Jimmy Coots. If you’d like to learn more about Jimmy and the custom hollow books, he makes you can visit hollowbooks.com. The music for our show is licensed from audio blocks.com and unique tracks.com.

     

  • Must Have DIY Tool Guide – The Will and Eric Version – GF Radio

    I keep using the same tools on every DIY project I work on. So Will and I put together this list DIY Tool Guide. What is the best cordless drill? You might be surprised by the one we both really like.

    I go the the hardware store and the home improvement shop almost every week. But I don’t buy a lot of tools. I have my daily carry bucket of stuff that works for most of the projects life throws at me. This list includes most of that daily carry. Maybe send this list to your family, they can buy you the tools you really want.

    Tool List:

    Crescent 84 piece Kit https://amzn.to/3fDxFvW

    Craftsman Kit https://amzn.to/33mXlYW

    Kitchen Drawer Black & Decker Drill https://amzn.to/3lbHZML

    Bosch 12 volt drill driver combo https://amzn.to/33lIUUR

    Black Decker drill kit https://amzn.to/3lba7Qg

    LED lanterns https://amzn.to/37k3Cps

    Duracell Headlamp https://amzn.to/3mgcXoh

    Heavy Duty LED Flashlight https://amzn.to/37dg7Tp

    Box Cutter https://amzn.to/2JdpeeY

    6 in 1 Screwdriver https://amzn.to/3lij8qC

    Eric: Hey, how are you doing? Thanks for download GardenFork radio. I’m your host, Eric. This is my eclectic DIY show. It’s a podcast I make. I also have a YouTube channel, basically kind of doing the same thing, except it’s in video today. We’re going to talk about DIY gifts. You can buy the DIY or in your life. And I’m with my DIY expert friend will from the weekend. Homestead. Welcome, sir. How you doing Eric? I’m great. Just heads up everyone. It’s eight 30 at night and we almost never record at night. So I am having a glass of wine. I don’t know what

    Will : I will say. There may be a couple of beers in the, on this side of the field.

    Eric: That’s right, because you are in Wisconsin. Absolutely.

    Will : That, and I got to drink up the rest of the stock from the bar from the season. So I can’t let that go to waste.

    Eric: So in this time where everyone’s staying home and staying safe, there’s a lot of online shopping that’s going on and we’ll, and I wanted to talk about what we think would be some good gifts because we are DIY people. So for the DIY or in your life, we’re going to go through basically roughly three sections of stuff we think, and the links to all that will be in the show notes here and also on the GardenFork website. So you want to roll in, sir? You had, you sent me this huge email with lots of things.

    Will : I, I, I think the biggest question that we get asked, or at least I get asked is, you know, I’m getting started or I want to give a gift or I want to, for somebody who’s going off to college or buying their first house, or, you know, parents buying something for their kids and things like that. And people ask about these toolkits and there’s tons of them online. Like I did a search earlier today and 1500 different toolkits came up on Amazon, which is a lot. And it’s like, which ones are good? Which ones aren’t. So I thought you and I have talked about this many times off the air. Why don’t we talk about it one time on the air, which is general purpose toolkits, where you open it up and it’s got some wrenches and screwdrivers and all this stuff and what to look out for, what we like, what we don’t like, that kind of stuff.

    Eric: Yeah. I just had an experience with this with a buddy of mine. I helped him install a electric car charger, which we’ll talk about in a future episode. And he whipped out the 300 piece toolkit.

    Will : Did it have like 80 tools and then like screws and nuts and bolts and all that kind of stuff. Cause I see companies do that kind of stuff all the time online. And that’s one of the big tips that I think we’re going to talk about today.

    Eric: I found, well, I mean, I won’t say the brand, cause I’m not here to bash anything, but it just, you know, had the clear top and he opens it up and it’s a million Phillips had the little Phillips heads that go into your impact driver and there’s like 20 of them or 30 of them. And I’m like, they’re all the same. That’s, you know, you know, I just, I just keep those on a little little plastic bottle, you know, I buy them in bulk, but I just think when you see that big number, you need to dial it back and see, okay, how many socket drivers are in there? Are there any deep sockets? Are there not drivers in there? That kind of thing?

    Will : Well, the other item too, is I like to look at the reviews on it and I know we’re going to talk about this a little bit more later on, but you know, looking at it and seeing, is there a three reviews or what are people reviewing? Cause like when I was searching through for the stuff for today’s show, there was a couple of my found one that was $130, which seems pretty reasonable for a toolkit. And it had 300 pieces diving in, it only had 78 actual tools. All the rest of it was what I consider kind of the fluff stuff. And then when you read the reviews themselves, people were talking about how the pliers got rusty right away or the, the screwdriver on the Phillips head was chipping so that it wouldn’t work on screws and things like that. So you kind of want to do a little bit of research. So I thought maybe if we put together a good, better, best kind of list of these types of kits for people, maybe we could help kind of guide them in a direction of what is good or what to look for when you’re looking for these.

    Eric: I agree. So you actually have a big tool set.

    Will : I do. I actually last year I bought the Crescent 170 piece a toolkit. And one of the reasons why I bought it was actually, it popped up on lightning deals on Amazon. I don’t know if you know what those are, but they have crazy like black Friday pricing during the holidays. And it was, I think it was $80 for a kit that normally is $139. The reason why I liked it was it didn’t have any fluff at all. It had deep well sockets, which are the deep ones you can use for projects I’ve taken on spark plugs. It had combination wrenches. It had a couple of different choices for screwdrivers. Just didn’t give you one, it gave you a couple choices, a couple of different wrenches and so on. And because of that, it worked out really well for where we were going to use it, which was I needed kind of a utility kit that you could throw in the back of the vehicle. If I had to make a quick repair and not have to bring, you know, the whole toolkit with the nice thing is it all came in a plastic case that all the pieces fit into. So you could tell something was missing and you knew it was altogether when you take it out somewhere. So that’s kind of the first piece I’d like to start with.

    Eric: I liked that because going back to this electric job I did with, for my buddy yesterday, I walked through the nightmare of my workshop with a five gallon bucket and I threw in every tool I thought I would need. Instead if I had a little kit where all snapped into a case, I could just go grab the case, but I’m like, Oh, I gotta need this. And then of course I forgot things, right? And also in the bucket, you don’t know if you’re missing something.

    Will : The nice thing too is for a person who has zero tools, it gives you a little bit of everything because if you’ve never fixed something before or use tools on projects, you might not know exactly what you need. So it’s one of those things where you get a little bit of everything because when you walk into the home improvement store and you stand in front of the tool section, there’s a lot of stuff there and it can be overwhelming. These kits are a really good way to get a little bit of everything to kind of get you going.

    Eric: Another one on your list is you have the craftsmen kit listed.

    Will : A lot of people contact me and I’ll get emails going, Hey, my son, or daughter’s going off to college or they’re buying their first house, they need some tools. What do you recommend? I was looking for a kit that was under $50 that had a little bit of everything. And the interesting one about the craftsman kid is one super highly reviewed. And number two is it comes with a hammer. It has just some basic screwdrivers tape measure everything. And it’s a smaller kit of very, very focused items that almost 90% of people can use on any of their home projects. So if you buy a piece of Ikea furniture, this is the kit that you could dig out and put that whole thing together. No problem.

    Eric: It’s funny you bring up by Kia because it’s one of my favorite stores and they actually sell a little tool kit and I’ve never bought it, but I look at it and I go, I’m not buying that thing because it’s this generic cordless drill. And I’m like, I, I just don’t want to sink my money into that little thing thinking, is that going to last just the life of the installation today? Or is that going to be something that’s going to last for 10 years?

    Will : Right. And I think you and I have talked about this before. I mean, I found these kits online just to kind of be full disclosure, the like the kits that we’re talking about, the reason why I picked the craftsmen one was I did find some off-brand ones that are brands I’ve never heard of before. And it was one of the items where I’m like, well, you know, what do I know about this company? You know, it doesn’t have a lot of reviews. It seems to be pretty cheap. I mean, I found some that were $29. It had about the same number of pieces thing is I had experienced with craftsmen. I’ve had craftsman tools that have been in my toolbox for over 20 years now. And they’re still going strong and working versus the company that I don’t know who they are, what they do, you know, is it something that’s going to be worthwhile to have, or do you buy it once and have it for a long time and use it as a stepping stone to buy and more tools and things as you need them, or do you buy it self starts to break.

    Will : And now you’re replacing bunches of pieces inside of it and having kind of a bad experience.

    Eric: And the flip side of that is I don’t always need to buy the most expensive thing. Like I have two, three foot pipe wrenches, which I use to change our ready to valves because I have steam heat in my house. And I don’t use that. That’s not an everyday tool. I just need a three footer once a year. And so I can afford to buy the cheaper tool.

    Will : Yeah, it’s, it’s, it’s one of those items where you kind of have to pick your battles. But I think when you’re buying a tool kit and it’s a starter kit or something you’re going to use, like if you live in an apartment and you don’t need a lot of tools, I would suggest spending a little bit on it because it’s something that’s going to be with you for a long time versus, and I don’t want to dump on the Kia kit, but I’m guessing it’s probably the cheapest stuff you could possibly get to get the job done once. And it’s not something you can rely on when, Hey, there’s a leaky pipe in the house, or there’s some kind of issue that has some urgency that I need to fix at three o’clock in the morning. I’d rather rely on a good tool at that point in time. Then hopefully the inexpensive Ikea one that I bought you mean not

    Eric: Everyone needs a three foot pipe wrench. Well,

    Will : They are handy for hitting things. I mean, you can, they’re heavy. Don’t drop it. If you’re working with one, I’ll just say that.

    Eric: So you’re a fan of the Crescent

    Will : By far, it’s the best general toolkit. There’s only one item that I would recommend buying with the Crescent toolkit that it doesn’t come with. Actually I’ll say two items. One is a tape measure and two is a hammer. Those are the only two things that that kit does not come with. But quite honestly, you can easily pick up a hammer at any of the home improvement stores. Even the generic claw hammer is perfect for doing 99% of the stuff that you need to do and a good tape measure so that you can measure stuff to figure out for furniture in your apartment or your house or your garage or whatever it is, but a tape measure, a hammer and that tool kit perfect.

    Eric: And this I’m, this kind of goes into stocking stuffers what you’re going to talk to at the end, but there is really no reason to own only one tape measure. You should own about six of them, because

    Will : It’s funny at the beginning of the resort season, we always buy four large tape measures, three medium tape measures and two small tape measures. And we have them all over the property because there’s always something to do. And right now I only have three left out of whatever it is. The nine we started with, I have three left at the end of the season here. So they go missing, you, leave them places. People take them, you know, that happens. But it’s always something to have an extra one around. I know your phone can do it, but it’s not as accurate as a real tape measure.

    Eric: I I have a craftsman socket set that you can see in a video where I hacked a it’s a craftsmen, a tool cart, which I made into a rolling tool cart. And I show a neat way to take your socket sets, which are in those plastic cases and fit them in the drawer.

    Will : I think one of the cool things in that video, and I’m not going to give it away because I want people to go watch it, but you’re really showing how one of these toolkits like this Crescent one, the craftsman one or any of the other tool kits you look at can be the start of, you know, the tools that you’d need to do your work. I could see somebody buying the Crescent toolkit, and then as they start doing other things, going to Harbor freight or going to one of the home improvement stores or something like that and buying additional things. So it’s a good base to get started off of.

    Eric: We’re going to take a quick break. And then when we come back, we’re going to talk about drills. Very exciting.

    Speaker 1:
    Real here. We are going to talk

    Eric: About a bunch of different things you can buy. And I’m going to talk about, Oh, there’s an Amazon link in the show notes here, but it is true that I do make money when you use an Amazon link. But I also want you to try and buy these things local, if you can, because we still need our brick and mortar stores. If you need a grade eight metric bolt, Amazon’s not going to have that for you. Your local hardware store is going to have that. So please go check with them. If they don’t have it, then consider buying it online. But we really need our local stores. I go to mine all the time. Maybe if they’ll let me run the camera, I can show you the hardware store in my corner in Brooklyn, it’s called okay. Hardware. And it is chocked full of stuff. And at the back is like a restaurant supply house crammed into about 10 square feet. So now this is something that will, and I both have passionate opinions about what we’re going to talk about drills and impact drivers, and will sent me a list. So I’m going to let will go first. And then I will weigh in,

    Will : Start on the low end because we always start on the high end. We talk about the big fancy, powerful 18 and 20 volt drills with all the different attachments and things like that. Sometimes you just need to put a screw in somewhere, or sometimes you need to get something really quick done. There’s a drill that I’ve had in my kitchen for probably three years now. And it works spectacular. It’s less than $30 and it’s battery powered cordless, and it’s the black and Decker eight volt drill. It has the battery built in it’s real basic, and we’re not sponsored by these guys. These are things that we have in our house that are, that I tell people about and use and things like that. But if the wife needs to go and put something together or whatever, it’s a real simple drill that you can use that makes it so you don’t have to use a screwdriver, but you don’t need the big, you know, 18 or 20 volt, you know, DeWalt one from the garage kind of thing.

    Eric: Yeah. I love that because I actually have in I think everyone has, everyone has a junk drawer in their kitchen and not to keep harping back to videos I’ve made, but I made a kitchen Island out of Ikea cabinets and a butcher block. And I purposely had an oversize junk drawer with those little Ikea partitions in it. And it’s full of like markers and pencils and tape, and it has tools in it. And so I keep a bunch of tools right in the kitchen because instead of having to go find my toolbox because it’s at some job or, you know, I left it somewhere, boom, you’ve got this little drill and I, you can really, you can, over-talk things with a powerful drill. And sometimes you just need to, like when you’re putting something in the sheet rock with a dry wall screw because you know, somebody wants you to hang a picture. You don’t need the giant bazooka. You just need to put something in the wall.

    Will : The nice thing is, is the batteries built into it relatively inexpensive? I mean, under $30, I’ve seen it as low as $20 on some specials, but we’ll put that in the GardenFork Amazon store. But I, I don’t know. I just, it’s one of my favorite drills. I get picked on a lot for digging it out and using it. I keep it in my toolbox at the resort and I pull it out all the time and using people, always some of the contractors that work with the D guy, anything bigger than that, I’m like, no, look, this works perfectly fine. And then I do it and they’re like, Oh yeah, that does work pretty slick. It’s lightweight easy.

    Eric: So do you have to keep that plugged into a charger or it just holds the charge? It holds the

    Will : Pretty well I’ve had it happen a couple of times. I had one that was sitting in a box for probably about nine months. And by the end of the nine months, the charge wasn’t as strong. But yeah, I mean, I still think that’s pretty good for charging it up. What I’ll do is I’ll charge it over the weekend and then dig it out on a Monday, use it during the week. It usually for the little bits that you use it here and there it holds the charge pretty well. And then, you know, just throw it on there. Or if you need to use it for a day, you know, plug it in the night before, leave it plugged in, or even just leave it plugged in, in the drawer or if you have the ability to do that and dig it out when you need it.

    Eric: Yeah. So let’s talk about our favorite drill. Both of us have this as our favorite.

    Will : I think the boss’ drill. Yeah. And

    Eric: It’s not the giant Bosch. No, it’s

    Will : Well volt. It’s super lightweight. Like if you have to go up and down ladders or carry this thing around, don’t get me wrong. The big 18 and 20 volt batteries are awesome. You know, you get a big five amp battery at ways, you know, 10 pounds or whatever. I don’t know what it is, but it’s heavy. And using it all day, it gets heavy. Well having a little 12 volt impact drill, the one I have in the list is it’s $129. I’ve seen it in as cheap as $99. But the most important thing about this drill is you get all the benefits of what a big drill will do for you in a small lightweight package. But more importantly, the reason why I like the Bosch, when I think it’s the same reason you like it, Eric is the batteries to replace are inexpensive. I found the replacement battery for $34 on Amazon. So if you wanted to get a second battery or you needed to replace the battery, it’s fairly inexpensive versus I know that in my own experience, I have a branded drill. It was cheaper for me to buy the drill and a battery than to buy the battery by itself because the batteries are so expensive on some of the higher end drills.

    Eric: If you want to take this up a notch, it takes a little bit of work to find it. Sometimes I’m going to be sending out some emails, the holiday season about gift buying guides, because obviously this is part of how I make a living is the affiliate links for different things we talk about. And I, you know, I don’t want to hide that from anyone just want to be upfront about that, but Bosch makes a 12 volt drill and impact driver kit that goes on sale for about 120 bucks for the two of them, plus a charger plus the two batteries. And I that’s when I bought it when I saw that on sale. And I liked it so much. I bought a second pair for up at a little weekend house, and those are my go-to. Those are my go-to tools and the difference between doing a drill and an impact driver you know, a drill you can drill holes with a wood bit or a metal bit, and then you put a screw attachment on and you can screw in the screw, an impact driver. The, the tool is turning and it’s basically like tapping the back of your drill with a hammer at the same time. So it makes it easier to get into hard stuff. Or if you want to drill into wood and not drill a pilot hole, a lot of times you can slam a screw in with an impact driver. Or if you’re doing a masonary you would end to drill into concrete. A lot of times the impact driver is kind of a quickie version of of a bigger hammer drill.

    Will : I think one thing we should talk about too, cause I know we’ve been talking about drills here, a regular drill overall, a person would use it for, like you said, drilling holes. The thing I like about an impact driver is when you’re putting in a screw, a regular drill just spins and it doesn’t really stop versus an impact driver. The mechanism is set in a way that as it’s kind of hammering the drill or the screw in it also gives you better control to stop. So you don’t over drill or, you know, I’ve done it where you drill something and it’s, you don’t spin out the threads. Exactly. Or you chew up the, the, you know, the bid or something like that. And then all of a sudden you have all sorts of issues. So it’s, you know, that’s the thing I like about the impact ones is you have way better control, especially for somebody who’s never even used a drill before. If I was going to tell somebody to get something impact is always the way to go.

    Eric: Wow, that’s powerful, but it is a, it’s a nice job because you can literally, I can put it. I don’t like a tool belt unless I’m doing electric work and you know, too about, you can hang your, you can hang your drill on your thing. I just like to basically shove this little Bosch in my front pocket and I can go up a ladder and it’s, I think it has as much power as drills that are larger and have those big battery packs that I think are a pain, unless you’re, unless you’re doing a full day, is work building like a deck with two by twelves. I don’t think you need those big battery machines. I don’t know.

    Will : I agree. And it it’s one of those things too, where, because of the small size, it’s easy to store. I mean, if, even if you’re in a small space, like an apartment where you don’t have a space for a big rolling tool chest, anything like that, these types of drills are small enough that they’ll easily fit into that style or even into that type of space where it’s not going to take up a whole bunch of room and the chargers are really small. And actually the thing I like about it is the two amp hour battery is tiny and it’s super lightweight versus a lot of them. I mean the one for my DeWalt, be honest with you that the batteries are gigantic for a two amp battery.

    Eric: Also, something to think about is when you want to buy extra batteries, the Bosch one is less expensive. I found the battle,

    Will : The Bosch batteries are like the one I sent in the list is a $35 for a replacement. Just to talk about dwelt, cause we just talked about it. The, I think a pack of the batteries was $119 for the DeWalt one. So that was the challenge I had with that is it’s they make a great product, but the batteries are so expensive in comparison to the drills versus the BOSH where the batteries are really well-priced.

    Eric: So if you want something more than just the drill, if you want a neat kit, there is this really cool black and Decker kit that has a drill and tools for like 99 bucks. Yeah.

    Will : I was thinking about our first segment where we were talking about the kits and you know, the, I was kind of doing some research and actually the reviews on this black and Decker one, I was thinking a kid going off to college or a person getting their first apartment, wanting to get something that’s easy, a little tool kit for around the house. If you decide to not go the route of the big kit, the black and Decker kit works really well. Cause one, you can do screws. It has a hammer in there it’s got wrenches, but it also has drill bits. So if you want to drill holes and things, it’s kind of the kit where you just want to do little projects around the house and kind of fix things and take care of things around the house versus, you know, some people want to get it all in one. This would probably be the easiest way. And right now on Amazon $99 seem to be a really reasonable price.

    Eric: Sweet. And we’ll link to that in the show notes here, you just, if you’re listening, if you’re listening on the Apple podcast app, you just tap on the little icon of Henry, the Labrador and it’ll show all the little notes and then the links in that. Yay. So you’re gonna say something well, or I was just going to say,

    Will : Talking about your drill and your junk drawer. When we come back from the next break, I’ve got some items that are stocking stuff for items that you could put in that drawer at your house. And I’m thinking of one of your favorite tools that we use

    Eric: Need to talk about. Okay. I’m like, cause I was just about to say, we’re going to talk about my favorite tool when kids come back from them.

