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I asked him how much for one log. I have cats and one log would make a great cat scratcher. He looked at me kind of funny, but smiled and said take any one you like, no charge. Thanks. I picked out a log that had some good bark, and looked pretty solid. Perfect.
I brought it home and put it out on the porch. Unfortunately, none of the cats thought much of it. They sniffed it a few times, then walked away. Oh well, it was worth the shot.
Over the next few years it sat out on the porch. After a while we set it up against the milk crates, thinking the more elderly of the cats might like it as a ramp up to the top. Not really, but after Edward drilled a few holes in one end and used some string to tie it to the crates, Sandy did actually start using to climb up on the crates. As her eyesight got worse, she started walking up it with her front paws, and when she reached the top, hopped up with her back paws.
The log remained out on the porch for a few more years after Sandy died, but eventually, we took it down and put it in the garage where it stayed for a number more years, until Jan 2010, when we almost took it with us to the Cabins in Myakka and burned it. At the last minute, I changed my mind. I get overly sentimental sometimes, but I wasn't ready to let that log go, so we put it back in the garage where it stayed for another 12 months, while I waited for the inspiration to hit. What could I do with that log?
This past December it hit me, but too late to do anything for X-mas. In January, I snuck the log to work. I had a plan.
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I took the log down to the shop and talked to the guys down there. They gave me some advice on what to do, some do's and don't with power tools, which intimidate the hell out of me, and sent me on my way. This wasn't the first time I'd built something in the shop, just my most ambitious project yet, in spite of it being the smallest. We set up the band saw made the first cut. This one was to give me a flat surface to use as a base to cut the log into boards. Pretty ho-hum grain on this cut, but it wasn't the grain I was looking for, it was the fact that this log we had kept all this time was going to turn into something special. At least that was my hope.
I turned the log 90° and made the second cut. That's when things got interesting. I didn't get the normal wood grain pattern you might have expected. It was dappled and spotted with pale heartwood and gray outer wood for about an inch near the bark. That's when the guys that work in the shop started a debate as to exactly what kind of wood this was. Oak? Maple? Birds Eye or Curly Maple? Buttonwood? There wasn't any agreement. All I knew was that it looked really, really cool.
Now that I had the log sliced up, I needed a more concrete plan. I knew how much wood I had now. "I want to make a box," wasn't going to be enough. I decided on a size to make it and ended up treating it like a stained glass project. I made a mock up of the box from a manila folder, then cut all the pieces out of paper and laid them on the wood. I had enough for the box and still had one extra board. I think Jordan thought I was being a little ambitious, but he was game, he was going to be my main sounding board and advice giver.
The most nerve wracking part was the first cuts. Measure, mark, measure again. Think it out, don't rush it.
Because of the coloring in the wood I wanted to make it so that the gray wood was all at the junction of the top and bottom. There weren't pieces big enough for the flat top or bottom to be done in one or even two pieces. What if I don't get the box square, or the top is, but the bottom isn't? What if they aren't flush? What if...? It kept me awake one night worrying about it.
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Next was the top. I took two long boards of the pale wood and sandwiched between them four short boards with the gray wood in them, with the gray wood toward the center in each half. That gave me an interesting pattern for the top. The bottom was just four pieces of pale wood. They all had to be joined, sanded and measured out, Then the top and bottom had to be dadoed themselves to inset into the top and bottom boxes. Neither the top nor the bottom boxes came out exactly square. But I was hoping that I could overcome that in the finishing.
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The nice thing about working at an office that fabricates a lot of it's own equipment is they have lots of really cool (i.e. really dangerous) tools. We have a shop that's to-die-for, and guys who know what to do. We're allowed to use the tools at work on a limited basis, as long as we don't get in the way of real work and we don't use up resources. There are wood working tools there that would make Norm proud. Besides, working on something there means it's hidden from Edward as well, and it can be a surprise.
I love to make things and I'm really happy with the way the box turned out. As luck would have it, the box will exactly fit Edward's drawing pencils, or the Market Deck from one of our board games. That wasn't planned, but it works.
So I add this box to the things I've made Edward in the wood shop at work over the years. It started with the DVD cabinet, then the bookshelf, the file cabinet top and now Sandy's box. If you'd asked me a few years ago if I thought I could have made the box from a simple piece of fire wood I would have thought you were crazy. But I did it. And now we have a box, a really cool box. And a beautiful reminder of our friend.