Hard working Henry

Henry has been a regular visitor to our shop since he was very young. He has always loved to help as much as possible, which we encourage. Helping in the early years was mostly mimicking what we were doing, often using toy tools rather than real ones. He also enjoyed sweeping the floor or putting away tools that had been used by others. We made sure that all of it was a safe, fun and learning process. It wasn’t long until he was using our tools, and eventually, tools from his own well-equipped tool chest that is still a little taller than him. As he gets older and more capable, he is allowed to actually do real work on our projects. He first carefully listens and watches, learning what we want to accomplish. With our encouragement, Henry is very safety-conscious to a fault. Then, after putting on the appropriate safety gear, he tries on his own.

His absolute favourite time in the shop is spent working on his parade float project. We spend a few hours each weekend building his jet plane. Being seven years old, his attention span lasts a couple of hours at most, which is the perfect amount of time to accomplish a small part of the plane. Today’s first order of business was to drill and grind the custom-made brackets for the canopy struts. Then we fit and welded them into place. Henry helped me bolt the struts into position, and amazingly, they worked perfectly when he happily jumped into the cockpit to test the mechanism.

After each work session, we first take time to admire our progress, then plan out next week’s activity, and make a list of the supplies I’ll pick up during the week. I know he’ll be eagerly counting the days until next weekend when we get to work on the project once more. Stay tuned…

Colourful ship

The pirate ship we are building for Vala’s Pumpkin Patch in Nebraska is getting its base coats of colour and is getting more colourful each day. The entire surface is painted with more coats, and glazing will be done in the coming week. Inside the shop, the remaining sections of the ship are ready for paint. This has been a fun project for the entire crew! Stay tuned as it comes together…

Another massive sculpting day

This whole week was done full blast, sculpting the sculpting of Vala’s Pirate Ship. There’s a fine line between ambitious and greedy when we apply the magical concrete mud. Today we again skirted that line. The goal is to apply the concrete at the same pace you can soon sculpt it. With Matt and me applying the mud, Tony worked up a sweat mixing and delivering it to where we were working. Today’s mighty goal was to sculpt the poop deck floor and the two bridges that will lead guests on and off the ship. Trowelling on the concrete is the easy part and went quickly. The crew took an early coffee break, and then we moved twelve cubic yards of sand into the storage bin. By then, the concrete was ready to sculpt. We called in the entire crew, and there was absolutely no time to waste! The carving went fabulously as we chased the rapidly curing concrete. Lunch break was delayed by an hour and a half, as we didn’t dare stop and relax. The result was worth the effort and lunch delay. In the remaining work hours, we got in a shop cleanup and packed away a final twelve cubic yards of fine masonry sand into the storage bin. Thanks to our awesome crew for a monumental effort all week!