    Speaker 4:
    [Inaudible] All right.

    Eric: So stocking, stuffers, other cool little stuff that if you’re thinking, well I just need to get somebody something or yeah, I got them that you know, new electric car, but maybe I want to buy him just one more little thing. We have a list of those here and we’ll thinks that he knows what my favorite one is. Okay.

    Will : I can almost guarantee it’s at the checkout. You see them all lined up in a little row and every time you leave the hardware store or the home improvement store, you have to buy one, which is a six in one screwdriver. Did I get it exactly,

    Eric: Exactly. Yes. Because I buy them almost every time they disappear, they’re fantastic, but they disappear

    Will : Have them. And then when they lose parts of the screwdriver, they just get reused for other things like give example, the nut driver on there fits exactly on a Fern co or a sewer cap. So when we lose all the other parts to it, I saved those. And then the guys who do the field work at the resort, I just leave them the six in one with that. And then they have a nut driver to take the sewer caps off when we need to. Yeah,

    Eric: For everyone. That’s not quite sure what a six and one is, it’s a screwdriver and the shaft is it flips, you can pop it out of the handle. And each end of the shaft has a flippable tip. And each one is like a large on one end, it’ll be a large and a small Phillips. And the other end to be a large and a small slotted and the little hex hollow opening, I guess it is, is a nut driver as well. And it’s usually like three eights and one quarter inch or something. So it’s a great tool to have. And I have one in almost every drawer of my life. They’re just great.

    Will : Ever since we had that conversation about a month and a half ago, two months ago on the show, I actually got one for in the car and have it in the glove box just to have an extra because I just never even thought about it. Like, but how many automobile parts have the three eights nuts on them where you can just back it off of there. If you have to get into part of the dash or something along those lines, it’s right there for you. Yeah.

    Eric: On your list here, you’re talking about lanterns and I’m very intrigued by that

    Will : Preface this, the list. And the challenge was could I find five or six items that were under $20 that almost everybody could have in their life? And one item that I have found that I’ve used all the time are these little portable lanterns, you can get a two pack for not $15 or so, but it, it basically puts them AA batteries in the bottom of it and it’s enclosed. And when you lift it up, it turns into a super bright lantern. You can hang them on things that we actually at the resort, we give them to the kids and you can see the kids running around with lanterns at night and they’re inexpensive. They don’t really break. I mean, they’re, they’re kind of Bulletproof in that sense, but they work really, really well to light up an area. Or if there’s a power outage storms, any of that kind of stuff, it works perfect for all of those uses. So I thought it was an easy thing and you can get two of them for, you know, 15, $20 somewhere in that range. So I thought perfect for stocking stuffers

    Eric: And they don’t break. No, I mean it’s, if

    Will : You smash them hard enough, I mean, but for the most part it’s, they’re, they’re pretty Bulletproof. I haven’t had one break or stop working. The batteries tend to run out on them long before the LEDs ever go out. Oh, sweet.

    Eric: So segwaying that to another favorite tool of mine, which emits light. And I don’t understand why more people don’t own these, but it’s a headlamp.

    Will : It’s not a headlamp fan, to be honest with you until I got into the pyro world and we do a lot of work at night and you have to have your hands free to do stuff. And all the guys were running around and the ladies were running around with headlamps on and I got one and it, it changed my life. I mean, wherever you look, there’s light, it’s amazing. And they’re inexpensive. I thought they were really expensive, but they’re really cheap.

    Eric: Yeah. I just did a plumbing job for a friend of mine and he’s a good guy and he’s, he’s just learning. I taught him how to solder. And after doing this copper pipe job, I think I’m just going to use PEX from now on. But he kept on trying to work on something while holding his phone with the, with the little flashlight turned on on the phone. And I’m like, where’s your headlamp? Oh, I don’t have one. So I had one and then I was at Costco the other day. And Duracell had there at the Costco, a three headlamp pack for $15. And so I bought it for him and dropped it off at his place and said, here’s your Christmas present?

    Will : Exactly. It’s it’s it can the, the goal with this wasn’t to pick items that only like a gear head or a DIY person. I mean, these are items that anybody could use. I mean, think about it this way. Let’s say the power went out. You could put a headlamp on and sit there and read a book. You know, it, anybody could use this for multiple, multiple things. So that’s kind of the point of, you know, the lanterns, the headlamp. And actually the one other item that I have on the list here is what’s called a tactical flashlight. It’s basically a flashlight that if you look at it, when it’s on, it’ll blind, you, but you know, for $15 you can get a flashlight. And I put one of these in each of our cars, you know, if there’s an emergency or something like that, it’ll flash. But super, super bright. And the best part, is it recharges off a USB or you can put batteries in it if you have rechargeable battery.

    Eric: Oh, that’s brilliant. The idea of the ability to recharge it is brilliant. There I have one, but it’s just regular AA batteries. It does the Blinky thing and all that, but I always have to check it to make sure that the batteries are okay. Yeah.

    Will : This one has a like a micro USB port on the side and you can just plug it into you know, the 12 volt plug-in in your car. Or if you have one of those portable things in your bag that holds you know, power for your cell phone, you can charge it off of that. So it works awesome and emergencies, but then for work or for going out somewhere, hiking, camping, any of that stuff. Awesome. Awesome flashlight. Neat. All right.

    Eric: The last thing on our list here is something I think is very important and that is a box cutter.

    Will : I couldn’t put this list together without having one on there because the thing I think about is I see people all the time at the shop or around, they’ll just grab a razorblade out of the box, you know, the actual blade and holding in their hand while they’re trying to cut a piece of cardboard or something along those lines. And that’s how accidents happen. It just razorblades or something, not to mess with. They’re super sharp. And I think a tool that fits really good in your hand, it locks, it’s easy to change. The blades out of will change your life. You get one of these, throw it in your junk drawer, throw one in the shop, throw one in your garage, wherever. And it’s, it’ll, it’s amazing. And the best part about it is it’s safe. That’s the most important part about it?

    Eric: The frustrating thing about the generic box cutter is when the knife goes

    Will : Dull. Well like the one that we in there, there’s two pieces. Basically. You flip a little door, open, you slide the hatch, you can change the blade out and put it back in there. You don’t even need any tools to do it. Cause a sharp knife is a good knife. A dull knife is a dangerous one, especially when you’re dealing with a box cutter or something along those lines. It’s so it’s a, it’s a pain to change the blade out. You’re less likely to do it. Kind of like the podcast where we talked about the chainsaws and trying to sharpen the blade and your chainsaw and keeping a sharp blade makes it safer. Same thing with box cutters. So I like these ones with the quick change on it and a good sturdy handle. The best part is they fold up and it’s easy to throw in a drawer somewhere else. And it’s, it’s awesome.

    Eric: Sweet. I we’ve kind of like flown through this episode. I haven’t had a chance to drink a bunch of my wine here. There’s always the after show, but if you guys have some ideas about what you think are good stocking, stuffers are tools to buy for your DIY friends. Send us an email it’s radio at garden, fork.tv. And that is always great to hear from you all will and I are going to stick around and we’re going to talk for the patrons of GardenFork in the after show about those ads you see on Instagram for tools that are too good to be true because somebody bought a couple of them. We’re going to hear about that. I should have never told you, cause now we’re going to have to talk about it. All right. So thank you again for listening. If you want to check out the links, it does help pay the bills here.

  • Rachel Wharton Writes The Best Food – GF Radio

    You can tell good writing when you read it. If you asked me to describe what it is, I can’t tell you. But listen to this show, and you will quickly learn why I am a big fan boy of Rachel Wharton and her writing.

    “Once you actually start to look into the history of anything, it’s always way more complex, more layered, complicated, and interesting, and leads you down a path that you didn’t expect.”

    On this show Rachel joins me to talk about her super cool book, American Food, A Not-So-Serious History. Its full of the backstories of foods you did not realize had a deep history.

    cookbook

    An example being the deep dive into Ambrosia, which has devolved into a marshmallow thing, but when first created, it was a dish with African roots made by slaves in an American kitchen.

    Learn more about Rachel on her website.

    Buy American Food on Bookshop.org here.
    Buy American Food on Amazon here.

    Eric: Hey, how are you? Thanks for downloading garden fork radio, the eclectic DIY show. I am your host, Eric. I have this podcast and a YouTube channel dealing with eclectic DIY. It can involve building raised beds, making a pizza oven out of a metal barrel. Or today we could be talking about American food with my friend, Rachel Wharton, who we have not seen each other in person in a while, but we follow each other on those social media things. And she’s always doing something really cool and interesting. Rachel is a James Beard award winning journalist writing about food and and a lot more than food too. There’s, there’s always an article in the New York times or in edible, Brooklyn or edible Manhattan. And I don’t even have to read the byline and I know it’s Rachel cause I can, I just know her voice in her writing.

    Eric: And she came out with a book recently called American food and not so serious history, which is a collaboration with an illustrator Kimberly Ellen hall. And she’s been doing this a lot lately working with I guess you’d call it graphic news story telling it’s writing and imagery worked together, which I really like, but I’ve been in my own Erik way. Cause you know how organized I am trying to schedule some time with Rachel and it happened today and it was really a lot of fun to talk to her. So we’re just to kind of jump into the show. You can learn more about Rachel it’s, Rachel wharton.net and her book is called American food and not so serious history. I’ll link to that in the show notes here, but let’s just start talking to Rachel and here we go. First off, I always get excited when I find an article by you. I can tell you’re writing in the first sentence. I’m like, I’m like, Oh, Rachel wrote this. And then I look at, I I’m getting better at looking at by-lines, but you are first, not first, but a lot of your writing that I first read was an edible, the edible magazines,

    Rachel: Which you had, they have a very, or they did, they had a very distinct style. Yeah. Which I was like working within.

    Eric: And then you started doing other work and I, then I would find you in the New York times and I was so excited to see you in the New York times. And then you started pairing with an illustrator instead of a photographer, which I thought was really amazing. And then all of a sudden to me, it’s like, surprise, boom, here’s this book, but you probably were working on your book for years. Yes.

    Rachel: Yes. And the book came out probably before I did the first collaboration with current shad me who’s the, you’re talking about

    Eric: Who I mangled her mangled, their name. Sorry.

    Rachel: It’s okay. I actually it’s cause it’s spelled like, like the emphasis is on the last syllable that you don’t know that he’s amazing. I’ve actually known him for a long time through a mutual friend. And I, he has a totally different style than my book coauthor, who is not a graphic novelist. She does illustrations and art and paintings in our, her actual real world life is she teaches, she teaches at Mica, which is a great school in Baltimore and she does wall like these amazing wallpapers and, and like patterns that companies buy to put on like pieces of furniture you may even have in your house, but Kerryn is a graphic novelists. So cause so I, I partnered with him for the times because he’s used to telling a complete story through illustrations where my book illustrator does different kinds of work.

    Eric: So how did the book idea come about? Has it been in the back of your mind for a while or

    Rachel: There’s a part a that’s boring and a part B that it’s maybe more interesting part a, is it myself and the illustrator? Kimberly Ellen hall. We have a mutual friend. Kim had done like all kinds of, she, she often makes a pattern and then turns it into a wallpaper or a lampshade design or curtains. And she, her own artistic art practice was, was drawing from the everyday. Like she got a grant to go take items out of out of like people have been evicted and their belongings got removed to a dumpsite. She got to like go through the belongings and draw the every day. So she had always shows me love food and wanting to work on a food book. And she had always wanted to illustrate a cookbook. She told her friends like, do you know any, do you know any people who are food writers who might want to collaborate with me?

    Rachel: And this was a good friend of mine. She was like, Oh yeah, totally know if we’d read her, but I, I didn’t want to do a cookbook. Cause I didn’t really think I work on, I help chefs and food people work on cook cookbooks. And I just didn’t think that the world needs, I don’t think they like nobody needs a cookbook for me. They need like people who have much different. I mean, nobody needs another cookbook from a middle-aged white southerner. There’s lots of other people. So I was like, let’s do this, let’s do a food history book. So the part a was just that a mutual friend was like, Hey, Kim wants to do a food book. You’re a food writer. Do you want to work together? And I said, yes, but the B was that I figured, I just thought that everyone thinks of American food, which is not necessarily a cuisine like broader American food is more like just to like a loose gathering of food items that they have this perception probably rightly so being of crappy and mundane and flavorless and, and white in like every sense of the word and not very interesting and mass produced.

    Rachel: And I was thinking that if you picked just from what I knew from being a food writer and reporter and learning about history is that once you actually start to look into the history of anything, it’s always way more complex, more layered, complicated, and interesting, and lead you down a path that you didn’t expect. And I was like, I think we can actually pick American foods at random and research them. And we would find stories that we know we didn’t know were there. So that’s what we decided to do and to pick them at random, we came up with the structure, like, how do you, how do you choose which American foods you’re going to write about? So we were like, let’s just give ourselves like a arbitrary structure. We’ll do a to Z. And we’ll just pick a food from a to Z, which is what we did.

    Rachel: And we, we both made a short list of foods for the a to Z and we wanted to make sure we didn’t want them to be regional American foods. Like we know that, you know, shrimping to Faye in Louisiana has a con a beautiful, layered, interesting history. We really wanted it to be like yellow mustard, like a donut, like yeah. Like things that like things that you don’t even think about. Like, you don’t think they’re just so they’re a lot of them have been catching up. Like things have been exported to other countries. They like, there are a lot of them. I mean the, just food we wanted to pick foods that people didn’t even think about that much. And then, you know, you had to, I also wanted to make sure then, then we started to narrow it down because I wanted, I wanted to make sure we talked about almost every pressing issue in the world today via these foods, like climate change and agriculture and marketing and racism.

    Rachel: So we kind of like did a teeny tiny bit of like we competing at to make sure we hit all those things. And then, then we just, then I just reported out all 26 food items and Kim, I would send Kim ideas or screen captures of when I was doing the research or, or like sometimes I would be eating hot wings and Buffalo, and I would like send her the pictures or I would send her. And that would save a lot of the research or take pictures of the research. So she could draw from most, both modern experience and past. And she would also do her own research in terms of like, like a lot, like in jello, she was jello has a really interesting history because a huge part of their marketing was to tap like really successful. Well-Known celebrated illustrators, like people who were true artists of their time and a lot of women and then use their artwork to sell jello, which just seems crazy.

    Rachel: Now it seems almost unbelievable. So I actually went to the Jell-O museum, which is in between Rochester and Buffalo and they have pages and pages of some of the original art to sell jello. And it’s really beautiful stuff like Norman Rockwell and a bunch of artists that Kim knew off the top of her head that I had never heard of like famous people. And I can’t, it’s like, I’m trying to think. I mean, it’s probably like a, like your favorite, like indie musician contributing a song to an, to a huge mainstream advertisement. And that’s, that’s one example if I’m going like I’m digressing, but like that’s how the book came to be is that we were like trying to tell like the story of both modern American food and historical American food and modern meaning like all the issues we’re facing now by looking at seemingly MUN really mundane, maybe not even that flavorful foods.

    Eric: Yeah. I actually, I, that was kind of in the forefront when I was reading the book is just the amount of food in America that it seems like what is considered kind of white guy food was actually created by African-Americans.

    Rachel: Well, lots of it, particularly in the South. Yes. Yes. There’s, there’s a, like, I would say half the chapters and like, I didn’t even for some of them, I’d had no idea that I was going to, I definitely did not think I was going to go down that road with hot wings whose origin story is so solidly this Italian family in Buffalo. Like I had no idea, which is which is a really good example of what’s happening in the United States is that certain stories get told over and over and over again. And lots of them are told zero times in, in the mainstream world. So even though if you go back to talk to many Buffalo Buffalonians who were like, that’s the right way to say it, talk to people who are in their like sixties who were around when the first Buffalo ways, which were made by a, an African-American who had grown up in the South and the great migration, great migration came to Buffalo.

    Rachel: He was really well-known in like the fifties and sixties. And maybe even early seventies, he had a restaurant to the eighties, I believe. And, but like, he’s just lost to history now because he was never written about in the mainstream newspaper. And every time the story is told about Buffalo wings for like 40 years, he’s not mentioned even though, even though there’s lots of people in Buffalo make a living so empowering. So it’s not like just that one family, Italian family owns like makes a living, selling Buffalo wings. Like lots of people sell Buffalo wings and people know about them in Buffalo. And this guy was like, his, his restaurants aren’t even there anymore. And what else? I was also, I totally did not expect to go down that path and in borough on Ambrosia, which is my very first chapter and I kind of started writing them in order.

    Rachel: And I actually didn’t even, I didn’t actually expect, I didn’t expect my book to have so many kind of controversial is the right word, but like, so yeah, so, and like Ambrosia was like the V I really Ambrosia is kind of a Southern dish. So it’s really all over the United States. It’s just an older American dish. And as a Southern, I thought the big, the big deal about Ambrosia was that the original dish was purely grated coconut sugar at a time when sugar was a big deal and you’ve got it in a loaf and you had to scrape it. So it became this fluffy mass and oranges. Like I thought the big, like that was the original Ambrosia dish when those three things were really scarce and considered luxury items. And so also those three items when fresh and combined are delicious, but like now modern Dan Bertea is like, literally anything that you can throw at it.

    Rachel: And like marshmallows. And I thought that was going to be the, I thought that the big deal of my chapter was going to be the original dish. And like, and then I cracked open the book, like the first known reference. And I, I actually spent a lot of time trying to find a previous reference and cross-referencing similar recipes in British cookbooks or looking in cookbooks in like friendships and like trying to find similar recipes. I didn’t really find any, so I, for me, it seems like the first known reference was a, was a book published in North Carolina of all places. It came out right after the civil war, but had written before it. And it turns out that the there’s a, there’s a, you can, the woman who wrote it, her husband was like pretty high up in the world in the, in the military.

    Rachel: And actually he was like a well-known lawyer. Like they were kind of like well-to-do people in North Carolina and her family member, like many of his family members of her family members were members of the, of the, of the military in the South, the Confederacy. And so there was like, I could actually do research and find lots of about her family. And at the same time I was trying, she had, she had written, she had a very short introduction to the book and she said a couple of things that I didn’t quite understand. And so I had called up someone who had explicated her book as part of some early American cookbook research. She was a historian from the university and I was like, Hey, what does she mean by the sentence? And she was like, Oh yeah, she just, of course means that like I have to train, it’s so hard as a southerner because you have to train your slaves.

    Rachel: And I was like, Oh my, Oh my God. Like, it just, I just, I totally realized that it wasn’t like now where this woman wrote a cookbook, like this woman didn’t cook at all. She never cooked her. Cause the, as the historian explained to me, it’s like something Southern women said, even though it wasn’t even true, like they would make it, they would racistly make it seem like they had a harder job because they had to train people where women in the North, you know, could hire trained labor. But like likely this woman barely even set foot in her kitchen, her entire life, even after the civil war, because very quickly she would have had servants again, paid very little or living at the house. And so it just hit me that Ambrosia was not probably not arrested. Of course it’s oranges, citrus, sugar, and coconut.

    Rachel: And it just hit me that, of course this, like these are ingredients. I mean, these are ingredients from the slave trade through the Caribbean and Africa and back to the South. These ingredients are all well familiar to anyone who has spent time in the Caribbean and coconut in Africa. And I was like, it was just like totally obvious yet completely unsaid in anything ever written about Ambrosia and that, those chapters, that my first chapter. And then I was like, wow, this is actually even more revealing. Not just, and every single chapter was like, kind of, you know, not all chapters were other chapters. It was like, Oh, corporate corporate America is really like, it was like that kind of revelation or, but like every chapter surprised almost every chapter really surprised me.

