Today’s post is just a playful thing, it doesn’t teach anything, or show anything new – just me and my boy messing around. All I am doing is watching as my son WT makes pancakes.
I don’t eat a lot of pancakes, after I had the lap band, they make me throw up is I eat more than one. However, William likes them, and I enjoy watching him play in the kitchen.
I think that cooking is not only a valuable skill, but it teaches many valuable lessons. My wife tends to agree and uses cooking in her special education class to help teach her autistic and special need students many of the same lessons.
A few of the the many things cooking teaches children are:
Cause and Effect
Basic Math
Attention to detail
Self Discipline
Creativity
But today, as I watched WT making pancakes, all I was really doing was spending time with my favorite little boy.
He sure made a mess eating those things, I don’t think I have ever seen syrup spread so far. However, he had a great time. My boy still asks to make pancakes, but he smashes them up more than he eats them. I think that may because of the fancy ketchup bottle art pancakes.
I do know that this is a fun family activity, and its a pretty simple thing to do. Its really fun to do this while mommy sleeps in. As long as WT and I clean up the kitchen before she gets up I get extra patience from her throughout the rest of the day.
Like the earlier Home Workshop Guns for Defense & Resistance, Vol. 2 – the Handgun, the latest volume in this popular and timely series offers detailed instructions, complete with photos and machinist’s drawings, for making a pistol-caliber AR-15/M16 entirely from raw materials, as either a rifle or pistol, open or closed bolt and in semi or full auto.
I have put together several AR-15’s from stripped lowers and parts kits, and find that it is much cheaper to do it yourself, I also find that by putting your own rifle together from scratch you understand it.
This book tells how to build your own AR-15 lower from square pipe. This lower can either be used with a commercial upper receiver, or you can go deeper into the Home Workshop Guns manual to build your own AR upper also.
These types of books are rapidly becoming non-politically correct, which is all the more reason for owning them. I do not advocate breaking federal law by constructing homemade machine guns, but I do advocate knowing how. During the Britich Bombings during WWI the country was unable to supply enough weapons to gear up for war, but bicycle shops and home workshops started mass producing sten guns. The security of a free state depends on the populace being able to construct these machines in the event of invasion.
Once the meter box was removed I went to the electric company to see about getting a power pole.
Originally I was simply going to take the entire meter box and weather head off the trailer and bolt it to a shed. However, after talking to the utility and the shed builder we were convinced that getting a stand alone pole and getting it set up with an RV hookup was the cheapest and simplest method.
Basically I was told that if we installed the meter box on the shed the inspector would require the shed meet residential code. While that is no problem the $3000 fee was completely out of the budget.
This means we had to set a power pole.
As you can see in the video I had nothing to do with actually setting the pole. I watched the power company come in with their power pole setting equipment.
They came, drilled the hole, set the pole, and left in about 30 minutes.
Since a 30 foot utility pole needs to be set in the ground 5 feet. If I had to hand dig to the proper power pole setting depth in the rocky limestone soil I would have been at it for much longer than that.
The utility used a truck with a hydraulic auger. After asking which of us would be climbing the pole (he kept looking at me) the equipment operator dug in a couple extra feet setting the pole at 8 feet deep. He said it would give extra stability when we had to climb the pole.
They also used a hydraulic tamper. It acted like a pogo stick. The tamper compacted the dirt as they filled the hole. It stabilized the power pole and made me feel really good realizing how much work the power company saved us.
Since now the pole was only 22 ft high we could get away with not setting a guy wire – which greatly improves the land use around the pole.
Beware of Code
Code says the power line has to be at least 12 feet above ground and 18 ft over a road – so setting our weather head 20+ feet in the air gives us a good measure of safety.
In later articles, we will discuss the RV box in more detail, but the idea is to have an outlet we can use to power things like a cement mixer without using a generator, and not having the issues with setting up a temporary pole.
Plus, once the trailer is demolished we can plug a tiny house or an RV right into the pole.
In case you are keeping score it cost us $280 for the 30 ft pole and install. Which I feel is a bargain. Plus another $300 in various inspection fees, deposit and hook up fees to the electric company.
As of this point beside the land purchase of $7500. The almost $600 we paid to the electric company is our only large expense.
If you have never seen a utility pole being installed, you can watch the video. I found it very exciting. It is one large step toward my future Independence.
I don’t drink a lot of coffee, so maybe I don’t fully appreciate this coffee brewing hack, but since I love DIY solutions to problems, I wanted to show an awesome hack James from survivalpunk.com thought of in order to brew coffee using nothing but a glass carafe, a filter, and a cut off top of a soda bottle.
If you cut the bottom off of a 20 ounce soda bottle you can insert it into the top of a glass carafe (or bottle with a large neck). Put a coffee filter into the top of the soda bottle and fill with he appropriate amount of coffee and you can pour water into the filter and have coffee drip into your glass.
I am more of a tea drinker so I am more likely to do this with loose tea, but the idea is the same.
Hope this is useful to you.
After this post went live, I had a lot of requests to review french presses for coffee making. I don’t know why because I said I don’t drink coffee, but I did get one. I used it to make tea. It did a good job and I liked it, but it took too long for something I drink by the gallon.
The electric service to the property was attached to the trailer. Unfortunately, the mobile home is in that awkward stage of too burnt to fix, but not burnt enough to be easy to demolished. So we need electricity to run power tools so that we are not trying to tear the building down for the next decade.
Since our budget was demolished by buying the land I have to be frugal and reuse as many building materials from the trailer as possible.
That means we have to begin our electric install by removing a meter box from the side of the trailer. We will rewire it and replace a meter box on a future power pole.
Removing the Box
We start by using the flimsy aluminum ladder I got from the Doomsday Prepper film crew. It did not hold my weight very well. But we were able to remove the shingles and flashing from around the weather head.
Since the trailer is slated to be demolished, there was no worry about the home. This meant the rood was chopped and slashed until the electric conduit was free.
Next, the clamps holding the conduit to the trailer wads removed. Then ground wires and other connections to the home were disconnected.
The previous owners scrapped a lot of copper (which is what lead to the trailer being unfit for repair). This meant there was not a lot to disconnect.
The meter box itself was held on by 3 strong lag bolts.
Those wires were connected inside the meter box by some highly torqued Allen head bolts. Since I lacked the equipment to remove those bolts the guts of the meter box were removed. Then I could take out the connectors easier.
Take Pictures
Since I had to reuse the meter box and not just remove it, care was taken to replace the screws back in the holes they were removed from. I also took a lot of video and pictures so we could go back and see what the original set up looked like. That meant we could recreate it when we replaced the meter box on the new pole.
Once everything was disconnected, the screws holding the meter box to the trailer were removed. Then the the box and pole were lowered to the ground.
The conduit was heavy galvanized steel, and it was 12 feet tall. Therefore, it was not the easiest job for the day.
Make sure you are ready for the weight before you remove that last screw.
Watch the Video
The video below shows most of the process – but since the process of removing a meter box, rewiring it, and eventually replacing a meter box is pretty dynamic sometimes we forgot to set the camera up so we may have missed a couple steps – but we have shown enough that anyone with enough common sense to be able to safely remove a meter box should easily get the idea.
As you can see from the above video, removing a meter box is not hard, but the next part of setting the new power pole was a little harder and took some tools.