What Are Your Projects This Weekend?
5 Comments Published by Joel April 20th, 2007 in DIY. Share ThisI’ll be spending most of tomorrow flying back from San Francisco, but Sunday I hope to dig up my hop rhizome we planted last year and transfer it into a big pot so I can move it into the optimal sunshine space. Then I might just put together my fancy new Digg button kit from Adafruit Industries. (Then I’ll be able to Digg up all the posts on Dethroner that nobody on Digg actually seems to be interested in.)
What about you? Got any good projects to knock out this weekend?
Tomorrow eve i’ll be baking Joel cookies. During the day tomorrow i’ll be separating herbs and moving them to little containers so I can give them to people (we are running out of room!). Tonight, I will be celebrating today’s date with some friends. Goodtimes!
Since I’m kind of the musical barometer and recommender among my friends, I’ll be recording my inaugural “music I like so my friends can hear it” podcast. I’m not so worried about the recording, as Audacity looks pretty dead simple. The part that worries me is the feed generation and publishing…
… and the fact that I’m making a podcast of copyrighted music. Please ignore me, RIAA, this is for about 10 people total.
Seed another row or two of spinach, transplant the night-blooming tobacco outside, then hit the garden center for manure, cotton burr and container plants.
Strip the sod on the remainder of the garden expansion and condition the soil. Plant a few token rows of two-row barley.
Rack the ‘Slush-hearted IPA’ to secondary (if I can find my third 5 gal. carboy).
Finish reading ‘Deep Survival’ (http://www.librarything.com/work/113394).
I’ll be finishing a turned oak table, made from recycled flooring and an old bannister post.
Yard work weekend! Satisfies my need to GET DIRTY. We’re mowing and edging (keeping up with the joneses). Also, now that it’s warm enough for some vinca, I’m putting it in the front flowerbeds. It’s the only annual that I seem to be able to keep alive. It’s pretty, it’s hardy, it can survive the Texas heat and full sun.