    Eric: I’m I mean, I got your book and I’m like, Oh, there’s these little chapters about each little food and it’s going to be a little thing about each of the food. And then I’m reading, I’m reading it. And I’m like, I’m like, Holy cow, there’s a S there’s like six citations on every page of some book you’ve read or a podcast listen to hundred interview or a book you found from the 18 hundreds. Is that all online? Are you going to libraries in person or,

    Rachel: Oh yeah. When I did it, it wasn’t online. I mean, some of it is obviously, but I did go to libraries. You can’t even do that right now. It’s actually hard because I want to do something. I want to work on stuff and you can’t actually go to a library right now. And some things they can give you, but you can’t get to like microfiche as far as I know. Oh. So I went to libraries, I’m deliveries in New York city, but also in, I went to lots of libraries in the place. Like I’ve, I’ve tried to go to almost every single place. I went to South Carolina in Portland, Oregon, and, you know, I went almost every place. I would sometimes have peop librarians give me stuff. I got a subscription to newspapers.com, which is huge. I heard of that. Yeah. And that, that can, the super.com is also very useful because you could start to look at what every food section is saying at a certain period in history. And there’s a lot of, you can glean a lot of information and other sources that way I looked at a lot of books. I did a lot of reporting, like were, just, would talk to people who knew these subjects really well. And then, especially in terms of African-American history Michael [inaudible] book, I mean, there’s a couple of, there’s a couple of authors and they’re all I, I saved them all because they’ve done so much work recently. And, and they were invaluable, particularly in those times,

    Eric: There’s four pages of bibliography at the end of your book. Yes.

    Rachel: And actually, I didn’t even put all of them because I got tired. I just tried to put the big ones.

    Eric: So is there a library somewhere in the country that is just cookbooks that you get to go to?

    Rachel: I mean, there’s, I actually think that there’s people, Oh, I want to say cookbooks. Like the best thing to do is to go into used bookstores because to me it’s really, I actually have, to me, some of the most valuable things are the community cookbooks of the places, because you can really see trends. Like if you, like, when I went to Albuquerque to research Chili’s, I would go in every single use bookstore that I found and look in every single community cookbook or newspaper cookbook, and there’s a lot of them and they go back really far and you can kind of see when like certain things came in to like, Oh, that’s when people started adding sour cream. That’s like, and you also find a bunch of cookbooks that did not have wide distribution, whereas you can maybe see them on Amazon, but they’re $200, but you can find them for a quarter.

    Rachel: And I saw, I did a lot of that, like was going and local bookstores. And a lot of times I would just open up the book, take a picture of the page. And sometimes I would buy books that had lots. And then I actually have a lot of cookbooks. I figured that if you, if you, I mean, some people have way more than me, but if you just like open up a random cook, like if you have, if I have like five cookbooks that kind of briefly touch on cakes and I look at every single one of them, then I start to you start to, they all have resources and ability geography, and that’s how you begin. And then, so it’s actually think regional, regional bookstores. One very cool thing now is that through Google books and Amazon, you can search a lot of books for keywords.

    Rachel: So you might not be able to read the whole page, but you can tell before you buy a book or buy an ebook, if that book has the has information on your subject and not every book has searchable pages, but a lot of older books do like, like, especially in Google actually has ton of historic cookbooks for free. And then with results, there’s actually a fair number of, there are some libraries. I can’t think of it as top of my head. I could, if you’re, if you’re thinking your readers are interested, I can look up the, like, there’s a couple of college libraries that have a ton of historic cookbooks. Awesome. So digitalized. Oh, wow. And over and over. And also also because I can, you, I also used a lot of library search tools through my alumni memberships with my, where I went to college. Of course they let you do online searches. So, cause I looked at a lot of academic. I looked, I looked at everything. I did re like my typical reporting where you would talk to people and read what other articles have been written. I also read, I read cookbooks and I also looked at academic sources too.

    Eric: I think everyone knows my now I’m a big proponent of shopping local. I’m a big fan of going to my local hardware store and buying everything I can. If you are trying to find an item that you can’t find in your local store and you’re considering going online and you’re considering using Amazon, this is a big ask. Isn’t it? Would you consider starting your shopping experience on the garden fork shopping page on Amazon? That was a really long sentence, wasn’t it? But basically if you could bookmark this link, amazon.com/shop/garden fork, amazon.com/shop/garden fork, start your experience there, your experience. Listen to me. I’ve actually on my shopping page, I list all the tools I use books. I like cookware and stuff. I like as well. So if you’re wondering I’m using something in one of the videos, more than likely it’s listed right there as well, again, buy local as much as you can. This post may contain affiliate links which won’t change your price but I earn a commission from. Thx! And I’d super appreciate that. All right. Thank you. Back to the show.

    Eric: So can we talk about a couple of specific chapters? I was curious about shifts. Totally. my father, we, I grew up mainly in Wisconsin, even though my family is new Yorkers and my father would travel in the South for work and he would come back with a hunk of ham in a burlap sack, usually with some, you know, some name of some, a smokehouse on it and he’d be like, Oh, okay, we’re going to cook this and make red-eye gravy. And he, I remember he had a cast iron pan and he would over the ham and then he would pour coffee into the fry pan and he’d put it over the, the ham and it tasted horrible.

    Rachel: You actually, can’t not over cook country hand. Like it’s kind of like that way. It’s impossible. Like that’s just the way it is really it’s going to seem over cooked.

    Eric: And so is the red-eye gravy is supposed to taste bad or is it just my dad did it wrong?

    Rachel: Well, did he add any sweet? You got to

    Eric: Add squeeze. I don’t think he did.

    Rachel: I would agree that it kind of tastes bad until you add some, like either, either add some sugar or sorghum on her glasses or if you’re using Coke or Pepsi that adds the sweetness right there. The sweetness makes all the difference in the world. Cause I kind of agree with you that it, it doesn’t, it’s like bitter coffee and extremely salty funky. Yes. There’s like a, there’s like a big undertone of ferment in a country ham. Like it’s got a Tang. And until I started, I couldn’t, we didn’t make it that much when I was growing up, I had like, I’d never made it. And I experimented with everything. I did a recipe with Manhattan special for edible Brooklyn a long time ago actually, which was perfect because it’s like the sweet, the sweet coffee soda, right. The Italian coffee soda. And I’ve made it since I added sugar. I actually enjoy it. So you just get, if you add sweet sweetener, sorghum, molasses, Coke, Pepsi sweetened coffee that,

    Eric: Well, now I want to get a country ham. Of course. So, yeah,

    Rachel: But that chapter was pretty interesting cause I, I don’t, I, I had 26 chapters. I sometimes had to stop before I had really satisfied my like I actually would like to call several country, hand makers and ask them all, if they know the origin of red-eye gravy, I think I was able to ask like one or two and nobody, really, everyone says that everyone says the myth, which was completely proven. Like it’s about the, how it was like Andrew Jackson’s Andrew Jackson telling his shift that is like to make him gravy as where’s your eyes, because the chef was, was a drunk or whatever, which is completely like, if you do even the slightest bit of research, you can see that it’s from a book where a guy just like made up a fake history and then it gets repeated over and over again, even though it was totally obviously made up, but the only, like I couldn’t find any and it, it isn’t read, like if you make it, it’s never written.

    Rachel: So like that doesn’t even make any sense. And I can put, so I finally know. And so like anyone I asked, like I would ask chefs at Southern restaurants and like people who sold country ham and like, everyone kind of gives you the same things you always hear that you make it when you wake up with coffee and that’s like, no one used like the red I drink. That’s when the red eye flight, like that’s way after red eye gravy. So it didn’t make any sense. But so as I say in the book, I was just doing random Googling. And I came across like somebody from Europe, like someone from another country was blogging about their, their years spent in the deep South. And they had had country hand the traditional way, which is when you, when you cut it off, you like now they take a meat slicer, they cut a slice of country, ham.

    Rachel: It has around, it still looks like an eye because there’s a little Brown little piece of bone in it, but she had a picture of how she went and got country here in the real way where you use, where you have to cut the bone out, which is interesting because I’ve actually seen that done with Italian country ham where like, they like it to Palos. They have to cut the bone out and it makes a raggedy hole in the middle. And it looks way more like an eye because the ham is oval and the hole is bigger and it looks like your actual eye, like, so that’s and I saw her picture and I was like, Oh, the ham is red. Like the hand was red. The ham is the red eye. So I have no other proof other than seeing what country hit myself, what country ham used to look like.

    Rachel: So, but it happened very late. Like, like that was like, I think I’d already turned in the first draft. And I was like, Oh, Holy, Holy crap. That’s, that’s gotta be it. Like, it looks like the ham itself really looks like a red eye. And there was one other reference in the past where someone had referred to it as red eye ham. And so now I’m not. So like I got that happened so late. Like I didn’t, I didn’t have the chance to call up all these country ham experts and say like, Hey, do you think it might be this? So anyway, that’s what I would like to do next.

    Eric: Wow. I was, I was kind of intrigued by something I never thought of before.

    Rachel: Oh, also country at one big thing before we go into something else is that it’s obviously, it was obviously enslaved Africans and later African-Americans who are the country ham experts. And yet, as far as I know, I do not believe there is any, there are any black country, ham producers, maybe there are now, but I didn’t know of any, when I did the book

    Eric: Said in the book that they were the ones who had their own kind of rub their own dry rub

    Rachel: It’s chili, it has cayenne chili, which is, which is, I mean, like it’s very obvious when you look at the ingredients that there’s African influence in sorghum in like a hundred percent. And there’s also no question of who was doing the labor of the kitchen when these foods were first made the United States. Like there’s just no doubt where it comes from it’s what’s now is just needs to be rectified. Is that it’s you know, it’s like a bunch of old white families who own the country ham space and, you know, hope. I hope that that’s actually changed since I’ve did the book.

    Eric: I think there’s a lot of change. I think there’s a big awareness.

    Rachel: Yeah, it’s probably not cheap. I, you know, it’s like, it takes so long. It’s like one of those it’s like any Italian food, like you have to invest in the product and then it takes years before you can sell it or at least eight years. So it’s like, I think it’s, it probably requires a lot of expertise and probably money up front. So hopefully, maybe now it’s happening.

    Eric: I kind of was surprised by the chapter on lunchboxes because I was like, wait, this isn’t a food, but then I was like, Oh, but I want to read it anyway. Well, lunchboxes were first just kind of like tin cookie, cookie tins or something. And then this company made the thermos decided to make a metal box that could carry the thermos.

    Rachel: Yes. Oh my gosh. Oh, and I, I just keep went down this really cool. There was a guy whose father was a designer of lunchboxes and he had written my Kim I’ve actually found his story. He had written, he’s a, he teaches fiction at UW. I think UCLA teaches fiction at a university in Los Angeles. And one of his, one of his own works was like this half fictionalized, half autobiographical account of, of his father selling all of his lunch boxes, the metal versions that he cause he had, he had, he like would watch cartoons with the sun and whatever son laughed at this is part of the, his story. He would commission to have put on a lunch box and those would be the best selling. So he had all these lunch boxes in his garage and he sold them to help put a son through college. Some of that is fictionalized, but his father truly was a lunchbox designer and was around when it shifted to plastic.

    Eric: I had tracked him down

    Rachel: And checked on him down and like was like, which part of the story is true, but not actually can’t remember. Like

    Eric: I just kind of relate to the lunchboxes because when I was a kid, I had a he ha lunchbox and I was even then, I didn’t know what I was experiencing, but to me, the lunchbox artistry was very surreal, but I didn’t know. That’s what I was like, why does this look weird to me? You know? Cause I was like, I, it just seemed to be a diff it’s not, it wasn’t really the reality of hee haw on the lunchbox and it kind of, it had this profound effect on me. And then Later I remember, I remember always thinking that whatever lunchbox I had was worth money, but E-bay, hadn’t come along yet. You know,

    Rachel: I have a $6 million man one, but I don’t have the matching thermos.

    Eric: Ooh. And I believe that the pair is the key.

    Rachel: Yeah. Well, okay. Now I’m actually looking at the chapter. I, I did. Yeah, it was the collector. I guess what I was saying was it was the collectors who really interested me, which is totally true. And they’re actually worth less than I was like looking up how much mine was and it wasn’t that much.

    Eric: It’s a big deal. I mean, it’s still, I mean, collecting is still a big deal for lunchboxes and I’ve actually I helped my grandfather in law sell some on eBay and it was one of them got quite a bit of money. The other ones were, were not as much, but it was kind of fun for me and my, my, my in-laws grandfather to do something together, you know? And cause he, he bought stuff at auctions all the time and he’d just have boxes of stuff, but I’ve always found lunchboxes fascinating. And for a while when I worked in Manhattan, it was kind of cool to instead of have like a backpack, you brought your lunch box to work for, with your food or with your stuff in it. Yeah. Yeah. The metal ones, I was very retro, but I was very displeased by the move to plastic with the lunchboxes.

    Rachel: Yes. I mean, who wasn’t? Yeah, that was, Oh God, there were some, there were something things like I, there was like that whole thing where people thought, I don’t know if I even mentioned this in the story anymore where people thought that someone had been killed or hurt with a metal lunchbox. And that was like completely like fake news. Right. And, but I think what I was also saying is that they don’t fit in a backpack very well of lunchbox. You kind of want it to be squishier. And I didn’t realize that the backpack like the back, that was another thing. I was like, Oh, the backpack was actually not invented until like 1980. Like like until the eighties either. So like as, as they were becoming plastic, they were also having backpacks,

    Eric: Right. The backpack, as we know, it now became very popular then and kind of pushed out the lunchbox as something that kids would bring, even if they even brought their lunch to school they would bring into their backpack instead of metal lunchbox. But now I’m thinking I want a row of lunchboxes on my shelf up here or something. So at the very end of the book is a recipe for vinegar pie, which I want to make a video about now, of course. And it reminds me a little bit of in Brooklyn, New York city here, we have a chain called milk bar and they have a pie called crack pie.

    Rachel: Oh yeah. I think I say that in the book. I mean her pie is a hundred percent based on these recipes. Like a vinegar pie is like a scarcity pie where you make it, you make it with egg, only eggs, butter, cream, like those kinds of ingredients, basically a sugar, sugar pie. Yep. And she, even if you, I can’t remember how much I said in the chapter, but I know that she even refers to it when she grew up in that, in the part of the country where those were very common. And she even talks about how she was when she talks about there’s one, I think, mind of a chef, even where she talks about how did that pie was created and she was kind of trying to make a chess pie. Oh yeah. Which is which is basically a scarcity pie, which has vinegar pie is, I mean, there’s like a tablespoon of vinegar in it.

    Rachel: Yeah. It’s just add a little acidity to the sugar. It’s a sugar pie and a chess pie has a little bit of cornmeal in it and that’s her, that’s what she was doing. And like a molecular gastronomy counterweight was a crackpot, which is, I just thought that was really fascinating because when I first tasted, my mom always made buttermilk pie, which was basically a vinegar pie made with buttermilk. It’s just, it’s, you’re just using these rich thing, rich ingredients that anyone who grew up on a farm would have access to when you wouldn’t have had access to fresh fruits, you would have had dairy, maybe sh something sweet. If it wasn’t sugar like honey or sorghum or whatever or flour and water, I think the scarcity pies make the sugar, flour and water. And we used a little buttermilk instead of vinegar. And I remember when the first time I tasted crack pie, I was like, this is just totally my mom’s buttermilk pot except 600 times. Sweet. And I just think that’s so fascinating that like the most like this, like this just like futuristic modern success is like this old scarcity pantry pie.

    Eric: Did they call them scarcity? Pizer? Is that like kind of a modern

    Rachel: I think people call them all different things like it, like there were Hoosier pies, pies and pantry pies and impossible pies. I’m saying scarcity and just cause that’s kind of what they were the, the, I always, I said this in the chapter, like the irony is that they’re actually Richard and fruit pies. Yes.

    Eric: I mean, I have a phrase I’m all about use what you got when I’m doing something. And I think that’s kind of basically what kind of pie that’s a use, what you got pie to me.

    Rachel: Yeah. They’re really good. Like I, I tested a bunch of vinegar pie recipes and this one was really good. You will only want like a little sliver and it definitely tastes better cold or like cold out of the fridge or room temperature. And it is really good in the Graham Cracker crust, but like the feeling starts to sink into the crust. So it doesn’t look as awesome. Cause it starts to like become one mass or even like go underneath the filling, but it tastes amazing. I have to figure out I’m sure like Christina Tosi figured out the molecular Chris, John, or any way to fix the filling, waking into the Graham Cracker crust. But those, the combination of the vinegar pie filling with like a Graham Cracker crust is really good.

    Eric: You know, I, I need to remind you of publicly that I’m a bike ride away from your apartment if you need a tester.

    Rachel: Oh yeah. I, well, I did a book signing at the grant the union square green market and I made a sheet pan size pie, vinegar pie, and I handed out like a hundred squares of it, like in November,

    Eric: Sign me back when you could have that kind of thing. Yeah.

    Rachel: Yeah. That’s true. Well, they might actually, I think you could probably safely handout pie slices now they would just, people just have to eat them away from you. Yeah.

    Eric: So what’s before we end the end, the show what’s what’s on the horizon here for you. What’s what’s coming up next.

    Rachel: Oh, I don’t know. That’s a good question. Well, I am surprised. Do you know who the league of kitchens is? So the league of kitchens is an incredible New York city organization, a woman named Lisa Gross started it. And she works with women who are refugees, who are known as like the cook, like the woman who, the people who just make the best food from wherever they’re from like the like, Oh, like the best Lebanese food, the best Japanese, Japanese, home cooking, the best Weger home cooking. And she, her organization trained them to, to teach and host classes in their homes for money and people would take these classes and they were, they were really well respected. They were all day long and they would, he would leave like all the recipes were tested. They were written up in advance. So it was like, like almost like a cross between like a homemade cooking class.

    Rachel: And like when you go to take a class at a real culinary school where you leave with like super tested ingredients and like, and so it was a really, it was very, very successful and she was expanding it to other cities. And she wants to, we’re going to work on a cookbook together. I mean, essentially as I do with every cookbook project is I’m helping other people make the very best cookbook they can possibly do. So she would be working with all of her instructors to, to do a book about home cooking. And we were just getting started on it before the pandemic. And then they had had to completely reinvent their business to be online. So they’ve been busy doing that. So I think we’re now, now they’re very successful and that it actually has opened up their classes to everyone in the world, which I think a lot of people are finding is that it’s open doors that you didn’t know, you could have one closing, some other ones.

    Rachel: And so hopefully we’re going to actually be able to, now that they figured out how to teach classes online, we could actually start working on the book again. Cause now, cause before I couldn’t go, we couldn’t go sit with the women while they were teaching. And now we figured out how we can do it. So that’s next, which is going to be cool because I will get to learn how to cook things from all over the world, which is always exciting from an incredible cooks from all over the world. And it’s a really good project. Everyone should look it up and try to take a class that they don’t know it already. So it’s very cool to be associated with them. So that’s one thing that’s next? Everything else, like a lot of people we’re trying to figure out what the world is going to be like.

    Eric: Yeah. It’s interesting by you know, making videos online is actually my viewership has gone up quite a bit during the pandemic. Cause people are home, but they’re also wanting to learn how to do stuff that they can do in their homes. So,

    Rachel: And are you, are you fine? And like you’re doing a lot of like, you’re doing a lot of hands-on gardening and intensive like yard projects, correct? Yeah. And I would imagine there’s a whole lot of people who are now in those yards and gardens all the time.

    Eric: Yeah. For a long time you would go to the home improvement store and you couldn’t buy any lumber because people bought a lumber to build

    Rachel: Or seedlings. I remember in like, Oh, it was so hard to tip, but I’m a member of a community garden in New York city. And typically it’s very easy to get seedlings because greet we’re connected to green thumb and like they bring seeds. Like there’s always someone who goes to pick them up and then we have tons and it was, it was so hard to get them. Plus they didn’t turn on the water and nobody was selling them. And then I don’t know what it’s like now.

    Eric: It’s a little more back to normal. I actually was able to buy hand sanitizer in the store the other day, so,

    Rachel: Oh yeah. That I’ve noticed as everywhere it’s hand sanitizer is very easy to get, but I definitely know that early on, I just had to go with whatever seeds I had. So like a lot of what we were doing was like everyone I knew who had, we all had like random leftover seeds and we would just grow as many as we could and then trade them. And then of course it was an incredibly cold spring, so everything was stunted. Like I never really got stunted. I mean, now I get it. I see what stunted means. Like for real, I don’t know if you, you probably have much more experience, but like I have a couple of plants that are still like an inch tall and it, because, and that’s like, they, like, I have an okra that I started inside and like, I don’t even know, like early March, it’s still like less than a tall and there’s like one Oprah flower,

    Eric: You know? Fedco seeds up in Maine sells a variety of of that, that will grow in the North.

    Rachel: Oh Oka. That’s true. Cause I did get my seeds. My seeds are collected from an okra pod in the South of how I need to give it like a couple more generations.

    Eric: Yeah. They’re they have an okra that will grow in a short seat. Well, what’s considered a short season compared to the South, so yeah.

