Justa Rollin’ Right Along


A New Work Bench For The Garage

Saturday, February 28th, 2009

I have to post this for my father. He wanted to see pictures.

I am not sure I told you this already, but for the longest time, I was using a big 36″ wide solid door as a . It was mounted on 4″x4″s. It was huge and worked well, but I needed to grow up and get a real , so I took the door apart and put the parts in the garage. I tucked the 4″x4″s away in the corner nicely, and leaned the door against the front wall. It was kind of in the way, but not all that much.

Poor Laura has been crowded for a few months now on her side of the garage. It seems as though the ride-on mower, the push mower and the were all in her car’s way. She was able to pull the car in the garage, but it was a tricky maneuver each time. The main culprits were the ride-on mower and the . When she tried to walk in front of the car, the push mower’s handle would jab her in the stomach. It was hard to watch. It was even harder to receive those wicked stares during those times I did decide to watch.

A few days ago, I decided it was time to clean up the garage and get rid of that door. It was just sitting there. I figure that if I disassembled my home-made shelving unit, I could replace it with a “door work bench” that could park the push mower and the right underneath. You’ll see in the photos.

I just want to say that I am a master when it comes to these types of projects. I even use a level. It’s simply amazing.

To do this project, all I needed was a miter saw, a circular saw, a few 2″x4″s, some , a stud finder, a measure and a level. It was pretty easy. Let me show you the photos, but please ignore all the items on top of the work bench. I haven’t organized them yet.

As you can see from the photos, I simply mounted some 2″x4″s against the side and back . Then, I the door to size and placed it on top of the 2″x4″s. I used one of the old legs for the last corner. Remember, this is a thick, heavy, solid door. Also, since I had an extra piece of door left over, I decided to use some shelve brackets I had hanging around to put up a nice little shelf. I keep a bunch of stuff up there and even drilled in it to use some old hooks. Now, I get to hang extension cords and stuff like that.

See how nicely the push mower and fit under that beauty? I moved over the ride-on mower a bit, tucked those two under the work bench and now Laura is all smiles. Plus, I got rid of the door.

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New Mailbox Installed

Tuesday, May 13th, 2008

Today was an adventurous day for us. We had to go to the to get our Connecticut . That in itself was an adventure. Now, we need to update our and go back to register the cars here. The thing that really stinks is that I just paid for a new registration for my old car, then got a new car and paid again. Now, I have to pay all over. I wish they would pro-rate a refund for me. Fat chance of that happening.

We also went to to get the new mailbox supplies. As I said in an earlier post, I got the new post, a mailbox, some Thompson’s Water Seal, some cement and the brass post numbers. I think that’s it. I mean, I got some other stuff too, but none of it relates to this story. Ok, I’ll tell you what else I got…a new , a handle that I broke the other day and a 5 gallon, plastic gas tank. Satisfied?

I got the post all soaked with the water seal, then nailed on the numbers. Then, I a piece of scrap wood and screwed it on to the post and then screwed the mailbox onto the scrap wood. I am a real carpenter. I did have another job before me though, and that was to get the old mailbox out of the ground. I had no idea how it was installed.

I went up to the road with my and started digging. Then, I noticed some that were cemented together. I had to walk back down to the garage to get my . I walked back up and broke the and cement apart with the hammer. That was pretty easy. Ok, so I started wiggling the mailbox post, trying t pull it out of the ground. Oh, no, not that easy. I first had to dig some more dirt out, only to find more cement down at the bottom. I dug and dug and finally got the whole thing out. I kind of made a bigger hole than I thought I would. Honestly, I thought would just go up there and pull the sucker out and use my to widen the hole a bit. Now, I had a two foot hole across. Whatever. I used the to dig down a few inches, so the new mailbox was the proper height, whatever that is. It looked good to me.

Cement time…I went back down to the garage and mixed up the bag of cement I got in the . I brought that up and cemented the whole base of the post. I threw in some and dirt on top of th cement. Then, I used my level about 30 times to make sure the post was perfectly level. I stomped the dirt down and…

…there you have it. The most level mailbox post on the whole road. You can’t tell me that’s not the most perfect install you have ever seen. Sometimes, I need to just pat myself on the back (since no one else will).

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