



This is my attempt to document my adventures, experiments and attempts at all things sustainable, from growing food and making things to being a good dad and generally trying to live 'The Good Life'.




The poppets are held in place by wedges which fit snugly into a tapered hole on the poppet. Altogether the project has been very simple to build, even for someone with such limited woodworking experience as myself. The only other issue is the building and fitting of legs, which at present are not essential. However, if I wish to take it outdoors it'll need something to stand on.
Second task for the weekend was making a new handle for the froe. Making tools for the pole lathe seems to be a constant chicken and egg situation, where the things you need to make are made by the things you need...ad infinitum. Here you can see an ash log split four ways. I used a curved piece so that the finished froe handle leans away from the moving mallet and so lessens the chances of bashing one's knuckles. You can also see the 'mallet' of an oak log until a real mallet, or 'maul' has been fashioned.




This is one of a pair of Vauxhall combi van leaf springs I managed to secure for just a tenner! As you can see they're quite heavy duty, but that won't be a problem once they're cut down to size.



The handle shown in the picture is part of a Eucalyptus tree I felled a few weeks ago. I used it partly as it's the only timber I have lying around at the moment, and partly because it's tough as old boots and hard as nails! I turned the handle on my electric lathe. I know this is supposed to be a pole lathe project. However, the pole lathe is still yet to be assembled!
One step at a time shall be my motto from here on... One more thing is the garden. Throwing down a bag of grass seed did the trick after all, as a few days later we have a luscious lawn. Compare this picture with the one taken just a few weeks ago in a previous entry to see the difference.

That's it for now, I'm off to cut the timbers for the pole lathe. Until the next time...
(This isn't actually my shave-horse, but once it's finished I'll upload my own attempt)
The wood I'm using to build the horse is all reclaimed timber, of which I have been fortunate recently to have acquired a large amount, which will be put to good use for the pole lathe, shave horse, and maybe even a shed should there be sufficient wood left over.
My desire to make and create is linked to a yearning for a simpler way of life. I believe many people now are becoming increasingly stressed and suffering mental health issues due to our lives being overly complicated. Every day our senses are being constantly bombarded by advertising, information, warnings, advice, noise, sound, bleeps, sirens, telephones, announcements, and people trying, like sirens, to tempt us from the path and play poker, claim money for negligence, sign for a credit card, change our energy suppler, eat less, look good, spend more, spend less and, ironically, to relax.
Working outdoors with the smells of the Earth, far from the madding crowd, using your two hands to fashion something something from the woods growing around you; wouldn't that be something? So, to this end my plan is to reach the goal of working part time at home, doing a bit of wood working, metal fabricating and other plans I have in the pipeline to make a living. This too would mean I have to spend less time working and more time at home with my family.
On a final note, hopefully I'll have some more images by the end of the weekend to post of the garden now that our lawn has appeared from no-where!
Until then...
Taking advantage of a work free day I was out this morning clearing space for the raised beds I intend to use to start some food cultivation. Being fortunate enough to be surrounded by trees, it's easy to forget sometimes that we are on a large estate and not in the middle of the countryside. 




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About me: My name is Richard Day and my life has just been turned upside-down.
No single event is behind this, but rather it’s the culmination of several events which have amassed to force me to re-evaluate the life I am living and the life I would like to live.
Two weeks ago my son, Miles, was born. My wife Julia and I are ecstatic and after the initial shock and readjustment we are starting to consider how we are going to bring up our child (and most probably, children).
The second event to throw me into disarray was a film I was fortunate enough to be invited to view yesterday. The Age of Stupid, with Pete Postlethwaite, seemed to come out of no-where and hit me between the eyes. The current trend for all things fore-tellingly apocalyptic and doom laden can tend to provoke a general feeling of helplessness and ineffectiveness against such massive odds, but the individual stories of struggle and hope encapsulated in the film have spurred me into action.
Lastly, turning thirty-four a week ago today made me realise that to achieve the life I want has to start with positive steps in that direction (my apologies if all this sounds like vacuous psychobabble, however I hope to get to the point soon enough).
Briefly, we live in an ex council house on a council estate in Leicester. For the last five years my wife and I have lived in the sunny south of Spain, where we were generally unhappy and desperate to leave. Now we have been back a year and have started to live.
You can never wait to start living.
We found ourselves in an ex council house as we had limited funds and no recent UK work history to verify our good nature. Being in a recession meant Mr Halifax and Mr Barclays were keeping a much tighter grip on the purse strings. However, a loan of £60,000 was agreed and four months ago we moved in.
Okay, I’ll come to the point: this blog is my decision to chart my way through the paradigm I feel that is starting to take hold. I aim to describe, reflect and chart my path through un-chartered territory. Is it possible to live energy (and nutritionally?) free, from the confines of a normal family home? There are plenty of people out there with allotments and small-holdings doing just this, but can we do it with just our 20m x 6m garden? So far I have been fairly successful with the energy situation, being able to heat the house from scavenged firewood and timber from the woods behind our home, but can we do that with food as well? I hope to include advice and open dialogue on the way that we can achieve this in the hope of inspiring others in similar situations to do the same.
In The Age of Stupid, Pete Postlethwaite asks, “why didn't we stop climate change while we had the chance?” I aim to do what I can, not least for Miles, aged two weeks and three days.