    Rachel: Yeah. This was, I mean you remember right? Like if this was a really cold spring. Yeah,

    Eric: Yeah. It has had a bit, my garden is not what it usually is that the garlic liked it, but nothing else did like my, my string beans are like half the half.

    Rachel: Oh I’ve got my spring reserve wreck. Yeah. I have like one tomato. I’ve had one cucumber in one tomato plus our community garden gets like six hours of sun, which doesn’t help. Oh, this is a long way of saying that. Like I’ve actually, I have, even though I am, I I’ve been like always been growing and a gardener, like actually longer than I was food writer and I’ve never pitched a gardening story for the New York times food section because they don’t cover it very often. But I just feel like usually like home. Do you ever read the home live stuff? Like the S the, which section?

    Eric: The home email that Sam system sells sends out?

    Rachel: Well, there’s this, there’s some section that has a gardening columnist.

    Eric: Well, Anne raver used to be the columnist for the New York times the garden. She was the garden writer. Yes. And I think she was let go or she retired

    Rachel: Now there’s another person doing it.

    Eric: Oh, I don’t know who they are.

    Rachel: Me neither, but I, I just feel like that I’ve always, there’s always been like some growing stories that I’ve thought about, but now it seems like more than ever, that would be very useful information for, for cooks because so many people are growing this year and there’s, there’s so much you can do in the fall. And we missed the spring here. So

    Eric: You can recede, you know, like I’m gonna plant my sugar snap peas again.

    Rachel: Yeah. And I, I mean, I don’t know, but you, you probably grew up most stuff up upper upstate. Right. So it gets a little colder than the city. We didn’t even have a hard freeze in the city last year at all. Not at all. So like, we, like, we, like nothing died back. Like I had incredible, we had incredible collards and Swiss chard, all like all through the winter. Like you can harvest coloreds in February who know? Yeah. Well, I guess there was recently a like just in like two weeks ago, there was a story in the Metro section about how we’re now a subtropical, which sounds a lot crazier than it is because North Carolina is subtropical and it’s not like there’s bananas. So, but it means that you can, like, we probably will be able to harvest collards in February, in Brooklyn for the rest of our lives. Yes.

    Eric: Well, cool. This has been great. This is I got you. I saw your book and I just got so excited about it. And then

    Rachel: Oh man, I think you’ve heard, like, wanting to talk about it. Thank you so much.

    Eric: I am, I am. I keep threatening to hire a virtual assistant to do scheduling in that. Cause I, as you know, I think I took three months to put this together. It’s my fault. I just forget to email back, you know?

    Rachel: Well, I’d love talking to you and I actually feel like I would like to interview you next time around. Cause I want to learn more about what you do.

    Eric: You could do that. I, we also, we have to do a shout out to Charlie Shaw, who was my first friend in New York city. When I moved back here from college and he introduced us.

    GardenFork Radio is produced by GardenFork Media, LLC in Brooklyn, New York, executive producer, Jimmy Gootz. If you’d like to learn more about Jimmy and the custom hollow books, he makes you can visit hollowbooks.com. The music for our show is licensed from audio blocks.com and unique tracks.com.

     

  • Katherine’s Favorite Propane Pizza Oven – GF Radio

    Thinking about buying a propane pizza oven? GardenFork pizza expert Katherine is on the podcast to tell us her pizza making journey, and which oven she uses now.

    A few key things from the podcast.

    • Follow Katherine on Instagram @kcrosbie .
    • We have both used Blurb to print photobooks with good success.
    • AND Katherine is a GardenFork Patron. Want to get the behind the scenes photos and The After Show? Learn how here.
    • The best propane pizza oven? Katherine uses the PizzaQue by PizzaCraft.

    pizza oven

    Eric: Hey everyone. Thanks for downloading the show. This is garden fork radio. This is your host, Eric. I am your host. Is that what I say? Anyway? Today we were going to talk about making photo books and making pizza with my friend, Katherine, who I have known virtually. Is that the right word for a really long time? Hey Catherine. Hey there. So a little backstory between me and Catherine. you were one of the first people that started watching garden fork, and then you started emailing me. and then we became a virtual friends and I think that’s a great thing.

    Katherine: Yeah, it’s kind of neat. it’s a little different probably from my perspective, because you are like the star and I’m just one of the many fans. but, it is kinda neat to be able to connect with people and, you know, you can check out my Instagram and learn a little bit more about me. I actually know way more about you just because of all the videos and podcasts, but it’s an interesting way to get to know someone.

    Eric: You can all follow Stu in a bag. She has a terrier that travels with her and I kind of envy it because the Labradors, you just can’t put in a travel bag.

    Katherine: No, it’s very challenging and he, I’m getting worried. Now he’s putting on a little bit of weight and he’s reaching his, he’s consumed to weight, reach his weight limit. So he’s going to have to go on a diet before the fall and we get to go traveling again.

    Eric: So today we were going to talk about, making pizza in indoor and outdoor ovens and then also making photo books. And we have a huge list that Katherine sent me, which will probably fill up like three shows. And I’m, I’m all for that. But, I just made this a pizza oven out of a barrel and it got, I think people really liked it. I really liked making it, but you actually have, a properly made outdoor pizza oven.

    Katherine: Yeah. We have a, it’s called a pizza queue. and it’s something that, you know, a friend actually gave to us as a Christmas gift, a surprise Christmas gift, which involved me taking a rather large box that I didn’t know what was inside it to Mexico on a plane Canada, which my son was horrified. when he learned on the way to the airport that this large box that I planned to take with us, I didn’t know what was in it, which of course isn’t like a TSA thing is always like, always know what you’re taking. so yeah, it was, I’ll tell the story briefly, but, so my friend had been down our place in Mexico and they decided that they knew what we needed and they thought it was a pizza oven. For some reason, I thought that they wanted us to have an espresso maker, like a coffee maker because they were totally into coffee.

    Katherine: So I figure out that this box in my mind, which they don’t want to tell me what it is, which they’ve wrapped in Christmas wrap is like a large espresso maker. So we get to the airport and, of course we get diverted to the large parcel area to run this parcel through the X Ray machine. And as they’re putting it on the box, I’m with my daughter at this stage because my son has totally abandoned me and said, I’m not having anything to do with you and got on the plane with his girlfriend. So my sister, so my daughter and I are sitting there and the he’s, the guy says that the X Ray machine, what, you know, what’s in the box. I said, well, I think it’s a coffee maker anyway. So it goes to the box through the screening machine and he says, that’s like, no coffee maker I’ve ever seen.

    Katherine: So anyways, so I said, well, you know, I don’t, I actually had to confess, I don’t really know what’s in it, but I thought it was a coffee maker. So anyway, they open it up in a way it goes and out comes this gigantic propane pizza oven. So it was a nice surprise. But unfortunately when we get to Mexico, of course, I don’t have a pizza peel. I don’t have, you know, anything for like a roll, roller for dough and all that sort of stuff. So we, we, improvised it first and used cardboard as the pizza peel to get the pizza into the oven and eventually bought ourselves a proper pizza peel and brought it down. But yeah, it’s a neat, it’s a propane fired, pizza oven. So it heats up really quickly and it has, it utilizes, you know, a stone like a pizza stone that you would use in an oven. It uses two of those. And with this gigantic pizza burner up underneath and fires right up and gets up to like 900 degrees Fahrenheit.

    Eric: Wow. So once you turn it, turn on the flame, do you have to wait 10 minutes or is it just ready to get going or,

    Katherine: Yeah, it takes about seven or eight or, you know, minutes or so. And usually the first pizza is not the best one. So I probably should always, I mean, patient didn’t want to get one in the oven and out as quickly as possible, but usually the second or subsequent pizzas work the best, because, it’s, you know, properly heated up and they get nice and bubbly on the top and those little leopard spots on the bottom that you’re supposed to have in the crust.

    Eric: Yeah. I, my issue with the barrel oven was the fire was a little too womp and hot. So the side of the pizza that was near the fire was burning crispy, and I have to spin it. Do you, in the pizza oven, do you have to spin it or is it the, the, the heat is kind of all round?

    Katherine: Yeah. The heat is all around because there’s an opening at the front and no opening at the back and there’s no actual cover for the front opening. I I’ve thought of, I should have some sort of little thing I could hang on that would, you know, keep the heat in. So because of that, it is a bit hotter at the back. And I usually spin it halfway through halfway through the cooking. but I found a great, what I do is prepare the pizza on a sheet of parchment paper. And then I just put the parchment paper in the oven with the pizza and leave it with that. So that makes it really easy. First of all, to get off the peel, and makes it easier to spin around. And usually the pizza, the pizza just comes off the parchment paper and then those, you know, some of the parts of paper might burn on the edges. I usually trim it. So it’s not too big. It doesn’t start a big fire in the oven, but using the parchment paper is, is makes it super easy, especially to make a lot of pizzas. Like if you have friends around and everybody’s going to make a pizza, they can all make their pizza on a piece of parchment paper, and then you can go around and pick them up and throw them in and you don’t have to wait, you know, to kind of bake it on the peel or whatever.

    Eric: I never thought of that.

    Katherine: Yeah. It’s an, it’s an amazing pack. It just makes it that much easier. You can, and you can have more pizza, doughs rolled out ready to go. but yeah, mostly I use that when I have, I started doing it when I had friends over for a pizza party and you know, you, everybody kind of grazes on pizza as it comes, but you want them to kind of go in and out a little bit quicker and have people engaged. So while one person’s cooking, another person could be making their pizza. That one comes out, you know, you can whip the other one in.

    Eric: So with the parching paper that the bottom of the crust still crisps up there. Okay.

    Katherine: Absolutely. There’s like no difference whatsoever. Wow. Yeah.

    Eric: So many people in the YouTube videos are like, for some reason, they don’t like the idea of the dough being right on the clay brick. Cause it’s used used clay brick, which I’m fine with. and they’re like, can I put in my pizza stone? I’m like, yeah, but you’d have to have the charcoal, the coals on the pizza stone to heat it up anyway. But the idea that of the parchment would be brilliant because that way people would feel okay about it. And yet they’d get the good crust.

    Katherine: Yeah, no, it works out really well. And then you end up with this, it’s funny when the paper comes out, because usually the, sometimes the paper comes out before the pizza’s done, you know? Cause when I go to turn the pizza, the paper is just isn’t attached to the dough anymore and it just comes out. It’s almost, it looks like, like old Papyrus kind of, you know, tea, stained paper. It looks like some piece of art when you take it out. It’s kind of interesting, but no, I mean it, and it also cuts down on the amount, cause I used to use like a corn meal or semolina on the peel. so that the dough wouldn’t stick. Right. So that you could kind of shove it in really quickly and it would, it would just separate from the, from the pizza peel, but then you get a lot of that.

    Katherine: I found that in burning up in the oven and make, it would just make a huge mess. So, this way I don’t have to use the, the corn meal or the semolina. And although you could, if you like that texture right on your crest. Yeah. And I use the, New York times pizza dough recipe, make it usually the night before one of their recipes makes, for, you know, balls of pizza dough and you let it basically, you let it slow rise in that plastic bag in the refrigerator and take it out. Basically I take it out and put it on, you know, like a cookie sheet and leave it in the oven with the light on, if it’s cool in Mexico, it’s not so much of an issue, but if it’s cool, you know, it just take, take the dose out of the fridge, put them on that. like on a, either on a piece of parchment or a sill Pat and throw them in the oven with the light on and they just have their second rise there.

    So were you making pizzas before the pizza oven gift? The mystery gift came?

    Katherine: Yes, I was. I started, I’ve made pizzas a couple of different ways over the years of the first things I did actually was make it on the barbecue using flour tortillas. And I can’t remember even where I heard about that, but it’s a super easy, quick, and pretty tasty way to get like an extremely thin crust pizza, but you just do it right on the barbecue and you can’t put too many toppings on it. Cause of course the tortilla is very thin, but it makes a lovely, a lovely pizza, really easy, really quick. And so that was probably the first thing that I used. And then I, I had one of the ceramic pizza stones for a while and would use that in the oven, but I wasn’t all that happy with the results, with that. So I ended up purchasing and I think, I think you were the inspiration for getting the modern steel, pizza steel, huge rectangular, extremely heavy. I’m not sure. Do you know when it’s made, it’s made of steel obviously. and put that in my oven and made pizzas on that and had a lot more success. Cause it just holds that much more heat than the pizza stone

    Eric: And it doesn’t crack. It’s not fragile, you know, I have one and, it was just kind of, I was just making a pizza video about what’s better than pizza steal or the pizza stone. Cause I was never a fan of the pizza stone. I, the two I have are both cracked. I still use them cause I just shoved the pieces back together, you know?

    Katherine: Right. I remember from your videos in the, in your country place with you kind of just joining the fractured stone,

    Eric: You know, me too well. Oh and yeah, so that, that’s my go to now the New York times pizza dough recipe, there’s one that they have where they made a video about it. And it was just kind of a light bulb for me. I think the key thing with pizza dough is it just needs an overnight rise and in a refrigerator

    Katherine: I think. So that helps develop the, the, the flavor. And I guess the gluten, I mean, I definitely don’t know anything about the science of it, but the slow rise, like the no knead bread. I mean, I think just that slow rise just gives you a much better result in terms of the texture and the flavor at the end of the day.

    Eric: Yeah. Cause the New York pizza places, I’m an, I, you can see them, you know, they shaped their pizza doughs right at their, at the counter, you know, and they have below this marble counter is a frigerator basically what those big stainless steel doors and individual pieces of dough are in these round, but just like stackable round bowls. And I got to talking to the one guy at Romano pizza near me and he’s like, yeah, we make the pizza day before. And we, and we do a cold rise and it was just like, Oh, just like just like bread, you know? So it was kind of a light bulb moment for something really simple.

    Katherine: Yeah. And it, and the other thing is, is I often will freeze the extra balls and then you have them, you know, before you do any rise, basically just as soon as I make them put them in the plastic bags and just throw them in the freezer and then you’ve always got pizza dough ready for people come out, you can basically take it out, let it, let it defrost on the counter. And it doesn’t really take that long. And you’ve got, you know, homemade pizza dough ready to go.

    Eric: I love that. I love that kind of thing. So yeah,

    Katherine: What I would love to have is one of those, Breville pizza ovens that they use on, on Bon Appetit. Have you seen those? No, it’s an electric countertop pizza oven that heats up to like a thousand degrees in five minutes.

    Eric: What’s, what’s the name of it they’re made by Breville.

    Katherine: I L L E but they’re like a thousand dollars, which just seems insane.

    Eric: Yes, they are a thousand dollars.

    Katherine: So one thing, so I’m waiting for those to go down in price, because it’s, you know, it’s an extremely extravagant thing. I mean, I could see spending, I don’t know, I don’t need, it’s be hard to justify spending more than $200 on a pizza oven, which I think is what the outdoor ones cost. the one that, I have my friends bought at Canadian tire, which you guys don’t have in the United States, but they go, they have, they have what they call fantasy pricing. So they’re, most of their large items are priced at about twice of what, you know, anybody really wants to pay for them. And they go on flyer specials, you know, two or three times a year. And that’s when everybody buys that particular item. So anyway, these, these things, you know, the outdoor pizza Q is probably only about $200 Canadian when it’s on sale.

    Eric: All right. I like that. Cause I’m on YouTube. Kenji Lopez all has been making these videos where he literally slaps a GoPro on his forehead and just cooks. And he’s been, he did a review of the two different pizza ovens he has and one’s called an uni. And I can’t remember the other one, the Oni is about $330 online here. And he has quite good results with those two ovens. But man, the thousand dollar one looks very interesting.

    Katherine: It’s you have to watch one of the Bon Appetit pizza videos that use it. And it’s, you know, they’ve done deep dives into pizza and, you know, episodes about the sauce and episodes about the dough and episodes about the toppings and all that sort of stuff that they, this is what they use because it makes a pizza and, you know, in three or four minutes and they get really good results from it. But I’ve seen that Oonie one, that’s an interesting pizza oven. the other, the other great way to make pizza and you’ve done this, I think is cast iron pan right on your stove. And I think, the Kenzie, what’s his name? Jay Kenji Kanzi Lopez. He has done the same thing. I’ve watched some of those videos when he has the YouTube, when he has the, the GoPro on his head. And, I really enjoyed those.

    Eric: He’s a good guy is a good energy and he is wicked smart.

    Katherine: Is he located in New York as well or Houston, San Francisco?

    Eric: Most recently he was at, America’s test kitchen. And then he moved to, a website whose name I’m blanking on. And then he wrote several amazing cookbooks. And now he’s, he has a restaurant called versed, versed hall, like sausage hall basically. And then the Corona thing hit. And so he went back to making YouTube videos. He already had some YouTube videos up and he just, I mean, I don’t know him personally, but I think he was like, well, I needed to do something. And he just slapped the GoPro on his head and it’s wildly successful and a complete lack of production value, which I love.

    Katherine: Yeah. Well, isn’t it great. And you can just, you just do it, you just film it right through. It’s done in a short period of time. You get to see in real time how long it takes them to do things. And every now and then he does like a, fast forwarded thing where he started does, you know, you’re, this is where I I’ll get to the next stage. Cause this is the boring five minutes where I’m stirring this particular thing. But yeah, no, I’ve, I’ve really enjoyed his, his videos very accessible. He makes things very accessible

    Eric: And he’s, he always feeds his dog at the end.

    Katherine: [inaudible]

    Eric: Does Stu get fed at the end of the meal or is he a as the

    Katherine: Yes, yes. He’s, he’s an extremely food oriented dog. So he, he gets fed through the meal at the end of the meal and and he eats almost anything. So he’s kind of like your Labradors

    Eric: Yeah. With our new lab, we’re trying to figure out, she gets really, really excited. She’s one of those dogs that does the circle spins when it’s time to eat her food. And it just must be built in somehow. Cause I just, like, I was like, I didn’t train her to do this. It’s just that my other labs would never do this, but she just does these spins and I’m like, okay, sit down so I can give you your food, you know?

    Katherine: And I see she likes tomatoes.

    Eric: Yeah. She’s a character. It’s she’ll she is, she’s a good fit for the family. She’s a good fit. So yeah, it’s always amazes

    Katherine: Me when dogs, we used to have, a vegetable garden and the, our black lab would like the carrots love the carrots out of there. And she also was able to pick blackberries off the bushes with her. Like she could just put her head in a Blackberry Bush with all the thorns and everything and pick off blackberries and eat them. It was amazing.

    Eric: Yeah. It, it, mine, we’ll take the sugar snap peas off the vine. So I just planted a seed for my second crop of sugar snap peas. That’ll hopefully, bear fruit, bear sugar snap peas before it gets too cold up there. So

    Katherine: Yeah. So how long, when, when do you get your first frost?

    Eric: Well, with the climate change thing, it’s, it keeps changing up. There comes later in, late in the year, but the F the first frost is usually in November. but we’ll see. So like last year, it barely, it barely snowed, you know?

    Katherine: Yeah. Yeah. Well, we get a PR we have pretty mild climate here in Vancouver, so it’s, you know, we off, we have had years where we don’t get any snow at all and somewhere we just get a dusting and then we have years where we just get walloped, but

    So amongst our huge list that we put together here, something that intrigued me is that you make photo books.

    Katherine: Yes. Well, I, photography has been probably one of my longest and most consistent hobbies. although I took a fairly long break, I guess, from any sort of serious photography when my kids were growing up, I started out, you know, with a Canon [inaudible]. Yeah. That’s, I think that’s so many people’s first serious cameras. And I started that out with that. I think when I was 16 or something, I thought a and eight, you want, I still have it. And, got back into it, photography, more serious obviously to, you know, family photos and that sort of thing when the kids were young. but back into it a little more seriously when they were back at school full time, and I had a little bit more time to devote and camera’s changed dramatically, you know, ditch, I got back in just before digital.

    Katherine: and so, but quickly made, I got back in because of autofocus. Cause that was the old cameras that we had were not autofocus we, you know, manual focus, manual everything. And, you know, so the next camera I had after the one was one of the Nikons, a Nikon SLR with autofocus, which I thought was like revolutionary, but then within, within a year or two, you know that with the digital revolution. And, so I got got right into the digital thing. And, but the big thing with digital is that you don’t print your photos. And I missed that tangible thing to show people, digital photo frames, you know, they never, they never really took off people have screensavers on their, their TV’s. And I do that with, through flicker. I have, you know, like a screensaver on my television, but nothing beats, you know, something that people can pick up and hold in their hands and look at, also because not just for other people, but for your, for yourself as well, because you don’t sit back and say, you might, you know, you sit down and you’re having a coffee, you might scroll through one of your photo books.

