Its cold out there!

It's been a winter to remember in our area with more snow that we've had for a long, long time. Temperatures have also been lower than normal for sustained periods. The weather has played havoc with our work schedule as getting material on the yard and into the shop has proved difficult. There have been a number of days when staff simply couldn't safely come to work. This morning we are experiencing an ice storm - the worst in more than forty years locally. There was about a half inch of ice coating everything in sight. While it does create problems it is also incredible beautiful too.

Our signs out by the road were coated along with everything else. Our dinosaur sure looked cold and the flying ship needed a thorough de-icingbefore it few on. Hopefully spring and much warmer temps are on the way soon!

ALL HANDS!

Fiberglass reinforced concrete is an amazing medium. Almost anything we can imagine we can build. It is durable, relatively inexpensive and with lots of practice, not too difficult to work with. Both a curse and blessing is the fact that working times are relatively short. We could use chemical retarders to lengthen our working time but the fact is there are only eight hours in a workday. We don't want to work longer. We instead carefully plan what we will do each day and in what order. Then we mix and trowel on the concrete we need as quickly as possible. When the concrete has set the prefect amount we begin the sculpting process.

The key to a successful job is to carve at the same rate the concrete was applied. If we manage to do that it is perfectly workable. The reality is however that the concrete sculpting process is much slower than the application. That means the concrete is getting hard. We have the perfect solution. The most skillful (and experienced) carvers begin the process a little early. They lay out the work and carve key areas. As the concrete begins to set up more crew members join in. And at some point each day the call goes out for ALL HANDS! This means everyone drops what they are doing and carves as well.

Generally, the skilled people work beside the less experienced, coaching and training as the work is done. With all hands busy helping a great deal of surface area is covered in a short time and as we near the end the crew members begin to put down the sculpting tools and start in on the massive cleanup that needs to be done without fail. By the time the sculpting is totally done all the concrete is expertly carved and checked. The tools are cleaned and all of the concrete waste and crumbles are gone. It is a routine that happens every concrete day and it works exceptionally well. In the process a lot more is accomplished and every crew member gains valuable experience in the sculpting process. It is a rare occasion we need to put in overtime hours. ALL HANDS and amazing teamwork make it so.

Bottom section sculpted!

It seems with almost every project we think of a new way to do things which will add even more detail than we've done previously. As we start we congratulate ourselves on the brilliant discovery. But as we get into the project it becomes obvious that the new marvellous ways take a lot of time. As we get about three quarters of the way through doubt sets in and we wonder what we got ourselves into and how will we ever get through. We persevere and as we near the end our thoughts change again to isn't this marvellous! The new found detail is always worth this struggle and we never want to go back to the old way of doing things. Then with the next project we raise the bar once again and the whole process begins anew.

Today as I was working on the seemingly endless rock and bracing detail at the bottom of the Sign Invitational Challenge piece I struggled through this exact scenario. But by the afternoon as I finished the section I could once again see the light at the end of the tunnel.