Paint Your Guts Out!
12Mar/11Off

Paint Limerick

Paint Limerick
Paint Limerick

How to work out the correct croquet ball replacment for you

If the worst has happened and you have a damaged croquet ball in your set, you do not need to throw out your perfectly good croquet set and start again, even if your set was not that expensive.  Replacement balls are very easy to get hold of.

The key things to know before you start to look for the replacements are pretty simple.

First thing to know is if the croquet set you own a tournament or competition standard set? If you have this set you should be able to identify the CA (Croquet Association) certification.  The balls with in the set should have been approved not just for size (5/8" diameter is the current standard requirement) and weight (16oz ), but also for regulation bounce.  These balls are more likely to be composite plastic though there are very rare instances of wooden regulation balls.  In the UK there is only one set with the regulation wooden balls currently on sale these are the Townsend Longworth balls. 

If you require tournament standard balls as a replacement, I really believe that the best place to source these would be through the Croquet Association.

Knowing the size of your existing balls is a key thing to know prior to starting your search.  The easiest way to do this is to weigh one of the undamaged balls.  Full sized sets should have balls that are 16oz in weight and most balls of this size are a composite plastic. 

Garden croquet sets tend to have 12oz balls and these can be either a painted wooden construction or a composite plastic.  12oz composite balls may not look dissimilar to 16oz composite balls so if you set has composite balls it is a great idea to weigh these as purchasing the wrong weight will put the player at odds with the rest of the game.

If you have a smaller /cheaper set these may come with a lighter weight ball and it is really best that you go for a similar weight though this may be harder to track down and an alternative may be to go for a full set of smaller balls instead, but be warned it is best to go for the lightest balls you can and avoid the full sized balls as your mallets may not be up to the impact.

In short before you go on the hunt – get to know what you have …Weigh and measure the diameter of the balls.  This will help you identify that replacement with ease.

About the Author

Samantha Limerick is a working mother of two school age children, working and living in Oxfordshire.

Samantha is currently working as the Sales and Customer service manager for Garden Games Ltd a leading manfacturer of Giant Garden Games,Croquet sets Sandpits,outdoor play equiptment and Action Climbing Frames. Garden games Girl is an expert in all these areas plus many random subjects.

I wonder what you will make of this limerick.............................?

There was a young girl from Australia
Who painted her backside like a dahlia
The picture was fine
And the colour devine
But the scent on the whole was a failure

lol good i like it

Limerick Uncovered Part 2 of 2

24Sep/10Off

Paint Horse Colors

Paint Horse Colors
Paint Horse Colors

Rocking Horse Plans the Kids Will Love

Rocking Horse Plans

There are many rocking horse plans available, in sizes that range from toddler to adult-sized horses. Plans for rocking horses may include specialized detailing allowing it to become a circus or carousel horse or a knight's battle horse. There are plans for rocking cows, rocking donkeys, rocking teams of horses and many more. Choosing which plan to use may take more time than building the rocking horse.

Age Appropriate

Before choosing a woodworking plan to build a rocking horse consider the age of the child for which it is intended. Some plans will indicate age appropriate designs. Taller rocking horses would be a fall hazard for a toddler. A toddler-sized rocking horse would not allow a pre-school child to rock. Some of the rocking horse plans include metal hardware and slats that could pose problems for younger children. Woodworking plans are detailed and many provide pictures of the finished project. Choosing a plan that is right for the child will provide many hours of imaginative fun and enjoyment.

Wood

There are many types of wood available for constructing rocking horses. Beginning woodworkers should consider making their first rocking horse from pine. Pine is inexpensive and is easy to work with. Carousel and circus horses have painted decorations. Using a less expensive type of wood is smart since the grain of more expensive woods would be hidden under paint. Once familiar with the plans, cherry, oak, walnut and ash are excellent choices for rocking horses. Using more than one type of wood will allow you to use heavy hardwoods on the lower parts providing stability while constructing the upper parts from a lighter less dense wood allows more ease in movement.

Finishes

There are as many ways to finish rocking horses as there are plans to build them. Wood stains are available in many shades for all types of wood. Stains for wood are also available in colors to match or accent any décor. Rocking horse plans occasionally come with finishing suggestions and tips. Varnish or polyurethane will produce a shiny finish while oils produce a soft natural finish. Painting the completed horse allows for unique and personalized finishes. Little girls might prefer a carousel horse while little boys who dream of being a knight might prefer an armored knight's horse.