    Katherine: It’s sitting out on your coffee table. You don’t sort of scroll through all your photos on your computer, partly because you have so many of them and you just don’t have them curated in a way that makes them accessible. So the photo book was something that I got started on. I don’t know when my first photo book was, but I’ve been making them for at least 10 years. I would say

    Eric: My thing with that is just trying to edit through everything.

    Katherine: Yeah. And that’s where, and that’s a discipline thing. So if I, if I’ve taken a bunch of photographs or I’ve been somewhere, or I, I know I’m doing something that I’m going to want to, make into a book, so it might be a family vacation, it might be some sort of an adventure. then I will, when I, when I upload those photos to my computer, I will take the time. And I use Lightroom for my, both my editing and my storage or organization of photos. So I’ve never been good at, you know, tagging things. I mean, that was, you know, supposed to be the way to do things. But what I do is I basically create a collection in a Lightroom and I will go through basically, well, you know, right after I’ve uploaded my photos and I will do, I will create a collection of kind of the best photos and save that as a, basically like, Oh, you can do the same thing just with your computer by saving photos into a folder or creating an alb I guess, is the way that you would do it probably on your back in the photos app or something.

    Katherine: So I try to right away, create some sort of an album or collection that has a subset of the photos, the ones that I like and kind of cuts out some of the duplication so that I that’s usually what I start with when I do a book. And I usually don’t, you know, go back to the, the bigger collection, unless I think, you know, as I’m going through things, I’ve missed something that I want to tell the story.

    Eric: So what are you, how are you creating the book? is it an online company or,

    Katherine: Yeah, it’s a company called blurp. and they, they have a Canadian and a U S website. I like the fact that they have a Canadian website because I can order and have a book and not have to pay, you know, shipping and duty or extra shipping costs or duty, an import duty costs on it when it gets here. and they also, one of the big reasons I use them is that they have a link through Lightroom. So there’s actually a book module in Lightroom. Oh, wow. That is linked to blurb. and the nice thing about that is that when you, so you create your collection, your, you know, you do your layout and basically decide which photos are gonna go, where in your book. And then, then you can only, you can decide to only edit the photos that are going into your book. and I don’t necessarily do a lot of editing, but I will, you know, go in and correct the exposure or the white balance if that’s screwed up. and the nice thing about the blurb thing is even after their photo book, the photos are in your layout. When they’re in light room, you can go back and edit them and it will automatically update so that when you upload your book, it gets uploaded with the most recent version of all the photos that you have.

    Eric: Oh, that’s brilliant. So it’s like auto updating and it’s one less thing you have to do.

    Katherine: Yeah. So, because I mean, one of the other things is you have to kind of pick all your photos, edit them, all, save them. You know, if, if you, you know, if you upload your photos in raw, then you have to edit them, save them as JPEGs in a folder. And then if you go in and you’re, you know, you’re creating your book and you say, Oh, well, I don’t really like that photo. I need to edit it or do something different with it. Then you might need to go back to the original image, change it, you know, and then save it again as a JPEG and then upload it again to whatever site you’re using. So this way you kind of do it all, and then you just click the upload button in light room and it uploads it to the blurb website. And you can order your book from there.

    Eric: Sweet. I know since you said blurb, I’ve actually, haven’t used it in awhile, but I used blurb to create a couple of books about the dogs, and then we’ve also used it for our family. And, they’re not paying us to feature them, but it’s a really straightforward process. And I like that they have templates for photo books and you could just pick one and it’s different layouts. And some of the pictures overlap sometimes it’s three across, but man, is it easy and fun?

    Katherine: Yeah. And they, they offer, so there are a few different ways. So the way I use it is through the Lightroom logical, but they have an online product. And then they also have, I think it’s called book-smart or something, which is some sort of their own software, which you can download for free and use on your computer. And then basically do it the same way I do it in the sense with Lightroom. so it doesn’t have to be done online, but I’ve used, I’ve also used a company called I don’t even know how you pronounce it, but Xenos Zed, or do you pronounce it C, Z or Zed and Oh, and they, they do really nice books as well. really nice quality. And they do like a little, I think they’re more professional, maybe more of a professional site, but they do these lay flat books, which are more like a cardboard kind of paper, you know, and that the quality of those is really good. I, I made, I only made one through there just kind of on spec of a bunch of, photos from our boating. We have a boat. So we do a lot of boating up here in the Pacific Northwest. And, so I did a, they had like a free book promo or something. It was like, all you had to pay was the shipping. So I ordered one of their books and the quality was very, very nice as well.

    Eric: Now I want to go make photo books. So yeah.

    Katherine: Well, it’s, it’s great. So I, I also follow, a couple young couple from Newfoundland. they go by the name, I think their YouTube channel is Becky and Chris. Oh, I love them. Do you love them? Yeah. Yeah. Let’s, it’s funny. Actually, Becky lived just down the street from where, cause I’m from, I’m not from Newfoundland. My husband’s from new Finland and my kids were born in Newfoundland, excuse me. So we, we lived in basically in the same neighborhood in st John’s and I think my kids, you know, played with her sister or something, but so we have that, a bit of that, that Newfoundland connection, which is what got me started on their site. But she posted a video recently on making photo books and she’s much more organized than I am, but one of the ideas that she had was like me, she takes photos with her camera, but also takes photos with her phone.

    Katherine: And the challenge for me has always kind of been integrating those, right. Cause the, you know, you have your kind of more photography that you do with your camera, but then the iPhone photos are, are so good now. And you take a lot of the more photos of those, where with your iPhone, how do you integrate those into the photo books? So her idea, which is what I’m going to use when I do my next book is that she basically creates grids at the back of her photo books with all the iPhone photos from that trip. And so, you know, and those are more of the, like what you would think of as a snapshot, right? So all the, not the serious landscape photos are the most beautiful photos, but they tell a story. And so she has like a grid maybe with like, I don’t know, 16 or 20 photos on a page. And that then she throws all the iPhone photos in at the back and it looks really cool. And it’s a great way to kind of not leave out those things without bulking up your photo book too much.

    Eric: I love that. My challenge with photos is the color balancing. And, I just start to get overwhelmed in my edit software. I use Adobe premiere, like I’ll shoot some of the video with my main Canon. It’s a camcorder actually. And then I have my GoPro and the GoPro has a kind of a preset it’s called a lot, color lookup table. It applies, but for it basically kind of enhances for, for your average person, the GoPro enhances the video to make it kind of look, saturated in contrast. But to match that back to the other camera’s video, there’s literally a button you press that says match the colors.

    Katherine: Wow. Yeah. That, that, that whole thing, you know, editing video, I’ve done a little bit of video and tried to edit. I can’t even just, I mean, it’s challenged for me just to, you know, splice things together. I still think of splicing. Cause I think back in the days and we shoot, you know, you actually cut the film and joined it together, but this whole, yeah, the latter, less people call them that whole thing. Like you shoot your video in an, in a neutral format or something and it has no color. And then you apply the color to it afterwards. It’s flat. Yeah. Yeah. It’s very, sounds very complicated.

    Eric: It’s, it’s really easy. I, my cam Carter shoots flat and then I lay on a, a preset that is in Adobe premier. It’s called golden tobacco, I think. And it just warms it up a little bit almost. And I set it to, there’s a scale from zero to, I set it about 40 and then I just crunched the blacks a little bit. I darkened the blacks and the shadows a little and add a little saturation and I’ve done sometimes don’t even color. Correct.

    Katherine: And can you create a preset your own preset for that sort of thing or?

    Eric: Yes. And why? I’ve never done that before? I don’t know. Yeah.

    Katherine: Well we’re creatures of habit, right? We do things the same way, whether it’s the best way or not. Yeah.

    Eric: So we’re almost at the end of the show, but I’m going to throw this out, Katherine, and you tell me whether you want to do it or not. is, is to ask Eric, anything

    Katherine: I can ask Eric anything. Oh, Eric, anything

    Eric: We could skip this part if you want.

    Katherine: who would you most like to interview on this podcast that you haven’t interviewed so far? that would be like a stretch maybe.

    Eric: Oh, who’s the guy Nelson Mandela.

    Katherine: Okay. How about if we pick someone who’s alive? Oh,

    Eric: I’d like to, I would like to have Gary Vaynerchuk back on the show.

    Katherine: Oh, so you you’ve interviewed him.

    Eric: We did a video together. It’s still on, it’s still on the channel. It’s still on the YouTube channel. And I met him when he was scaling up his father’s liquor store into a big wine business and he wanted to go, he wanted to use YouTube. He wanted to use web video to drive business to his store. And then from that became Gary, the personality, Gary who would describe wines is tasting like a mix of Kool-Aid and RO you know, raid Roach spray. And he was advertising in the newspaper of all things about his video show. And so I just emailed him and I said, can I, can I bring my camera? You want to be in my garden fork show? And he said, sure. And we talked about wine and you know, I look, I wasn’t balding or anything, and he’s got the near jets bucket there. And, but, and then we,

    Katherine: I’m going to have to, I’m going to have to look that one up,

    Eric: We would meet at different, you know, web web 2.0 events, and then he just blew up. But I love what he’s doing now. He’s basically telling people stop worrying and just start. And don’t worry about what people are gonna think, you know, lead with your heart and, and, don’t be mean don’t be a jerk. Basically. He uses more colorful language. Like there’s one video of him addressing like a sixth grade class. And he was just like, he was telling them and really blunt terms, don’t be a jerk to the other in your class because one day you’re going to get to be adults. And, and that nerdy guy over there is going to be running the tech company that you want a job at, you know?

    Katherine: Yeah. Don’t, don’t burn. Bridges is what we used to always say. Right.

    Eric: I just believe that karma is boomerang, but that would be, that’d be a fun one,

    Katherine: But he would be up, you know, I thought I learned about him through my son because my son watches a lot of his videos. And, I think during the whole COVID thing he’s been doing, like just like iPhone chats with people maybe, and yeah. And posting those. And, yeah, my son has sent me a number of those and we’ve watched some of them together and yeah, I think he’s been, you know, helped a lot of people through, you know, rough times.

    Eric: And I love that. He’s, he’s, self-made, he’s, you know, he’s got money in the bank he’s okay. And he doesn’t have to do this, you know, he can live, he could live off his profits for the rest of his life, but he’s out there spreading a message of good and he keeps it a political, which I think is really important even, you know, I mean, I occasionally make a comment about the national politics, but, he’s just positive, positive, and I love that. So, yeah. That’s great. Well, Catherine, would you come back on the show? Cause we have a bunch of other stuff to still talk about.

    Katherine: Sure. I’d love to, well, I’ll have to listen to the episode first and see how I sound.

    Eric: It sounds like a Skype call and that it is what it is.

    Katherine: It’s fun. It’s been fun chatting with you. So yeah, no, I’d like to do it again.

    Eric: We’re going to chat more cause we’re going to do the Patrion, after show, but, this was a lot of fun. You guys should check out the Becky and Chris YouTube channel. Cause it’s, it’s very inspiring what they do, especially Becky and Chris is a doctor, so he’s never there half the time, but I’ve learned a lot from him. She’s she’s a neat person.

    Katherine: Yeah. They’re, they’re an interesting, they’re an interesting couple. They have a lot of fun and they don’t take each other too. They don’t take themselves too seriously, which is nice.

  • Your Favorite Adhesive? Urban Root Cellars? GF-Radio

    Eric: Hey real quick. Before we start here, I just wanted to give a little shout out a big shout out actually to my good friend, Rick, co-host Rick for you all. He had a bile duct stone or several stones and then a gallbladder removal. He was like off my radar for a couple of days and I’m like, what’s going on? And then, I got an email from him that he sent to his, I’m presuming close friends. I hope I’m a close friend of yours, Rick to, let everyone knows going on. Rick’s spouse partner is a retired, registered nurse. Much like Rick, She was in the Navy. So he is in good hands. I hope he’s doing everything that the nurse tells him to do, but I just want to say, Hey Rick, we were thinking about you. And, Rick just posted on the Facebook GardenFork Group.

    So he must be feeling better and he’ll share his story with us. I’d like to do an episode with Rick about, I mean, we talked about this a lot, but the marvels of being alive in this time and the fact that we live in a time of antibiotics, anesthesia and laparoscopic surgery, you know, Rick was in the hospital, but in a matter of days, he was out walking his dog. So that’s pretty good. So Rick, I’m thinking about you and, I’ll talk to you, I guess I just pick up the phone and call you. Maybe you want me to do that? Alright, here we go.

    Today We talk about what we think are interesting things, and I hope you think are interested as well today. We’re answering questions from my Facebook discussion group and Will is here.

    super glue

    Will: Hey sir, how are you doing Eric?

    Eric: My body hurts actually

    Will: The last time we talked, there was snow on the ground. So it’s been a little while.

    Eric: Today was 95 degrees in New England and I decided today was the day to get a cement core driller and drill a four inch hole through a 10 inch concrete wall.

    Will: W I, you sent me the picture of that and I was like, that’s amazing looking, but at the same point, what exactly are you drilling?

    Eric: We have a cistern that sits on top of a natural spring at the end of our backyard. It’s in the woods, actually. It’s about a hundred something feet from the house and for the first, 60 or so years of this house, life, it drew from that spring, that sister and for all the house water and up until a few years ago, we did as well. We ran it through a UV sterilizer system with a carbon filter and a sediment filter. And these UV systems are amazing and we drilled a regular well, cause we had some extra money one year, but I still use it to water the garden and the yard. And as a backup source for the house, if the well ever goes dry. So then I asked the question that everybody’s probably asking right now. Sure. So most people are on probably city water.

    Eric: Some people are well water. What exactly is cistern? Like what is that? I explained that a little bit. Well, the sister is it generally, it is a, some sort of constructed underground tank near your house and you can either collect rainwater in it or, well, you know, water from a spring or a Brook can flow into it or it can be filled by a truck that delivers water to your, to your house. And then there’s a pump in the bottom of it or at the top of it. And it pumps water into your house for drinking water and showering and washing machine and everything.

    Will: Do they, I mean, do they still build these or is this kind of old technology or an older style?

    Eric: This is old school. They now are above ground. Most of them, they might still be called cisterns. There they’re like oversized rain barrels.

    Eric: They’re they can hold hundreds of gallons of water. They’re very popular in arid areas that will do rainwater collection. Interesting. And mine, the overflow drain hole is very small and has caused some problems with clogs of, there are, you know, like a frog gets stuck in there or something. and the system was not sealed very tight last couple of years. Cause I, I was just busy with a lot of things. So I decided to make an oversize drain hole. So it’ll never clog again.

    Will: Did you rent that tool or did you have that tool?

    Eric: No, that’s a very special too. It’s called a core drill and then you rent an appropriate diameter core bit and it is, it’s like a hole saw if you know what a hole saw is to drill like really big round holes, cut holes, round holes in wood.

    Eric: It’s basically, it’s not like a spade bit are a corkscrew circular, but you’re not removing all the material. You’re only removing the material around the outside diameter of the hole. It’s basically a core drill bit is a big steel pipe with diamond industrial diamond, material along the cutting edge. And it is water jacketed. There’s a system to inject water into the center of the core drill and that keeps it cool and also removes the cement dust as you’re drilling. And I had to hold it horizontally about three feet off the ground and that kind of hurt to do cause you have to hold it level if you can, because once you’re once you’re three or four inches in it’s, if you, if you just move the drill a little it’ll bind. So a lot of core drills have a, it almost looks like a tripod setup or a, a drill press kind of setup attached to it. But because I had to do horizontal and I didn’t have a lot of money to rent the fancy thing, I just got the $50 a day core drill. I got a done, but, I’m pretty sore.

    Will: I would say that. I mean, we’ve used concrete saws before and have the little thing to inject the water. It’s a knock the dust down and kind of clean it up, but it goes back to the story that we talked about many of times on the radio program, which is find out what tools your rental places nearby have, because it’ll really define what kind of projects you can take on and what you can do and renting a tool like that is probably saved you a ton of time and effort in comparison and money in the sense of not having to buy that tool. Cause I’m guessing that tool is not cheap.

    Eric: No. And another way to put a big hall through a cement wall is to drill a bunch of smaller holes with a hammer drill and like a three and three eight spit or something like that. And then you chisel it out, but that would have taken all day. I would have burned out my hammer drill. I would have burnt out a bunch of drill bits and it wouldn’t be a smooth bore hole. I wanted that four inches cause three inch PVC pipe, with a, connect, not at what’s called a connector. What’s that called? Basically the female, the female connector slides right into a four inch diameter hole really nicely and it’ll seal tight. So if you had drilled it with your smaller drill bit and then chiseled out a hole, it would be jagged. You’d have to use hydraulic cement to patch the whole thing. And it was expensive and it was two trips down to the big town, which is like 20 miles from here. But still it was the one thing I was going to do today was the big project of the day. And I got done in by three o’clock. I was done. I took a shower and boom, here we are.

    Will: Awesome. It’s always good when you can rent tools and it makes your day go pretty good.

    Eric: And the cool thing is since it’s a core drill, you’ve, I’ve got this core of old school cement with the old stones in it and some of my side porch. And now it’s a conversation piece because people are being like, what is that?

    Will: You should put some like a polyurethane on the outside of it to make it kind of shiny. You can make it like a paperweight for your desk or something.

    Eric: It’s actually kind of polished. It’s kind of like, you know, remember that rock polisher thing because the metal pipe has been rubbing against it as it drills through the 10 inches of cement. Awesome. Maybe I could send it to you. It could be like a,

    Will: That’s an $80 thing. You’ll mail to me because of the weight. Yeah. I got an idea. Let’s get a chop saw with a diamond blade on it. We can cut it into thin slices and make coasters out of them for, in your house.

    Eric: Right, right. Get right on that. All right. So that was our, as we know are a collectic here. that was something that I sent, well, the pictures and he’s like, what’s this? And I said, we’ll talk about it on the podcast. So, but the other day we asked on the garden fork discussion group, people wanting to know questions and we have a couple of, we thought we’d just answer people’s questions today. What do you think that works for me? Wanda has a quote. Well, someone named will said, how does he keep such awesome hair all the time? Thank you.

    Will: I’m just saying that the product works. It just, it does awesome. You know, it’s, it’s, it’s looking good today, even though it’s humid, it’s looking really good.

    Eric: Wanda, who is, very active, on the discussion group sharing a lot of neat stuff. you’re both outdoors men. Do you do any serious birdwatching? Do you have bird life birding life lists? Do you have feeding stations on your various properties? Awesome question. You want to go first or should I, you go?

    Will: so we live in bear country. So for us birds during the season, I’ll say from basically about mid April to about mid-October is a no go for us. Unfortunately, we just can’t have bird feeders out. Cause every night the bear would come by and destroy them. Or, and we lost a number of bird feeders that way. But in the fall we set up bird feeders. We have bird houses on the property. In fact, actually this last week we were taking care of a baby bird at the resort that fell out of a tree and happy to say the bird survived in his back with his family and everything is good, but we do do a lot of stuff for us though. It’s always in the winter months, we’ll have bird Peters set up. They come in. It’s nice because we have like a book that you can go through and see the different types of birds, things like that. So we’ve done that. The other item we have is on our property. We have a number of deadhead trees and we have probably three or four pileated woodpeckers that have been frequenting the area. And you will know you have an affiliated woodpecker when you see a gigantic pile of salt, as it looks like somebody dumped a garbage can have sought us at the bottom of a tree. And they’re huge chunks. That’s an pileated woodpecker doing his job.

    Eric: Yeah. They, they will tell you which of your trees are dying.

    Will: Absolutely. They, and they’re an awesome creature to watch. I mean, they are huge. They’re probably, I mean, some of them I want to say are between 18 and 24 inches tall and you see the same moving up and down the tree and you can hear it forever when it’s doing its thing and drumming on the tree.

    Eric: They, they look prehistoric to me. Yes, definitely. We, we also live in bear country. So I actually, when we first moved up here, I had some sewage on the tree, you know, I, I strung it across two trees on some cable trying to foil the squirrels and then a bird feeder. And the squirrels of course figured out the bird feeder and everything. So I got a little obsessed with it. So the camera operator bought me this, it’s a tube feeder and it has a ring around the bottom where the birds perch right to, to nibble at the food that comes out the bottom, but also built into the bottom of the tube is a pressure sensitive switch and a motor. And if the squirrel lands on the little round ring, the feeder, the perching ring, the motor turns on and flings the squirrel off.

    Will: I was, I was fearful to wonder what the motor was going to do, but I’ve seen many of feeders that do that.

