February this year my girlfriend and I purchased a house in a village in Bulgaria, the house is in need of lots of work but it is surrounded by valleys and forest and comes with lots of land and a couple of barns. We decided we would move there as soon as we can, everything is so much cheaper there and the village life is like stepping back in time, people bringing you home made cheese and yoghurt, nearest thing to a traffic jam is a donkey in the road. I have always wanted to get into woodwork, my grandfather was always a carpenter and all my memories of him involve wood chippings saw dust ... oh and playing the spoons. But I have been a computer programmer and the last few years living in a flat so woodwork has just been something I thought was something I wish I could have done. Well now I have the space coming, a barn to convert into a workshop and a house that gives me so many excuses, doors, kitchen bathroom .. well everything needed.
So my first step, buy some books, see what tools were needed, I was told that the tools in Bulgaria are not good quality and can be hard to come by .. by a Bulgarian.. so my purchases are happening here and now. Ofc reading the books I have been buying table saws, routers, bandsaws, planner thicknessers etc, and the last few weeks have been like Christmas. All needing to be compact as they will have to be taken over with our furniture so nothing fantastic but the best I could afford and the ones recommended after searching the internet.
But now... Hand tools, there is nothing more enticing than a nice set of chisels, a good looking hand plane or a gorgeous brass backed tennon saw. I am hooked, have the tools at my work storage, getting all my remaining stock covered in saw dust and getting lost in all the things about woodwork I never even knew existed... grain direction.. joint strengths... tool maintenance. I just can't wait to get out there and set up a real workshop rather than make do with 'playing' when I get a free moment at work.
So what is this message about... just saying hello I guess and making it so when you all get annoyed later with my thousands of questions you know who it is annoying you
Oh one real question.. some of the outbuildings are made with lots of wood, mainly from trees that grow on the land like walnut etc.. could any of this be useful?
Hope anyone who reads this isn't too bored just had to share my excitement I guess. And yes this excitement is still here after working a set of chisels on some waterstones.
Already not a fan of the Veritas MKII, just doesn't hold the chisel secure enough I think.
Neil
So my first step, buy some books, see what tools were needed, I was told that the tools in Bulgaria are not good quality and can be hard to come by .. by a Bulgarian.. so my purchases are happening here and now. Ofc reading the books I have been buying table saws, routers, bandsaws, planner thicknessers etc, and the last few weeks have been like Christmas. All needing to be compact as they will have to be taken over with our furniture so nothing fantastic but the best I could afford and the ones recommended after searching the internet.
But now... Hand tools, there is nothing more enticing than a nice set of chisels, a good looking hand plane or a gorgeous brass backed tennon saw. I am hooked, have the tools at my work storage, getting all my remaining stock covered in saw dust and getting lost in all the things about woodwork I never even knew existed... grain direction.. joint strengths... tool maintenance. I just can't wait to get out there and set up a real workshop rather than make do with 'playing' when I get a free moment at work.
So what is this message about... just saying hello I guess and making it so when you all get annoyed later with my thousands of questions you know who it is annoying you
Oh one real question.. some of the outbuildings are made with lots of wood, mainly from trees that grow on the land like walnut etc.. could any of this be useful?
Hope anyone who reads this isn't too bored just had to share my excitement I guess. And yes this excitement is still here after working a set of chisels on some waterstones.
Already not a fan of the Veritas MKII, just doesn't hold the chisel secure enough I think.
Neil