Finishing Touches

Rocking horses are unique toys for children. Some plans list special materials that will allow the project to come alive. Yarn or unbraided rope can be added for the mane and tail. Covering the seat area with leather and adding reins gives a western rocking horse the feel of a real cowboy's horse. Using fur, thick material or some other fabric can help protect toddlers from hard surfaces when placed on the seat, and used as manes and tails. Metal studs can be added to work horses along with leather harnesses to provide an authentic feel to a Clydesdale rocking horse.

Rocking horse plans are plentiful and many are available online for all woodworking skill levels. Talking to the little one who will receive the rocking horse may help in choosing the right set of plans.

About the Author

Pat Fisher is a professional carpenter and woodworking craftsman. For more information on finish carpentry and household carpentry projects and plans, visit <a href="http://www.finishcarpentryhelp.com/">www.finishcarpentryhelp.com</a>.

horse color question? paint?

I know I should know this, but whats the differance between piebald, tobiano, overo, paint, and well I dont remember for some reason right now what the other ones were but whats the difference?

Piebald is a black/white pinto(http://www.coloredhorses.com/DrumsRoyalArts.jpg ), and a skewbald( http://www.coloredhorses.com/ScotchFizz.jpg ) is is any other color/white pinto. These terms are typically used over in the Uk as they have been replaced by the below terms in the states.

Paint is a stock breed while Pinto is a color.

Tobiano (http://www.equusite.com/articles/basics/colors/colorsTobiano05.shtml )as decribed by UC Davis: The pattern is clearly marked and characterized by white across the spine that extends downward between the ears and tail. The skin underlying the white spots is pink and under the colored areas it is black. The eyes are usually brown, but one or both may be blue or partially blue. The head is dark, with white markings like those of a solid colored horse. Usually, all four legs are white below the hocks and knees. The spots are generally regular and distinct as ovals or round patterns. The tail can be two colors—a characteristic seldom seen in horses that are not tobiano. A tobiano can be predominantly dark or white.

Overo's can be classified as frame, sabino, and splash white. There is also Tovero in which the horse carries a tobiano and one of the overo genes. Tovero: (http://www.equusite.com/articles/basics/colors/colorsTovero03.shtml )

Overo's the white usually does not cross back. They may have wild patterns of color.

Frame: White is on sides with base color over back, on belly, rear, shoulders like a frame. (http://www.whitehorseproductions.com/images/overo_tbs/tri-chrome.jpg ) (http://www.coloredhorses.com/MrNorfleet.jpg )

Splash white: White is on legs and belly, looks as if it had been dipped in white paint. (http://www.coloredhorses.com/BarlinkUltraLite.jpg ), ( http://www.coloredhorses.com/SpanishDuke.jpg )

Sabino: (http://www.coloredhorses.com/FirstClass.jpg ) A sabino horse has a dark base coat with a unique overlying spotting pattern. It is one of the most confusing colors to explain because a wide range of patterns are considered acceptable. White stockings that extend past the knee or hock, sometimes combined with a bald face (white extending to or past the eyes) are considered evidence of at least minimal expression of the sabino gene-complex. White stockings that extend past the knee or hock, sometimes combined with a bald face (white extending to or past the eyes) are considered evidence of at least minimal expression of the sabino gene-complex.

This page http://www.coloredhorses.com/PP2new.html has a lot of great info!

Paint Arabian Horse - Weanling Tri-Color Sport Horse - Royal Crusader CTA

15Jul/10Off

Paint Doctor Delaware

Paint Doctor Delaware

Political Rules Of The Road

30Jun/10Off

Paint Stores Albuquerque

Paint Stores Albuquerque
Paint Stores Albuquerque

If a group of volunteers could revive this rust bucket, picture just what your team of rust proofing pros could do!

Most Saturday mornings, Mike Hartshorne, M.D., chief of radiology in Albuquerque, New Mexico Veterans Hospital and professor of radiology in the University of New Mexico, dons a Tyvek suit, gloves, and hard hat and straps on a DBI/SALA Stop II protection funnel secured to a lifeline. Armed with an Ingersoll-Rand 125 needle-scaler and a flashlight, he climbs down into a enclosed space that, for many, may really feel just like the very bowels of hell.