    Eric: And that was more than a hundred dollars. And I had it maybe three months and then the bear came and destroyed it. So that was the end of my bird feeding. But what I do do is plant a lot of bird friendly bushes. I have winter Berry, I have elderberry. I don’t know if they eat wild, like blue, you know, blackberries and raspberries, but we have a Bush of them. And I’m trying to make more bird friendly, shrubbery, maybe as the word, because I can’t, since I can’t feed them at a feeder, I would like to have some stuff that they can eat as they migrate. And also, I mean, we, we know what some of the birds are when we’re on our woods walk, which I sometimes record for the patrons, by the way. we will try and identify and figure out what birds are making the different sounds. And we’ve, we’ve gotten pretty good at it, but there’s still a sum. And you’re like, what is that? So I’m not an official birder and I don’t have a birding life list. but I do have natural feeding stations now instead of, a big tube of sunflower seed.

    Will: I will say that one thing that we do, and remember when we had the conversation about mushrooms and going mushroom poor gene out there, and you have a book and things like that at the same place where we got the books for that, we actually got a book from our region. That’s a color book that talks about the birds. And when we see something, we’ll sit down with the boys and we’ll be like, Hey Cameron, what is that? And he’s like, Oh, that’s a pinch. And then we talk about where it comes from and does it live here or does it migrate and all that kind of stuff. And it’s, it’s kind of a neat thing. There’s a ton of apps out there that do it. But the old fashioned analog book is kind of one of my favorite ones to do. So we’ve got a bird zone, Wisconsin, and it works really well.

    Eric: Yeah. I think I wish I could know all the birds, but it’s, I’m just kind of busy. I’m just a little busy on the weekends.

    Will: Let me ask you one other question about birds. Do you do anything with hummingbirds? Cause we have our first hummingbird feeder we’ve ever put out and we’ve actually now had success with them coming in and they’re very brave. I mean, you can be standing in there and they’ll just come right in and do their thing with you just standing right next to it.

    Eric: Yeah. I, my neighbors have them. I it’s just, hasn’t been on my list. We have some hummingbirds of buzz around here because we have a, I think they like dailies and things like that. But if you keep them topped up and also you have to watch that the sugar syrup does not get moldy there, they are pretty amazing. They’re they buzz around. They almost, when they buzz around, you think it’s like a giant deer fly coming after you or something?

    Will: Absolutely. There’s many of times where we’ll see people in the backyard and they’re just kind of moving around all kinds of funny. And that’s what it is, is the hummingbirds are coming in, but it sounds like you’re about to get buzzed by a giant wasp or something like that.

    Eric: Nicole asked, who is a patron what’s going on with the cistern. And we just talked about that. So it is the hardest parts are over with the cistern and I did the cement repair and I just bore the hole for the overflow. And then I’m going to build a new wooden roof for it. It won’t be wood, it’ll be, some plastic wood and then pressure treated wood and an aluminum corrugated tin on top of that.

    Will: I was going to say you can’t forget about the second part of your question. Cause I know that Erin and I are wondering also what’s going on with the canoe repair. Cause I know that we had a conversation, I think in the after show about whether or not you were going to use PVC or wood. And I’m curious what happened.

    Eric: Well, I have an older fiberglass canoe that has disintegrated, but it is my favorite canoe and the gunwales, basically the gunwales disintegrated, which were wood and the seats, which are fiberglass kind of disconnected. So I have bought the PVC. it’s basically molding, it’s like a one by two molding. I bought the glue to glue together and I need to make 16 inch long, 16 foot gunwalessuper glue. So I bought a 10 foot piece and an eight foot piece and I’m going to do a, not a butt joint. I think it’s called a scarf joint is where I’m going to make an angle cut across the two pieces glue and clamp them and then start assembling it. So once I’m done with the cistern, which will be this week, I will start working on the canoe and make videos about it.

    Will: Is that kind of like a French cleat where like one angle fits into the other the opposite way. And then they squeezed together to make a solid piece when you’re talking about that. Okay.

    Eric: I think a French cleat also has a tensioner on the inside. Yep. It does. Cause a, I have a neighbor who restores, post and beam buildings and I’ve seen some of his work and I see that cleat a lot with a hand hewn wedge in the center of it, detention it up. It’s pretty amazing.

    Will: Well, a lot of people too are now using the French cleat style for their shops. So you can put the one half of the cleat on the wall and then you have the other piece where all your pieces for your shop, kind of where you can Mount tools to the wall. And you actually don’t put the tension on there because then if you lift it up, you can remove it from the wall, use it and then, you know, clean it right back on when you’re done.

    Eric: Wow. So are we going to see this in your new shop?

    Will: You know, actually I’ve, I’ve been starting to work on it, but it’ll be, I have a big plans in September, October in the shop to do a bunch of work. And actually that’s one of the things is to figure out a way to hang a lot of stuff on the walls because the walls are 14 feet tall. So I feel like I’ve got a lot of room to work with.

    Eric: Alright. Helen asks, what is your favorite garden hose? Is there a trick to preventing kinking

    Will: Garden hoses? I will say this, you get what you pay for with regards to garden hoses. What I did when we did the Apple orchard, one of the farm supply shops had kind of a heavier duty, like it’s called professional hose. and on the end of it, I actually think the ends are more important than the hose itself. you know, you can get the kind that are the cheap kind of molded ones and things like that, where you screw onto, but there are some cast aluminum ends on the end of this hose and it had a little bit thicker of a, a feel to it. The hose was expensive. I mean, it was, I think like 60 or $80 for a 50 foot roll, which is a lot more expensive than the regular green stuff you see at the normal home improvement stores.

    Will: But I’ve had that hose for now. I’d say five or six years, we bought a hose reel to put it on and we move it around the property. I’ve never had a kink. I’ve never had a hole in it that connections have never linked and I’ve only had to replace one gasket. So I think we’ve got probably a hundred to $140 into hose, but buy it once and use it for a long time versus buying the cheap green stuff that you get at the home improvement store. It makes all the difference on your hose. Just my opinion.

    Eric: It really does. There is a brand that is the hoses kind of terracotta, kind of a red terracotta. And I bought it at the local true value because I mean, they carry the green cheapy hoses and this was substantially more. But, and on the ends, if the, if, if the end where you, screw on things, you know, you’re your squeezer, what’s a squeezer thing called the sprayer. If that looks like it’s been kind of a crimped instead of cast in metal, that’s a, that’s a, that means it’s a cheap hose and it will, it will eventually break. And I have a brand whose name escapes me, but it, it was advertised as kink free. It’s actually a dark green and it has this, it looks like a piece of coiled metal in the rubber hose and it does not kink. And I think it’s because it has this, it looks like a slinky. That’s been kind of expanded throughout the holes. And I don’t, I don’t have the brand. It’s just, it’s outside now, but you really get what you pay for.

    Will: It’s a fortified, rubber hose is what it is. There’s a it’s impregnated into the hose itself. And that’s, that’s exactly what the, the hose that I have has in it is if you cut it, which we’ve had to do at one point, cause I was making a connection for something and the end of it, there’s a w there’s wire meshed into the hose as a, as they make it in it, it also comes down to how you store it too. If you just coil it up on the ground and it’s sitting on the ground and you don’t actually coil it up in a way that it’s nice and smooth and laying on itself that will lead to spots as a hose where it’ll kink myself. I went the extra step and I actually bought one of those little hose carts. I don’t know if you ever seen him at the home improvement store.

    Eric: Yeah, that was my next thing. You just stole my thunder.

    Will: Oh yeah. You got to get a hose cart because if you store it on the hose card, I got a, the main hose is on there. But then on there, there’s a little basket where you put all your note nozzles and you can put a little zip tie with a whole bunch of the gaskets on it and kind of like everything you’d need to make the hose work. And then they actually make this little, I don’t know what you want to call it. It’s like a light almost translucent hose. That’s super tightly wound. And it’s very small in diameter, but it’s like a big slinky. And I use that to like, if I need to relay the hose out and then I need to get into somewhere and work on something, you can do that. And that hose will. And I can’t either, it doesn’t have the same volume as a regular garden hose, but if you’re watering plants or just filling up something, it works really good for that.

    Eric: And don’t buy the cheap garden cart, garden hose, cart realer. If you buy the plastic one that it’s going to break. Yup. Yup. Northern tool, I think has a pretty good one. If Northern tool, they have a catalog and a, and a website

    Will: That’s actually exactly where I got the garden cart from. I didn’t get the hose there. The hose came from a regional place here called fleet farm, which is a farm supply store, but you get what you paid for on it. And I would suggest just biting the bullet if you’re serious about running water and a garden hose somewhere and, and buy nice hose by a nice way to start and then buy some nice ends. Don’t buy the plastic, spray nozzles, you know, the $25, brass ones are some of the cast ones and things like that last 10 times longer than the cheap plastic ones you get for five bucks.

    Eric: Yes.

    Will: Coming from a firefighter. I know hoses. I’m just saying I wasn’t a retired firefighter. I know how to, how to handle and deal with the hose and having nice stuff is always important.

    Eric: Wanda asked another one, favorite adhesives for what and why? And Aaron, the impatient gardener. Second that saying, that was a great question. What’s your favorite one? Eric? I, I really like gorilla glue. Yep. But you have to use it properly.

    Will: I think one of the big mistakes that people have with adhesives is there’s actually very few brands out there that are poor. The challenge I think that people run into is they use the wrong adhesive on the wrong material. Like they make it, he uses specifically for plastic or concrete or whatever. And so it’s not a one, one fits all type thing like, Oh, this brand is the best one out there for this. Well, it all depends on what you’re gluing together. Sometimes Loctite is better. Sometimes gorilla glue is better. Sometimes the cheap stuff is better. It all depends on why you’re using it for

    Eric: Elmers glue is amazing for wood. If that’s all you have, you know,

    Will: You know, for me, the one thing that’s really surprising and I didn’t realize it until a couple of years ago, but I always, always, you know, let’s nail things together. Let’s put screws and things together, and I never realized the importance of glue when it comes to dealing with woodworking. I was always just, you know, I just screw it together. It’ll last forever or whatever it is. And now that I’ve kind of learned about how glue works with, with wood. I’ve realized that you could glue something together and it’ll hold way better than nails or screws.

    Eric: The other thing with glues is that the, surfaces that you’re going to glue together have to be prepped and they have to be compatible. And a lot of times people are trying to glue things that just the glue isn’t going to hold them together.

    Will: I would say on some of them too. you ever see like the super glues or the, you know, the really super sticky stuff. If you get it on your fingers, you can put your fingers together. Like in a second type deal. I like to buy those in the multi-packs where they have like seven or eight little tubes in it versus one big tube, because I never used enough of it to burn up the whole tube before either the clock at the end of it gets clogged or whatever. And no matter how much I try to store it in a good place, it always seems like I get one or two uses out of it. And then it dries. So buying the little ones, you could have a whole bunch of them in a plastic bag and take it out, use it a couple of times. And if it dries out, you’re only losing a little versus if you buy the big tube, you definitely run into situation where you’ll throw it out. And it’s kind of wasteful

    Eric: Harbor freight. and I would be willing to bet dollar stores also sell it. But Harbor freight has like a three pack of those tiny little tubes. It looks like little tubes of toothpaste. Like they’re like one and a half inches long each one. And it’s like two or three bucks. So I, I buy a couple of those cause invariably one of my friends shows up with some project and wants you guys super glue. I’m like here, go away to the point of, to digress here for a moment, one of my friends came over and one of his crowns popped out of his mouth and he had read online that you can superglue the crown back in. And so he did that and that’s a stupid thing to do.

    Will: That’s real DIY right there. Do it to yourself.

    Eric: He had to go to the, he had the dentist had to do extra work to redo that crown. So yeah, just, just go back to the dentist,

    Will: I will say, and this is an odd one, but, superglue actually, if you have, if you’re ever out hiking in the woods and you get a very serious cut, of course, you know, apply direct pressure and make sure that a wound is clean, but in a pinch superglue actually works really well to seal up a injury. before you go to the hospital, if you’re really bleeding badly on a cut.

    Eric: Yes. You can buy a version of super glue. I mean, it’s, it’s called sodium Cilla fuck. And it’s got some kind of big word. Yep. The generic chemical name for super glue, but they have a wound repair. It’s a medical grade version of super glue that they sell at the drug store. And it works really well. It’s great for Labradors because they run through the woods and like a tree limb is sticking out or something and it, it, it gives, they get a cut and you’re like, okay, well it’s Sunday afternoon. The vet’s closed. You can, you can clean it. You know, you clean it with beta Dyne and then you can glue it shut. And I didn’t go to the vet and they could go take a look at it afterward.

    Will: Well, and actually to go even further with that is like on my quad or on the UTV. When we’re out in the woods, driving around, you know, you have a little medical kit throw on a couple of things like that, and they’re actually make all the difference. Normally when you buy a med kit, it doesn’t come with, but spending little bit of money to have it in there. It lasts forever. As long as it’s closed and you keep it in a glove box or something like that, where it doesn’t get dirty, it can save you in a pinch.

    Eric: My other favorite glue is, it’s called JB weld and it is a, epoxy, it’s a two part epoxy, but I’ve seen people glue back together, exhaust pipes with that thing.

    Will: My dad actually used it two weeks ago to fix his boat. So he’s got a really old Illuma craft boat and there was a crack seam on it and he just bought some JB weld and I’m like, that’s not going to work. That’s not going to hold the water on. And he’s polished it down and put it on there and let it sit for 24 hours. And he was out on the water and it didn’t leak and it’s been two weeks now. So I was pretty surprised.

    Eric: Yeah. That is a good use for a good product. And I think you can buy JB weld at Harbor freight too, or, or a clone of it, you know?

    Will: Yeah. Any, any improvements or, I mean, there are certain APOC CS and things like that, but it’s all about knowing what you’re gluing together. You can’t use plastic glue on concrete and you can’t use, you know, poly or poly glue on wood and stuff like that. You just have to kind of match it up. According to what’s on the label,

    Eric: A really good line of construction adhesives is called PL and they have them for mortar. They have them for fixing your roof. They have it for crack repair in cement. there’s one called PL premi which is waterproof, which people use to build plywood, boats, big hint there. so that may be in our future,

    Will: Actually the bringing up PL brand, that’s the same. A remember when we did the epoxy floor and the basement on the house at the homestead. Yeah. That’s actually the brand of product that we used to fill in the cracks before we Polly a proxy, the floor and still to this day, four years later, it still has not leaked. It’s holding well. And none of the epoxy came up and that stuff worked great with it.

    Eric: It’s it’s cause it flexes, it’s a mortar repair material that flexes and that’s important.

    Speaker 3:
    Yep.

    Eric: I imagine by now you’ve heard me talk about the garden fork patrons and the pre show and the after show. And I thought I’d give you like 30 seconds of what that’s all about. Basically, there are people that listen to the show that contribute to the continued production of the show on a monthly basis, kind of like a, you know, like NPR or PBS, where you sign on for X number of dollars a month. Like I’m a member of PBS and it’s $6 a month. And for that, I get access to the older episodes of like Nova and their science and history shows and that kind of thing with garden fork, if you sign on for $5 a month or more, if you have more, that would be a quite nice. but if you don’t do not do that okay. But for that, I send out just kind of the mind of Eric kind of emails that also can show up on the app if you get the Patrion out and also the pre show and after show, when I record a show with other people, cause invariably, Aaron and I, or will, or Rick and I are talking about something else after the show, because we forgot to talk about it in the show and that’s sometimes fun.

    Eric: it’s really fun to listen to Rick, tell me what I’m doing wrong with the show, but in a good way, because you need feedback like that, but you could also provide that feedback, becoming a patron. So that information is in the show notes of today’s episode. You can also go to patrion.com/garden fork for more information about that. Alright. So think about that. We’ll go back to the show, see it

    Speaker 3:
    [inaudible].

    Eric: So we have a question from one of our new, garden fork patrons, Johnny from, granola, shotgun, the granola shotgun website. Who’s your, who’s going to be on the show soon, as soon as like, as soon as I get out of the cistern, I have my act together again. I promise everyone. and he says, for those of us who don’t live in a farm or a suburban home with a large lot, for people with high water tables, that would be me. Is there a good alternative for an urban root cellar, preferably passive and non-mechanical if possible, urban root cellar.

    Will: I’ve heard of people taking cinderblocks and making, I hate to say an outhouse looking type, but basically making a, a box out of cinder blocks and then using that, that, that dense material of the concrete to make a cooler area, the other way that people used to do at way back in the day, if you can look back in history, back when they used to cut ice out of Lake superior and then bring it down. And that’s what you use to, you know, refrigerate back in the day is build a building and then fill the walls with sawdust. And that material actually would help keep the temperature under control during the summertime. So either cinder blocks to make a space or, build a building and I hate to say put sawdust in it, but that’s the way they used to do it. And then they’d bring these big blocks of ice in, and that’s how they’d store it for your refrigerator during the summertime in a lot of rural areas. So that same technique would work to build a root cellar. I just don’t know if it would get to the same, temperatures as you would. Normally

    Eric: I would think any kind of structure with an exposed floor would be cooler and have a better chance of having a good moisture. I think the moisture thing needs to be, is it 50%? Someone’s yelling back at the podcast right now. My other thought was if you have access to a basement, I mean, if in an apartment building, a lot of times, there’s a storage, communal storage in the basement of the building and opposite of wherever the furnace is, you could build out of cement block again, you could cordon off an area or you could build it with, homicide and then maybe polystyrene. That’s not most politically correct stuff, but some sort of insulation material. And you can, you can make a cooler area is because my thinking is it’s not exposed to the outside air and it’s in the basement. I think that would be cooler as well.

    Will: I will say this one thing that I do know for sure is inside of our pole barn, a couple of days ago, it was 107 degrees in our pole barn. I know this just because we have the thermometer in there to manage temperature for the solar system, the batteries. Yeah. And I built a storage building or a storage space in the corner of that, which has a concrete floor and the walls are insulated just to try to keep it a little bit cooler so we can start painting those types of things. Cause at 107 degrees, your chemicals and all that kind of stuff, it just, it wrecks them. So I try and figure out a way to make longevity. So it’s kind of the same theory, which is we made a space inside of there and I bet you with 107 degrees outside, I think it was in the mid seventies, inside the space on the inside. So if you had a garage, you could easily make a, a space inside the garage. It has kind of a clothes closet. And that concrete on the floor definitely stays cooler. Well, if you can keep the air and the, the light from hitting that space, you can definitely least hold a cooler temperature.

    Eric: Very intriguing question, John, he’s talking back to the podcast right now. He’s a very interesting person. Granola. Shotgun is his website there. Oh, penny has a question. Fireworks. Are there names for the different shapes or kinds?

    Will: Interestingly enough, a lot of people ask about how they make those shapes and how that all works. When a firework is made. One thing that people don’t realize when you see a, let’s say a shell go up in the air and you see this, it, you see it in one dimension, but in all reality, it’s three dimensional. So when that firework explodes and you’re looking at it, it looks like a flat circle on the sky, right? But in all reality, it’s a sphere because if you look at it from all different angles or if you’re in a drone or something like that, you can see that it’s actually a sphere. Well, the way they build the fireworks that make the shapes is the firework itself. The shell is a sphere and inside the sphere, they make a three dimensional shape. So if it’s a star or a ring, the ring is actually made inside of the shell.

    Will: And then as that shell explodes, physics says that basically everything will continue to expand at the same rate, as long as you know, all things are equal. So in that scenario, when the explodes in the middle, that shape, that’s a circle in a very, very small or the square or whatever it is inside of the firework. When it explodes, they all travel at about the same speed, which means it holds the shape and it just basically expands into the shape. So when you see the heart or you see the cube or you see the rings, those are actually in the shell that way, when they start really very small and when it explodes, they all expand out to the right size.

    Eric: If that makes sense. Yeah, that is, it is an amazing, art and craft to do that.

    Will: I actually shot a show a couple of days ago. I’m back on doing 4th of July show. So I did a show in Western Wisconsin for everybody on is nice.

    Eric: Oh, great. We’ve had, in Brooklyn there, basically when I first moved to back after college in Brooklyn, the 4th of July was an insane time because there were, illegal fireworks brought in. And, it was pretty crazy the week of July 4th. And then the city straightened up, basically a lot of, things were fixed and that has been in decline. But during the pandemic, the police are pretty busy dealing with sick people and things like that. So they haven’t been great about policing, fireworks being brought into the city. And so basically sold out of a trunk, you know, on the Avenue. So it’s been, in a way interesting and spectacular, but also a little dangerous cause some of the stuff that these guys are blown off is clearly commercial grade and I’m like, someone’s gonna lose a hand.

