
Like the chipmunk above, we really don’t know what to do with ourselves as the snow melts other than watch the ice slide off the roof. We walked through the neighborhood yesterday and found the mail truck (with a substitute driver) wedged up against a band of four mailboxes. A woman from one of those four houses was out there with a small throw rug that she had put under one of the wheels, and she had a bucket filled with white pellets of some sort. We offered to push and gave it three or four good tries, but the one wheel that was engaged just kept spinning on the ice. The mail truck passed us about a half hour later, and he stopped to thank us. He told us his boss had pulled him out, but in the process they wrecked all four of the mailboxes.
While we were still reading the paper, we noticed our neighbor Jared shoveling his driveway. He injured his shoulder playing tennis and normally clears his driveway with his tractor, so something was up. We offered to help. He told us his wife was having her coffee group (“the gals”) over and the battery on his tractor was dead. This was heart-attack snow, with heavy water and ice content.
We took a short break, and I asked if he would have some time later in the day to help me with a project I had been meaning to get to since we moved in. One of the copper pipes from our radiant heat setup was visible in a corner of our living room. It came out of a brick ledge below our window and went down through an opening in the floorboards — a small visual irritant that took endless speculation before we came up with a solution.
I hollowed out a white PVC board, leaving only an eighth of an inch to hide the pipe, and used that as floor molding. I had never used a router. Jared had one, and he guided me. A retired chemical engineer, he likes to think projects out completely before going ahead — just the opposite of my approach. And because this piece went around a corner, I needed to use his radial arm saw to cut the forty-fives. He has one of those. The plastic shavings went everywhere in his garage, and the tiny pieces had enough static electricity to stick to every object in sight. The longest part of this project was spent with his shop-vac roaring away.
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