Hell is the 24,000-gallon water tank of the Santa Fe 2926, a 60-year-old steam engine locomotive undergoing the slow process of restoration, in fact it is one of the four dirtiest places in Albuquerque, in Hartshorne's evaluation. Dr. Mike's mission on this day will be to get rid of a 3/8" thick layer of calcium carbonate locally referred to as caliche which clings to the metal, along with baked-on grease inlayed with sand, plus a gooey, Vaseline-like asphalt, and rust that's stuck between the layers of steel in the locomotive's fuel tender. Bound by a desire for locomo-tives, Hartshorne and the 20 or so other volunteers which congregate in the construction site on Wednesdays and Saturdays really feel duty-bound in order to restore the locomotive to its original 1944 operating condition. Experienced in jobs who have nothing related to surface prep and coating including pastor, policeman, college professor, firefighter, dentist, electrician, auto mechanic, small-business owner, lab technician, and radiologist â€" they donate hundreds of hours of hard physical work. It's all in the desire that, some six years and $600,000 from now, they will see the 2926 smoking along at 100 mph, tugging excursion trains over the Southwest on tracks possessed by Burlington Northern Santa Fe.

The Santa Fe 2926, a 1944 steam locomotive left abandoned in an Albuquerque city park a half-decade ago (background), might pull excursion trains once more. It's been adopted by the New Mexico Steam Locomotive and Railroad Historical Society, whose members volunteer a number of hours a week to its repair. The cleaning and coating of the 2926 began in April 2003 and is expected to take at least six more years.

Radiologist Mike Hartshorne, M.D. (inset), wearing an air-supplied hood, heads to the bowels of the tender's sandbox, watched carefully by retired cop Ken Dusenberry, to whom he is secured by protection harness. The sandbox stored sand that has been fired through the locomotive's firebox to maintain its engine free of smoke. It's not a job for the claustrophic, says Hartshorne, who needed to overcome his fear of enclosed areas in order to clear the interior of soot and gooey asphalt.

Among the Largest, Heaviest, and Most-Powerful Steam Engines

At 121'-long and almost one million pounds, it was among the largest, heaviest, and most effective 4-8-4s (which describes the wheel settings) ever constructed. Only 6 of these remain, none operable. Just like the 2926, they have been left to crumble in city parks around the region.

There's been no preservation on them, notes Hartshorne. Every few years, somebody slaps a new coat of anything black on them. The 2926 was retired in Albuquerque's Coronado Park in 1956, at which it fell prey to vandals, graffiti taggers, and vagrants who lit fires in her caboose to remain heated through the night. Then, in 1999, the 200-member New Mexico Steam Locomotive and Railroad Historical Society (NMSL&RHS) purchased the locomotive from the city for $1, and started the titanic project of amassing money and manpower so that restoration work could commence.

Besides a $30,000 grant from the city's Wheels Museum, that eventually would like to see the locomotive as its centerpiece, the money has seeped in slowly. Bob DeGroft, a 65-year-old retired office-furniture supplier, keeps an eye on accounting, auditing, insurance, and other administrative tasks for the Society. Some of the money comes from just begging, he says, mentioning that many charities concentrate on humanitarian causes instead of fixing a piece of equipment. One such service was the June 2000 carting of the locomotive from Coronado Park on to the track where it's being renewed. of Texas that cost $160,000. Says Hartshorne, We were able to spend about $40,000, and, when I got to be chief executive of the Society, I asked everyone to dig deep to generate more money. Eventually, I got a call from Jack's wife in Texas â€" somebody had sent him a copy of our newsletter. ‘He does not want the money,' she stated. He excused more than $100,000 from what we owed him, and then came back two years afterwards and does some more work for us. All he got was a sign that said, ‘Thanks, Jack.'

Dismantle individual sections of engine and tender

Coat all surfaces with Rust Bullet, a rust-inhibitive coating

SAFETY CONSIDERATIONS:

All volunteers receive 3-hour security orientation (PPE, HAZMAT, MSDS, confined-space)

PPE includes steel-toed shoes, goggles, gloves, air-line respira-tors with hoods, and security harnesses secured with lifelines

Confined-space work restricted to 30-minute increments

Crane Service Company of Albuquerque donated one of its large lift cranes along with a team to hoist the large oil tank out of the tender car and place it on wood shoring. Based on Society members, six decades of paint, mud, oil, grease, and tar encrusted the tank, inside and out, which makes it difficult to wrest the tank free. He climbs feet-first through an 18-diameter pit, rolls over on his belly, and then crawls on his hands and knees some twenty feet over the baffles to a location where he can finally stand up. The first couple of times I crawled in the water tank, I wasn't thrilled about being there, he tells. Close Awareness to Safety