    Will: I will say one of the cool things that I did see this year, based on kind of what’s going on out there. there was a park that was going to cancel their fireworks and they worked out a deal with one of the, I dunno, it was a big box store that was nearby, but they basically had everybody in the parking lot pull into the parking lot in their cars. Like it was a drive in movie theater and everybody was pointed the same direction. And then they shot the show. So everybody watched the show from inside their cars and everything else and, and were able to have family time and a bunch of people sitting in the back of beds and pickup trucks and that kind of stuff. They shot the show. And then at the end, everybody filed out of the parking lot and drove away and they kind of made it a big tailgating event versus kind of the thing in the park. And it was kind of a cool way to still do the 4th of July and, and, you know, be safe about it.

    Eric: Yeah. Have fun and, and no one got sick. Yay. So is there, is that it for our questions? Could that be, are we that, did we talk that much?

    Will: I was going to ask you actually, one thing I had a question for you, I saw your video about a sugar snap peas and planting them. You made a comment in your video about planting them during the summer to have them in the fall. Yes. Like where does that fall into the equation? Cause like my summer is about a month and a half year as you know, we’re going to be in winter soon here in Wisconsin. So like how does a person know when to plant their false stuff, to be able to still take advantage of that? How do you figure that out?

    Eric: We have to wait for the next video. Ooh, no count back about 75 days from your frost date. Okay. That was great

    Will: Video by the way. A lot of fun,

    Eric: You know, it’s kind of funny cause that was so UN not spur of the moment, but I had been saying, you know, I want to do another sugar snap video because it’s of what I’ve done this year. And I didn’t really wing it, but I just talked about based on my experience, what inspired it is. I’m working again with Troy, our big sponsor this year and Aaron and I did some Instagram live streams on Troy belts. Instagram channel. It’s, it’s a little, it’s a little nerve wracking. When you take over a big corporations, Instagram that gives you the password to their Instagram account.

    Eric: And they’re like, yeah, log on and go live on our Instagram account. And you’re like, okay, yikes. But they said, what’s what Troy belts go. mission this summer is to provide people with garden and yard information because everyone, so many people are staying home right now and they want to work in their yards and they’re dealing with a lot of problems. So Erin and I also working with, a couple other people who I’m blanking on their names, I’m sorry, but we all took over the, the Troy belts, Instagram thing. And my thing was to talk about, DIY gardening was one of them and also just garden passes, a big theme and raised beds. And I just, I talked for an hour about raised bed gardening and I was like, why don’t I just do this for the garden for YouTube videos? And so that was one of them talking about the sugar snap peas where there’s, I’ll let you behind the, behind the curtain here a little bit.

    Eric: I’m on YouTube. There’s a lot of pressure to please the algorithm because then you get more views and YouTube will suggest your video just because you subscribed to garden. Fork does not mean you’re going to be notified when I have a new video out, you actually have to hit the notification bell and no one tells you that. But so there’s this, there’s this kind of angst behind your videos going, Oh, I have to make the algorithm happy. I have to have a catchy phrase. I have to have a catchy title and a cool thumbnail. And there’s times I just want to make a video and share stuff. And I throw that out the window. And that was, what I did with the sugar snap piece. Cause I was like, I just want to talk about my piece. And so that’s what we did.

    Will: It was a great video. I mean it covered all the bases. It looks like you guys had some fun. I mean, I love the thumbnail, the thumbnail for it was awesome. A little bit different than you normally do. And I think it was great.

    Eric: I’m trying to make better thumbnails because, the title on mobile, the title isn’t easily read and I’m trying to simplify the titles. Aaron from new patient gardener is inspiring me to make better thumbnail. She’s really good at it. And she actually made me a thumbnail when we did a collaboration video for Troy about she, the thumbnails and they were really good. So

    Will: I will say that video that you guys did together was awesome. Just how you went back and forth and answered the questions and everything like that. That was pretty cool.

    Eric: It was really easy for me to make because I just had to ask the questions. Aaron’s yelling back. I did the editing though. So, I get credit. I put the whoosh sound in there. The, when you jumped to the next, I was like, Eric’s got sound effects. Oh, neat. I dunno. I just add it. There’s there are times where that is appropriate and times where it’s not. And I thought to do a transition sometimes and I use it to kind of signal that we’re going somewhere completely different. So that’s and I saw a whoosh whoosh sound. Is that it

    Will: There’s always room in life for a whoosh sound.

    Eric: Yeah. You like them? Oh, here we go. Are you going to, make some video soon? Okay.

    Will: I actually hopefully will be making, I did something kind of smart this week. I’ll, I’ll give everybody a little, trip behind the curtain here. So you might know or might not know that we own a resort in Wisconsin. And actually now that we’ve completed our expansion, we own the largest resort in Sawyer County. And one, one of the largest ones in the Northern part of the state, which is a handful of all of its own. And for the 4th of July, which was a couple of days ago, we, hired a photographer to do video and photos of a day in the life of the resort. And we’re going to use it for video purposes and stuff like that. But it was kind of neat to have somebody around where we’re just doing our normal thing and they’re kind of capturing what’s going on. And we’ve looked at kind of some of the first edits of the photos and things like that.

    Will: And it’s, it’s really neat to show our guests what they’re doing, what the behind the scenes are, you know, what some of the facilities look like and stuff like that because it’s, it’s impossible for me to make photos and videos. I looked at my phone and like the last photo that I took was probably about two weeks ago on my phone and it’s right there in my pocket. You know, it just, everything is so busy and everything that’s going on. And you know, our staff has grown. I mean, last year we had two people. Now we have, I think, 13 on staff and you know, all these different things are happening. and the support of the community has been awesome, but it’s almost impossible to even get your phone out, to take a video or a photo of stuff. So we hired somebody for the 4th of July and if it turns out, well, we might end up doing it again when we do some commercials for the property, which hopefully will lead to me getting back into doing videos again, because there’s a lot of times where even if I did the reality show videos of quick snippets of the day and stuff like that, the amount of things that go on in the property and behind the scenes are pretty interesting to know about.

    Will: I should probably start documenting them.

    Eric: Cool. Yeah, you’ve been a, you’ve been on a tear. So, maybe in the winter, when things calm down a little,

    Will: We, I will say this. I mean, we’ve had a group of individuals even through all this stuff that’s going on in the pandemic and all the other things that have been going on, you know, the property itself, we were able to successfully finish the largest construction project I’ve ever done. We were able to finally open after all of the situations that were going on, you know, with regards to everything. And then we’ve been able to actually safely produce a product for folks to come and visit and spend time at and feel comfortable to come to. So, I mean, we’ve made all the changes and all the compliances to everything that you’d need to do to have a functioning property. And, you know, the, the nice thing is, is people have been coming and enjoying themselves and getting a chance to get away from everything else is going on. So it’s doing exactly what we hope it will do.

    Eric: Yay. All right. We’ve been talking for a while. So I think people have probably got to their destination or they’re exercising right now in their basement. Maybe.

    Will: Yeah, no, they’re re they’re really fit now after this one

    Eric: Planning their urban root cellar, you know, so sadly there are no new iTunes reviews.

    Eric: Hello, everyone out there it’s really kind of important. I’ll leave you on this weekend. Cause that sounds alright. But if you have any comments, it’s radio@gardenfork.tv will, and I are going to stick around for a minute for the after show for the garden fork, patrons more about becoming a supporter of garden fork. I will be in the show notes here, but it’s, it’s really kind of great to hear from people. It’s been a very crazy time and it has affected me. Let’s just say adversely. so it’s great to hear from people and it’s radio@gardenfork.tv. Thank you, sir. Awesome. Thank you for having me. It’s been an awesome talk garden fork. Radio is executive producer is Jimmy Gootz. You can find more information about Jimmy and the custom hollow books he makes@hollowbooks.com. Our theme music is used under license from unique tracks.com. Other music used in the show is used under license from audio blocks.com.

  • Garden Problems: Deer, Bears, Weeds, Caterpillars GF-Video

    Garden Problems never end in the vegetable garden. So I made two videos with Erin from The Impatient Gardener about how to deal with Deer in the garden, and much more. Like bears…

    These videos are sponsored by Troy-Bilt, a long time supporter of me. Erin and I are working with them for #FenceTalks, solving people’s garden issues.

    Deer, Weeds, and Moss In Your Yard and what to do:

    Beer, Weeds, Caterpillars in Your Yard

    What do to about Deer in your garden?

    Oh, if there were only a true fix for this plague of many gardens, including mine. All we can aim to do is discourage deer from hanging out in our yards. Erin from her blog post

    As Erin says in the video, plant deer resistant plants and use deer repellant sprays on your fav plants. The sprays only smell for a short while. If you want to go big, you can put in a high fence, or two shorter fences right next to each other.

    Moss growing in your grass and yard? I have watched over the years moss take over part of my yard. Its kinda nice and soft, but it tears up easily. The best way to get grass back there is to aerate the soil and cut back shady branches. Moss likes shade, grass does not.

    Invasive weeds? We are getting creeped on by Garlic Mustard. I have seen it slowly take over the town. About the only way to deal with it is to remove it. Thankfully, it pull out easily.

    There are tougher invasives coming in to our area. Japanese Honeysuckle is a vine that takes over. One of the few ways to deal with it is glycophosphates like RoundUp.

    Bears in my compost. Yes, the bears have torn open my pallet compost bin. Not fun. Then my Labradors  have gone in and start eating the half composted food scraps. Even more fun.

    Erin tells me that I need to avoid putting any meat or fats in the bin. I pretty much to that, but I’m wondering if the eggshells attract the bears? Another tip Erin gave me was to cover the new food waste with leaves.

    I’m always learning here.

    Holes in you Kale? Every year the precious kale gets its leaves eaten. Erin tell us its the cabbage looper doing the damage. Easy enough to deal with, cover the plants with row fabric to keep the cabbage moth from laying eggs. Done.

    What are your garden problems? Let me know, thx! Eric.

     

     

     

  • Planting Vegetables Outside The Vegetable Garden

    Today I’m talking with Rick about planting vegetables outside the raised bed garden. We then move on to talking about Johnny’s website, Granola Shotgun. Rick has an idea for solar array attached to a trailer that you can move round the yard to the ideal spot as the sun moves.

    Eric: Hey welcome. This is GardenFork Radio. My name is Eric. Thanks for tuning in or dialing in or downloading or wherever you’re listening to this. I have a YouTube channel and this podcast it’s kind of an eclectic, hot mess of whatever is interesting to me. And what I think might be interesting for you. And today, my friend, Rick is here. We’re going to talk about vegetable gardening outside the boundaries of your vegetable garden, right, sir.

    Rick: I hope so. Good morning, Eric. How are you? My friend,

    Eric: I have no complaints. That is my, that’s my answer for most people these days.

    A close up of a garden

    Rick: It, it is, it’s a beautiful day out there. And, as soon as we finish, I’m I’ve actually been taking a series of courses, while all this stuff is going on, by the way we figured it out the other day, we could survive without leaving the house pretty much. we will be down to our last can of Vienna sausage in about seven months. I mean, we, we have enough food stored and, the freezers and the, and, canned stuff around here to last for quite a good while. but I’m looking to add to that with the, the produce of the garden this year.

    Links mentioned in the show:

    Eric’s favorite tools: https://amzn.to/2XxApUp

    Get My GardenFork Email Newsletter: https://gardenfork.tv/sign-up-for-our-email-newsletter/

    Support GardenFork, become a monthly supporter on Patreon: http://patreon.com/gardenfork

    GF Sweaters and T Shirts https://teespring.com/stores/gardenfork-2

    Eric: Yeah. The gardening season, our spring has been kind of slow and cold and then it kind of just went boom. And since we have been, working remotely here from the house, I’ve I would have thought I got a lot more done in the yard, but, you know, your day to day work that pays the bills still has to get done. So it’s, and at the end of the day, you’re kind of wiped out.

    Rick: Oh yeah. Yeah. And, you know, gardening is, it can be fun. It can be relaxing, but it can also be hard work. you know, the, ability to, to do this. And I’ve always said, you know, if you know, hell goes in a hand basket, you know, I’m not really gardening, for subsistence right now, but the point is I’m if, things go terribly South, I’m gardening to learn how to garden, if I needed to for some, for subsistence.

    Eric: All right. Well, my gardening has been, Hey, let’s try this and see what happens. And that a lot of that happened this spring. And I wanted to share that with you all. And, I thought Rick could, share as well. Okay. So I have a raised bed, vegetable garden. there are six beds. Two of them are garlic and one of them is a flowers, only bed, cutting flowers. My neighbor is a big Dahlia, enthusiastic caress who has an dahlias, multiply the, they look like sweet potato tubers, all kind of gang together to a STEM. And you can separate them, Aaron from the patient. Gardener’s probably talking back at the podcast right now, cause I’m mashing this up, but she is a big Dahlia expert person. Yeah. But you can tease them apart in that you let them dry, not quite super dry, but you have to keep them over the winter in your basement.

    Eric: And Aaron has many videos on that and blog posts@theimpatientgardener.com, but you can, how, how do you, how do you tease a daddy or do you say your mother wears army boots stop? You can, well, imagine a cluster of sweet potatoes with their roots kind of stuck together, like a big ball of messed up string and you can kind of gently pull them apart. And you’ve essentially created two Dahlia plants from one or three or four Dahlia plants from a really big plant. So my neighbor, my friend, gave us some dahlias and we love them. So this year he gave us more. And so I, one raised bed is dedicated to Dahlia growing cause they’re beautiful flowers. And then I have tomatoes, sweet potatoes, peas, lettuces, things like that. But I’ve been wanting to, first of all, we had some leftover plants. I had some leftover tomato plants.

    Eric: I w didn’t have anywhere to plant my sunflower seeds. And I had some extra kale seedlings. And I’m thinking, what if I plant it in that kind of brushy area between the tree line of the woods and the grass of the yard, you know, it’s always kind of scrubby and it’s full of, Oh yeah, yeah. It’s got golden rod. It’s got Virginia creeper. It’s got, briars, you know, like wild blackberries that take over the world. Right. So I had some, carpet runners. Is that what it’s called? Like a floor mat kind of thing. When Charlie pop had her stroke, she couldn’t walk very well on the floor, the wood floors. And so Oh, okay. Yeah. So we just ran these carpet runners everywhere, which I’m not trying to make. I was trying to make the connection to garden. Lost me for a second, but go ahead.

    Eric: That’s okay. You just listen, sir. You know, so I took the carpet runners that I had rolled them up and I had him in the garage and I’m like, you know, I’m trying to declutter and I’m like, I gotta get rid of these things, but they’re full of yellow Labrador hair and I didn’t quite know what to do with them, but then I realized, Oh, I could knock back this weedy shrubby grubby area in the early spring and then plant sunflowers here or something else here. So there’s several strategic areas where the sun hits the yard even better than it hits the garden. Actually the vegetable garden, I put down those, those rubbery. And then the other day I lifted them up and everything was dead. It was perfect.

    Rick: Okay. So yeah, you were just a, we call it solarizing you have solarizing the soil so that you sterilize what it was, whatever it was underneath there, kind of keep the seeds from sprouting too much kill what was there. Yeah, it makes sense.

    Eric: So then I put in some sunflowers and I moved around some other plants or tomatoes are going to go and now I got some extra tomatoes and it was just kind of a fun idea. And then, by the porch where we come in and out of the house, there’s an area that’s, it gets kind of muddy sometimes and the dogs make a mess of it. And it’s a high traffic area and the camera operator got some of these very large they’re called cow pots. They are made out of manure, dried manure, and extending that idea of taking the vegetable garden out of the vegetable garden. We’re planning some cherry tomatoes right next to the door in these pots. And so I just thought this was all a brilliant idea to share with everyone.

    Rick: Yeah, well that is a brilliant idea. You know, you can buy a, an English garden mix at the blue or the orange store, a big package of it and spread, you know, the whole thing across your, that space. And you, you know, you’d get all kinds of black eyed, Susans and tick seed and, different kinds of sunflowers. And even some, some blue things that I don’t even know what they are. they, they look great if, you know, if, if you can kind of keep them in one place. I tried it once in our front yard and they just, it grew too tall for the house and the neighborhood and whatnot. And, my neighbors actually thought for a while, it was just keeping weeds, but, until they bloomed out and then they, they were spectacular, just, you know, yellow and black. And it was just wonderful everywhere

    Eric: is that one of those like straw mats that you buy, it’s all rolled up and you just unroll the straw mat and you water it and

    Rick: you can do that. Or you can just buy a package of what they call English garden mix.

    Eric: Oh, like a seed mix in a, in a, in a seed packet. Exactly. Oh, I was thinking something different.

    Rick: Oh, well, that’s how I thought I have seen the rollout things. They’re pretty, they, I think they work well, but I think they’re pretty expensive. But, and, and the nice thing is all this stuff, it’s not nice money now because I’m having to grub it out, but it, it regenerates cause it’s, it’s throwing seeds and it’s also a, it’s attracting birds to your, to your garden because they’re coming for the seeds and eating them and that kind of thing. But it will regenerate itself over time.

    Eric: I, the thing I’ve run into is the, Virginia creeper and the wild blackberries, and some other of those plants send out runners. The vigil creeper just has these underground vines. And so where I lifted up the, the rubber mat, when I went in, when I die, I wanted to dig a trench for the sunflower seeds. I ran into all these, rhizome root systems. And then I put in, I laid down cardboard and then wood chips. And then I D and I cut a slot in the cardboard to be my trench. And I, I trenched through that for the soil. And I’m almost like a day later, the vineyard, Virginia creeper has creeped around the cardboard and it’s trying to push out my sunflower seeds.

    Rick: Yeah. That’s my nickname by the way, Virginia creeper. but yeah, that stuff is, is awfully invasive. It’s, it’s kind of frightening. Sometimes you can hear it grow. It’s like kudzu, you’re afraid to sleep outdoors at night because a boy, the kudzu gets you around here.

    Eric: But I thought that was just a, for me, it was an aha moment to take an area that, you know, normally I just whack it back with the, with my brush cutter once a year after, usually after the, I really like golden rod, I think it’s really pretty in the fall and I’ll just, and I’ll cut it back down, but then I thought, well, let’s, let’s kinda mix it up instead of having the vegetable garden in its proper place. Let’s just put it somewhere where there’s some sun shining.

    Rick: Well, yeah, I think sun’s awfully important. You know, she, who must be obeyed, is working a little plot, mostly going to be flowers. And, she, you know, she says, Oh, you know, we need to go out the Roundup. And I said, no, no, no, no, we’re not doing Roundup anymore. and you can order online horticultural vinegar. And I think your household vinegar is about 7% acidity. And a horticultural vinegar is 30%, 25 to 30% acidity, and you can put it in the sprayer and it’s, it, it works okay with most sprayers, doesn’t need up the, the O rings and that kind of thing. And it works stupendously, and it’s, it’s not toxic to humans and it burns the lease back. And it, kept us from having to use a Roundup, which were really other than, fighting back the, what is it called? Leaves of three leave at Bay? poison Ivy, poison Ivy, that’s it, other than fighting back to poison Ivy, we, we don’t use Roundup at all.

    Eric: Yeah. Oh, it’s, it’s a thing to avoid the poison. There is actually poison, Ivy popped up in my yard the other day and I was like, Oh, and it’s just, it’s just a tiny little thing. And if you ignore it, that’s a bad thing.

    Rick: Yeah. Yeah. And I turn out to be one of those people that are highly reactive. I’ve got a neighbor who has it all over his yard and he gardens like crazy and it doesn’t bother him at all. He can pick a hole with bare handed and, he doesn’t get any kind of reaction at all.

    Eric: Wow. He’s better than most of us then.

    Rick: Yeah, no kidding. But, I’m, I’m highly reactive. So I, I do my best to keep it away.

    Eric: Good to know. I, I, I won’t ever bring you a pot of poison,

    Rick: but I’m really only, yeah. I’m only growing this year, two things, tomatoes and okra, and that that’s going to be pretty much it for us. I have, we’ve talked in the past. I just about had it squash bugs and, and bind bores. And, they, they, I have surrendered. I, I will not do those anymore. Yeah. The last time I, I planted some brackets, which are the, you know, broccoli cabbage, you know, stuff like that. I, I put it out and I put out 10 plants in, no, I swear, five minutes later, this white cabbage butterfly comes flying over me out of nowhere. You know, it was just an endless battle. So, okra grows here like you wouldn’t believe. And we have deed a lot ochre anyway, so that’s good. And then of course, tomatoes, wouldn’t be summer without tomatoes.