The volunteer position of safety officer has been assumed by Jon Spargo, security officer for the Very Large Array (VLA) in Socorro, New Mexico, a series of giant radio telescopes run by the National Radio Astronomy Observatory. We have a lot of folks who are long on enthusiasm, but short on experience, explains Spargo, who says the procedure of bringing the volunteers up to OSHA security standards is like herding cats. "I walk a thin line" I don't want to be overbearing and take the fun out of it, but I also don't want anyone to get hurt, he says. "I want us to have the image of being extremely professional not a bunch of old geezers playing choo-choo. Apart from OSHA specifications, the restoration work must meet the very stringent safety guidelines of the Federal Railroad Administration (FRA), along with the Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railroad, from whom authorization must be granted to perform an excursion service. Spargo's security attempts are assisted by Judy Sadel, a registered nurse and semi-retired firefighter, who has joined her husband, Bob, in becoming one of the team. When she's not getting 'down and dirty,Sadel operates a makeshift rehab station for the confined-space workers, equipped with a stethoscope, blood-pressure monitor, water, and Gatorade.

Spargo spent early on in air-line respirators, security harnesses, and other security equipment, so that the volunteers never have to use shortcuts. He restricts confined-space work to half-hour increments, and always has a staff standing by to enter in case a problem should arise.

Sparked by childhood thoughts of watching steam locomotives pass by, the Sadels, like the other volunteers, are “steam-engine aficionados. When all is said and done, says Sadel, "I can say, I was part of it because I was actually doing things with the rest of the crew."

A Unique Coating

After hauling numerous hundred pounds of caliche out of the container, Hartshorne and the other volunteers use a pressure-washer altered with a blast-media delivery process in order to achieve a surface profile of bare metal or light rust. Copper slag from local New Mexico mines is the medium of choice. They have opted to paint the surface of the tender with a rust-inhibitive coating called Rust Bullet, which can be applied over light rust, provided the area is free of dirt and grease, Hartshorne says.

Created 22 years ago by a Los Angeles inventor who worked for NASA, the single-component, hybrid, moisture-cured urethane coating has been initially designed for Air Force aircraft, to shield the wingtips from scratching during flight, says Bob Murphy, president and CEO of Rust Bullet. Using Rust Bullet on the locomotive came from from Bob Kittel of Long Beach, California, who had spearheaded a related repair project on the "3751" steam locomotive for the San Bernardino (California) Railroad Historical Society. With his task efficiently completed, Kittel now serves as advisor for the Albuquerque venture. He had found out Rust Bullet on the Internet through his other hobby, restoring Model A Fords.

"I had used another product, which seemed tough, but it didn't hold up to UV light or on locomotives," he says. "A locomotive is a peculiar beast" it runs outdoors and it is basically a big boiler on wheels, with a lot of steam, water, etc., all of which have detrimental effects. Rust Bullet's success on the "3751" led Kittel to recommend it to the NMSL&RHS for the Albuquerque locomotive's restoration.

The two-application product penetrates the porous rust and reaches the metal beneath, altering isocyanates and water into a polymer matrix that gives off carbon dioxide, according to Murphy. Basically, the rust gets intertwined in the resin matrix and becomes a permanent component of the coating. "We didn't trust it at first one of our volunteers, Paul Uhland, used to be in the Navy, and he said, "You can't paint over rust! It will just trap the rust beneath it." So we let it harden and then took a grinder to it. We couldn't find any rust. There was clean metal under it." The silver-colored Rust Bullet doesn't require a topcoat, but will bond well to one if desired for appearance, says Murphy.

"When you apply the product, it doesn't form a film immediately, he explains. One factor Hartshorne has found out is that Rust Bullet does not come off skin except if it is removed right away his spouse had to file a chunk of the coating off his nose with an emery board. "I figure I'll still be doing this when I'm an old man."

About the Author

<a href="http://www.briisbanewhalewatching.com.au">Brisbane Whale Watching</a> invites you to come on board the magnificent 'Eye-Spy' for an encounter with the whales. Of all the great whales, the humpback is the most surface active displaying behaviour that will not only inspire you but leave you in awe. There quite clearly is no better place to observe the mighty humpback than Brisbane's Moreton Bay, recognised as one of the world's best Whale watching areas.<br />

Bond Paint Co.