    Eric: Yeah. I am a big fan of simple. So I’m excited about this idea of the, I like the suite 100 cherry tomato and the idea that literally being right outside the kitchen door. I mean, we just eat them out of the garden anyway, but to have even more of them nearby, it’d be a lot of fun.

    Rick: Right. You know, I’ll, what’s it called blanching? yup. Our tomatoes, when we start to get a lot of them, I’ll blanch them. And then, but just dropping them, boiling water, the skin splits, you pick them out with the spoon and, pull the skin off and then I’ll just drop them in the blender. And, we, we’ll do, freezer bags full of, you know, put tomato, well, not tomato paste really, but whatever it is, have you made a Pope pulp? Yeah. Tomato pulp, and then you can make all kinds of wonderful dishes out of it. of course, if you don’t care much for okra, because you think it’s slimy, then you need to add an acid. and tomato makes a wonderful acid. So a can of crushed tomatoes with your in Europe, sliced okra and boil it a little bit at a big tablespoon of Worcester sauce. And you’ve got a delicious side in almost no time at all.

    Eric: Yup. Now I want okra and I’m in, I’m in new England. it probably grows there. they list it in the fed co seed catalog, which is a seed catalog from Maine. So there must be a short season. Okra

    Rick: must be. Yeah. ochre down here. Keep going damn near all year.

    Eric: Huh? No, that would not, it would not make it here. I mean, I imagine dahlias would work down there almost year round as well.

    Rick: I bet. So I bet. So, I’ll have she, who must be obeyed is in charge of all the, the flower needs of, yes. So we have lilies, we have peonies, we have lots of Laila. She loves Lai lik, which is wonderful, except it’s such a short season for it, a blooming season. Yep. But, you know, still, that’s, you know, she, they give her joy and, my job is to ensure that she gets her joy.

    Eric: Of course it is. The other thing that I’ve realized is to try much like you is to simplify the gardening, because right now I have, you know, I can, I can hop out at lunch and noodle around a little bit and come back. And I’m like, well, when, when the real world goes back in the going, I, we won’t be working out of the house and I want to make it productive yet simple. So it’s not a distraction to me. So it’s like, Oh, I, you know, I like a lot of people I can get overwhelmed when I have too much to do. And I’m like, you know, let’s just, I want to focus on the simple and boom done you’re out, you know?

    Rick: Right, right. And, you know, chasing, chasing vine bores and that kind of stuff. [inaudible] my days for doing that kind of thing are over. And, the squash bugs, they, they, they taught me when I go outside now. cause you know, they just want me to plant something so they can then humiliate me again.

    Eric: I did see one of those moths that is the adult of the tobacco horn worm the other day.

    Rick: Oh really?

    Eric: It looks like a little hummingbird.

    Rick: Yeah. They’re huge actually for a moth.

    Eric: Yeah. And they’re quite active during the day, which I think is a little unusual from auth, but I could be wrong.

    Eric: I imagine by now you’ve heard me talk about the garden fork patrons and the pre show and the after show. And I thought I’d give you like 30 seconds of what that’s all about. Basically, there are people that listen to the show that contribute to the continued production of the show on a monthly basis, kind of like a, you know, like NPR or PBS where you sign on for X number of dollars a month. Like I’m a member of PBS and it’s $6 a month. And for that, I get access to the older episodes of like Nova and their science and history shows and that kind of thing with garden fork, if you sign on for $5 a month or more, if you have more, that would be a quite nice. but if you don’t do not do that okay. But for that, I send out just kind of the mind of Eric kind of emails that also can show up on the app if you get the Patrion out and also the pre show and after show, when I record a show with other people, cause invariably, Aaron and I, or will, or Rick and I are talking about something else after the show, because we forgot to talk about it in the show.

    Eric: And that’s sometimes fun. It’s really fun to listen to Rick, tell me what I’m doing wrong with the show, but in a good way, because you need feedback like that, but you could also provide that feedback, becoming a patron. So that information is in the show notes of today’s episode. You can also go to patrion.com/garden fork for more information about that. All right. So think about that. We’ll go back to the show, see it.

    Eric: speaking of someone who does know something, we got an email from Kevin who is our expert on everything, about some pumps. Cause Aaron and I were talking about our flooded basements.

    Rick: Right. I remember that. I felt sorry for both of you, you don’t have a basement. I feel sorry for both though. No, I do not have a basement. if I had a basement, it’d be flooded all the time because the groundwater here’s a, you can dig a two, two foot deep hole and it will fill overnight the water table is that high there. Yeah. Yeah. We, we live on a fluvial plane. This used to be a, part of the outflow of the James river. And so, Thomas Jefferson referred to this region as a malarial, swamp, and that’s about it.

    Eric: All right. I was wondering why you guys didn’t have basements it’s it seems more prevalent in the South to not have basements. Is that why? Because of the water table or Sandy soil or

    Rick: well, and in the South, they’re just land is so cheap. It’s easier just to build a bigger house on top of the land and cheaper than it is the basement. And that’s rarely really why, growing up, we did not have a basement, but we did have a tornado shelter in the backyard.

    Eric: Yeah. That’s a good thing to have, but when you had tornadoes. Yep. Anyway, we were talking about one of my solutions, our preparedness things with the sump pumps when your some pump that is piped into place, burns out. I suggested this portable some pumping. It can be an on demand thing with this float valve. And Kevin sent me a picture of his sump pump connection to the outlet. And he said, I discovered through desperation, a trick was submersible. Sump pumps the power from the wall. Oh, sorry, go ahead.

    Rick: No, I said, which is, Oh, they’ll try to help you try to be a good, good, a good sidekick here. You know, you’re ed McMahon to your Johnny Carson.

    Eric: So he says, I discovered through desperation, a trick with the submersible sump pumps, the power from the wall is sent through the float then to the pump, my pumps all have a double plug. See the photo. If you separate them and use the second plug for power, the pipe, the pump will run continuously. So what’s happening is the switch has the switch basically plugs into your wall outlet. And then on the backend, in other words, the part of the plug that’s looking at you in the face has its own female connector. And you plug the sump pump power cable into that. So the switch controls the power from the outlet through the little gizmo and then it feeds it into the power plug of the pump. and if you just take the power pump of the plug and you don’t go through the little in between gizmo and plug it right into the wall, it’s always on it’ll run continuously. Is that good? Yeah. That’s good to know that. It’s good to know because if your switch broke or you wanted to use your sun pump somewhere else, or they kept on cutting, cutting in and out. So that was cool. He sent me a photo of a, the plug itself. Oh, interesting. He knows a lot of stuff that Kevin,

    Rick: he knows everything. you know, whether it’s, you know, you’re a DSLR cameras with the, you know, electronics now understood the film. He knows how to clean the, the plates and sensor and all that. Yeah. So, yeah, he, he just knows everything he needs to be here. Why am I here? I don’t know anything

    Eric: because I called you. and then you called me

    Rick: and I was foolish enough to answer the phone. But anyway, even though I saw it was you’re on, I only have one experience with some pumps and that was on boats. we left Annapolis and said the sail down Chesapeake Bay and out to Bermuda. And then about two days out of Bermuda had for the, for the islands, and about four o’clock in the morning, three, four o’clock in the morning, my propane alarm goes off, which is kind of a problem in itself just to kind of an existential question, because a boat is a hole in the water and it, and it holds water out, but it also keeps gas in. Right. And so when, when your propane alarm goes off, does that mean you’re about to explode God? Yeah. You know, don’t lie. It don’t let a cigarette. Yeah. And believe me, there are plenty of things that sparkle on them on a boat anyway, just when little motors come on and that kind of stuff. And I solved this question when I jumped out of the bunk and I was standing in about three inches of water. I said, aha, the saltwater shorted out the propane sensor. Oh. And S and so in the middle of the night, I, I, first thing I do is I hand she, who must be obeyed about a 12 inch, little, a pipe that you fit over. a, a fitting on a hand pump, that’s in the cockpit. And I said, here, pump the boat dry. And she, she didn’t think that was funny.

    Rick: And so I started pulling up all the floorboards, and then you have a way of doing this. You start, usually at the front and you work back looking for leaks at all the different places. And, we, you know, kicked in the diesel and, I had a switch on the diesel exhaust cause it’s a salt water cooled system, then a switch into a sample on the, on the boat. So it would pump, use the, diesel to pump the boat dry as well. Now I had a couple of, a couple of electric, some pumps, to hook up to battery cables, to drop wherever I needed them. And, finally found it and had shut off the engine, which by this time was really hot. And I had to lay on top of the engine using some of those, flotation, seat things and get back to the very back of the boat where they have what we call a packing gland.

    Rick: It’s where the, the, the drive shaft. Yeah. Prop shaft goes through the hole and the, nut had backed off. And there’s little pieces of ’em now think of them as cord. It’s actually a flax kind of stuff that you cut and you put five or six of these around it. And they tightened it down the nut to, to hold a compression. And you want about a, drop a minute of water coming into the boat through that because it helps lubricate the shaft. It keeps it from getting hot anyway, that bolt had, twisted off somehow. probably because the prop was spinning backwards when it’s out of gear. And, and it worked that loose and blew all the packing gland out. And, the boat was filling with water. And so we crawled back there, screwed it all back together and pumped the boat dry. And then, we had a glass of wine now went back to bed.

    Eric: That’s amazing. I would have never thought that for the cooling, you could use the, basically the big old diesel in the back to pump, pump out the boat. That’s kind of brilliant. That’s really brilliant.

    Rick: Well, thank you. I, you know, Aaron’s a big sailor, she knows about this. It’s, it’s just standard. if you’re, if you’re really deep water sailors, you know, you, you gotta do have be prepared to rescue yourself because, and, yeah, having the diesel pump, is good. you gotta worry about strainers and stuff, getting into your impeller and all kinds of stuff. So you gotta be careful about, and you certainly can’t run it dry. so you get it down to a level you can manage and then you switch it back to outside water. so you’re not pumping from the inside anymore.

    Eric: Wow. So did you continue on your trip or did you circle back?

    Rick: Oh, no. We went on down. We ended up in, Charlotte Amalia, st. Thomas. And then, the next day we, we’re running a little late, so we, scooted on the cross, with the trade winds, which is what we’re looking for all the time, over to Puerto Rico. And we, did a tour at the Naval hospital at Puerto Rico. That’s great. How cool is that? So that’s my sump pump story, but I don’t have one about pumping out my basement.

    Eric: Yeah. it’s not fun, but at least you’re on land, so

    Rick: okay.

    Eric: It’s, it’s like, it’s like, at least, at least it’s not like, why did I do that dumb thing? And, Oh, now I’m, I’m sinking two days out of Bermuda, you know? Yeah. Well, you know,

    Rick: stuff happens. And, you know, we, it was a wonderful trip. Other than that, we had semen scruffy with us, Karen terrier. It was just the three of us. And, she, who must be obeyed. And I were, in the Navy, we call it hot bunking, port and starboard watches of about five hours each. We just swap off. And, you know, the, the boat had a, a wind vein, which would keep it on a particular course set to the wind. That’s not necessarily a course. And, yeah, so mostly what we did a lot of reading and cooking and, had had time to, to nap and semen, scruffy, you know, the sea is a very sterile place for a dog because the dog lives its life through its nose. Right. And so when seaman scruffy would, you know, jump up and start, you know, we’d start looking around and sure enough, there would be whales or porpoises or something in the area because he could smell the, the bigs exhalation of the whales. And, it was just a treat to him. He’d, we had to kind of constrain him. Of course he was always tied to the boat, but, we had to make sure he didn’t try and jump in sweat and play the whales.

    Eric: Hey, we have, a couple of, cool announcements here.

    Rick: Okay. Is this a, is this the announcement you make where you say I’m always complaining and, and, and, and whining about how you do the show?

    Eric: No. that we reserved for the garden fork patrons. That’s the after show where you take me to task for how I produced the show. So if you all want to hear that, this is a great segue, garden fork does have a Patrion page where you can support garden fork. It’s like I asked for $5 a month, which is like a fancy cup of coffee a month. And for that, you get behind the scenes with Eric. I post stuff to the Patrion garden fork app. It also comes in an email to you. We have the after show where we discuss stuff after the podcast, it’s kind of Eric’s brain. And, that’s usually a good thing, I think anyway, we do have a new, patron and his name is Johnny, and he is an enigma to me. I have met him through, I met him online through Eric from the roots simple podcast.

    Eric: And Johnny has a very thought provoking blog called granola shotgun. And he recently installed, it’s a, it’s a great name for a blog because as soon as I heard it, it’s stuck in my head. it’s one of those, I, can’t what that’s called a word buzz or something in your brain, but anyway, it’s called granola shotgun and we were emailing cause he just did a DIY solar install with kind of a different twist. And I’m hoping, I have to email him and see if he wants to be on the podcast to kind of talk about it, but go to granola, shotgun.com and you can see photos of it. And his idea is not to have this giant. I have a 6,000 kilowatt solar array on my roof that has an inverter and it feeds back to the cred and I got tax benefits from it. He went simple with what I think is a simple battery backup inverter system that was quite inexpensive. So I’ll have to get him on the talk about that. I have, I have,

    Rick: I thought about doing something like this. And I thought about going down to the yellow store and getting one of those ultra cheap, two wheel trailers, she pulled behind your car. You know, you take it to the red or blue store to get a sheet of plywood or right. And putting, a hinge on the bottom of two solar panels, 60 watt solar panels, and then hinges on the side so that you had four 60 watt solar panels. And then you could fold them over each other to cover them when you don’t need them. Right. And then eight, six volt batteries, which would give you, you know, you are right. You get 48 volts into an inverter and then just use a notch stick to set the angle of the, the solar panels when they’re, they’re, open. So when you’re using them to get the right, the right angle angle, and then just move the tongue of the trailer around to get the, the asthma, right, as the sun moves across the sky and use the, instead of a generator, just have a permanent, emergency solar system that I could, you know, keep covered with a tarp and pull out whenever the power went out,

    Eric: that would work just a thought. Yeah. Now you got me thinking, cause Harbor freight tools has those trailers. They like fold up. I mean, I think they have like a four by eight bed or maybe a little smaller, but they, they can fold up and go into your garage against the wall, but you could use that with some panels and Oh, wow.

    Rick: That’s exactly what I’m thinking. And then I thought, well, another use, you know, we could,

    Eric: okay. After excising that comment, I’d like to move forward with, some great reviews that people have written on our iTunes page. and this is from Michelle, who I know from the garden fork discussion group on Facebook. I love the title of her review, exceptional normal folks. Wow. Isn’t that great. She must be talking about you. Yeah. Five stars, a DIY cooking, gardening, beekeeping, an entertaining normal everyday people research, troubleshoot and report on the same task projects and experiences that most, all of us encounter at some point in life. There you go. That really sums it up. I don’t need to introduce the show anymore. I’m just going to read that. Yeah, that’s actually pretty good. Yeah. That and a haphazard DIY, which one of our other supporters came up with that I’m blanking on her name, who described me that way. but I liked that too,

    Rick: just to, it’s a haphazard individual. He didn’t really know. Anyway,

    Eric: go ahead. and the next one is from a O G three and I don’t know who that is. that is cryptic, but that’s some people are like that. A good show. I especially like the cooking parts, five stars. We have no cooking today. Oh, I’m good show. No, no, no, no, no. We, I talked about how to make okra and tomatoes. Oh, there you go. So yeah, I have enjoyed some of the chitchat between Eric and guests. It can get a little long at times, but it’s a podcast. So I have complete control of the length. Yeah. If I were, you I’d play this at about three X. Yeah. Sometimes the show does go long and I, but I don’t really edit it too much because yeah. You can. There’s other podcasts that I just bounce out. I’m like, okay, this is not something I want to listen to, but yeah, no, all, all, all the better.

    Eric: And thank you for the five stars. [inaudible] I like that. All right. Thanks. Thank you, Rick. Thanks for taking the time. it’s always a pleasure radio at garden. fork.tv is our address we want to hear from you. And, thank you again for Kevin for his information. And, Johnny had granola, shotgun for a support and then triggering our whole solar conversation there. Yeah. It’s good to hear your voice again, my friend, talk to you later. All right. See ya. Bye. Bye. Garden fork Raiders. Executive producer is Jimmy Gootz. You can find more information about Jimmy and the custom hollow books he makes@hallowbooks.com. Our theme music is used under license from unique tracks.com. Are there music used in the show is used under license from audio blocks.com.

  • The Best DIY Mini Hoop House For A Raised Bed

    Here is the best DIY mini hoop house I have built yet. I’ve crafted bunch mini greenhouses and cold frames, taken that info, and made this mini hoop house for my raised bed vegetable garden.

    So, why build a DIY mini hoop house? The big answer is that it extends your growing season. You can start seeds earlier in the spring, and grow vegetable later into fall and even winter if you do it right.

     

    I’ve built and made videos about each of the mini hoop house builds I’ve done. And with every build, I’ve learned some more about how to build them.

    Greenhouse

    These season extending rigs are also called a mini greenhouse. I’ve built mine to fit on top of a raised vegetable bed. AND I’ve added a major upgrade to make it easier to lift and open the mini hoop house as it sits on the raised bed.

    I’ve had hoop houses slip off the raised bed with high winds, or when you open it, so I crafted a simple solution for that, read below for the details.

    Building The Raised Bed DIY Mini Hoop House

    I used scrap lumber I had around. I’m all about use what you got. So we had these 2x4s. The mini hoop house sits right on top of the wood sides of the bed. Make your hoop house frame the width of your bed, and however long you want it. Mine is 8′ long. Build the frame so that the long ends of the hoop house sits right on top of your bed, not inside the bed sitting on the soil. This will make it easier to open and close, and it will last longer.

    close up of wood framing

    For brackets to hold the wood frame together, I think these metal shelf hangers work great. I salvaged mine from some shelves a neighbor was throwing out. These brackets will last longer than the wood they are holding together. And it is completely fine to use coarse drywall screws to connect them. The screws will last longer than the wood as well.

    Some tools and supplies:

    close up of greenhouse frame

    I’ve used 3/4″ pvc for the hoop. Use a tape measure to determine how high you want the top of the DIY mini hoop house to be. You can also experiment with a piece of PVC to see how tight of a bend you can do with it.

    I was able to take an 8′ piece of 3/4″ PVC and bend it to fit within the 4′ width of the hoop house frame. The peak of the hoop house is 40″ high. I have found a higher peak with steeper sides really helps winter snow slide off the mini greenhouse.

    Eric Rochow and greenhouse

    I slid in one of the bent PVC pipes at the very end of the frame. I then placed a 4’x4′ piece of plywood behind the pipe and drew the arc of the hoop onto the plywood and cut it out. It is best to use outdoor rated plywood for this project. If you can’t find or afford outdoor rated plywood, paint whatever wood you are using with outdoor paint after you cut it but before you assemble it. greenhouse

    These automatic thermatic vents are brilliant for a DIY mini hoop house. The vents open and close around 50ºF, and they are adjustable. Do not buy the cheap ones, they will stop working. For this design, I place one high, to let out hot air, and one low, to let in cooler air. I may add two more of these automatic vents, so each end has two of them. When you get a really warm day in spring or fall, the hoop house can heat up right quick.

    Use UV rated plastic to cover your greenhouse. If you use inexpensive plastic, you will be replacing it in a few years. And the plastic breaks and splits apart and gets all over your garden. No fun.

    greenhouse being built

    I put in a long 1×2 to support the top of the arch. I drill a pilot hole through each pipe and screw the arch into the cross support. I then cover each screw head and the plywood ends with recycled hose so the plastic is not cut open by the sharp edges of the screw heads or plywood ends.

    greenhouse closeup

    greenhouse close up

    I attached the mini greenhouse to the raised bed with two recycled hinges. Make sure the hinges you use have a removable hinge pin, so you can just slide out the pin to remove the hoop house from the raised bed edge. If not, you can just remove the screws to disconnect the frame from the bed.

    This hinge improvement makes the hoop house green house much more stable on top of the raised bed. It wont blow off in a storm. Learn from me…

    interior of greenhouse

    A metal handle from my box of salvaged hardware makes it much easier to lift the DIY mini hoop house, and makes it easy to prop open. Note how the rig sits nice on the other side of the bed because of the two hinges.

    greenhouse and plants

    Watch More Of My Hoop House Builds:

    Mini Greenhouse Ver 3.0

    Mini Greenhouse Repair Fail