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Currently painting the new plant table; weirdly, the cheap primer I used claimed on the can to need 12 hours to dry, but it was fine after like 2 hours? I just applied the top (color) coat on top of it, and had no issues whatsoever.

This can of paint is one of my bargain bin cans - the local hardware store usually has a cart with assorted stuff on it that they are trying to get rid of, usually because they're no longer selling it. Discounts between 50% and 99% are not uncommon - at one point I got some 35 EUR table legs for 1 EUR each.

Sometimes there are cans of paint on there as well - presumably these are the result of some employee accidentally mixing the wrong color for a customer, and them deciding to try and recoup some of the cost for the erroneous can by putting it on the cart at a discount.

So I've been picking up some of these cans every once in a while, and now I have a decent collection of semi-random (and often unusual) colors for projects like this where I don't need any particular specific color!

Tomorrow, when the plant table is fully dry, I can continue with my *actual* project (for which the table and the garage were dependencies): pre-planting seeds for my vegetable garden.

I've also finally installed a garden hose box, because I am sick and tired of my garden hoses laying on the ground outside and getting damaged and needing replacement all the time (storing them inside is impractical because of frequent use and being wet)...

The plant table is done and installed! Quite happy with the result, considering that it was a practice project and all the wood involved was crap 😄

(Also, this is the first table I've ever built, I think?)

Cleared out some more invasive vines in the garden, and moved my flat greenhouse thingem to a new location!

There's nothing in there yet except for dirt, compost and vermiculite - but I'll probably be putting some lettuce in there soon, if nothing else.

The adopted strawberry plants seem pretty happy with their new home!

Completed! That's like, 3 years worth of vine backlog deleted. Now nice things can finally grow there, instead of just endless uncontrollable vine overgrowth!

I am so, so exhausted now. Did a second trip to Action today, bringing back a crapload of ground cover, so I was already tired by the time I got back, and then the vine removal... including removing the two 'base plants' which had developed roots with a diameter of like 8-10cm...

Today, I've made a Gridfinity paint tube holder, for the cheap tubes of paint sold at Action (that still didn't have a place of storage here)

I've also hacked together a rough dirt sieve from skewers and metal wire, to remove branches and roots and such from soil before I reuse it for something else

My paint tubes are now nicely stored alongside the rest of my everything :)

Well, today was mostly spent talking in Dangerous Professional to the manager of the local McDonald's, to get a friend of mine the salary they are entitled to. Things set in motion, and now we wait.

Speaking of which, if you work for McDonald's in the Netherlands and are on a part-time or full-time contract, check your pay slip. They *should* be paying you for your contract hours plus overtime, *not* for the clocked-in hours. But according to the local manager they always calculate by clocked-in hours (as per head office policy), which is illegal.

(Exception: they can shuffle hours to other weeks to make up the weekly contracted amount of hours. As long as it works out to the correct average in the end. But as we've found out, it is by no means guaranteed that that actually happens.)

These are tomato seedlings, right? I'm not missing something? Could they possibly be something else, like a weed?

(I ask because these are showing up in areas that I *definitely* didn't sow tomato seeds in, nor any similar plants...)

Thanks to @pixouls I now know what happened, I think! I mixed some home compost into my potting soil, and in the past I've composted... tomatoes! So most likely these are seeds that survived in the compost all that time.

Which, funnily enough, means that I now have tomato plants as a type of weeds

Gardening update! Over the past weeks I've been slowly planting various things, and organizing my backyard.

Looks like I now have early bumblebees enjoying the raspberry plants 🙂

Today's workshop improvements! Reused an empty 3D printing filament spool as a spool for the long extension card in the garage, installed some hooks to hang my (non-electric) scooter on (finally, it's no longer in my way!), and finally added some nonslip tape to a working surface so that I can safely put stationary tools on it without them moving around and without having to bolt them down permanently.

I've also been working on finishing my plant tables for the garden today, but I don't have any usable pictures yet. Today's work is mostly just fixing the parts I already put together; there wasn't enough room for imprecisions in the wood so I've had to change the design a bit, and move a couple of planks.

I've snapped some crappy (because lack of daylight) pictures of the in-progress woodworking project! As well as the little spacer tool I made to ensure the planks are at the correct distance from each other, and will match up at the ends.

I now have four of these 'half tables', that will then be transported outside and combined per two into a whole table, adding the two missing legs. That's why the spacing is important - it needs to match between all of them, or the point where they get joined won't line up!

Today's progress in Project Workshop Density: installed some overhead storage hooks for long things, so that they finally aren't in my way anymore; and installed an auto-retracting hose spool for my compressed air onto the ceiling.

Also worked on the plant tables a bit; cut and added all the ledges that the 'floor' planks will rest on. Assuming it's sufficiently dry tomorrow, I might assemble and install them outside tomorrow! Can't do that in the garage, because once fully assembled they won't fit through a doorway anymore.

Basically I'm trying to fit everything efficiently in what one might call a one-car garage if one were generous. Efficiently enough that there's actually enough space to work on projects. While also storing gardening tools and a bunch of miscellaneous stuff in there.

Just picked the first few strawberries from my own garden!

I have finally finished my raised beds (aka plant tables)! This isn't the first woodworking project I've finished, but it's the first that I *started*, back in 2020. Plenty of setbacks in health and circumstance delayed the project, but I got there eventually 🙂

Now all that remains is to put some permeable plastic in there to help keep the dirt and roots inside while still allowing drainages between the planks, and filling it with soil and plants!

Today's project: fixing the design issue in the foldable machine frame I bought (lidl.nl/p/parkside-universeel-), which requires you to install bolts upside down to fasten a machine to it, which is very annoying because it falls out during installation all the time! And it makes it needlessly difficult to swap machines, which is the whole reason I got it.

So now I'm designing a sort of 'bolt carrier' that can slide across the slot along with the bolt and hold the bolt in place, in the hopes that this will fix my problem. If it does work, I can add a tool-less wingnut-type thing to it, to make it easier to swap out machines.

One raised bed is now done entirely, soil and planting and all; the other is ready to have soil deposited into it.

Today's projects: filling the other raised bed with (mixed) soil, bolting a rack to the wall in the garage, as well as a ledge to hang my long clamps on, and finally the biggest project of the day: putting my table saw on wheels!

(And accidentally generating a sorting challenge, oops)

I built a new work table for my garage today! Sort of! There were already two half storage racks there with some planks haphazardly on top, serving as a makeshift worktable; so I sanded the edges of some very thin plywood of sorts, varnished it, then nailed it to the top. And now it looks a lot nicer!

I also made a little tray hanging on the wall, to hold my glue and spray cans and such.

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Project update! Our living room is multi-use, so we needed an easier way to move the table around. And now it has wheels!

This was somewhat nontrivial - originally the table only had two thin rectangular 'feet' as part of the sideboard's shape, not wide enough to mount wheels too. So I also had to make little feet, screwed to the underside, that can hold the wheel mounts.

The color match isn't *perfect*, but it's pretty good! The feet started as bits of plywood; I glued two layers of it together per foot, sanded the entire stack of 4 feet down as a single block, then manually sanded nice smooth edges all around. Then a few (rapid) coats of wood stain, and finally a coat of varnish.

I also accidentally discovered a new technique in the process; the only varnish I have is glossy, but the table's varnish is matte. Turns out that by repeatedly alternately a) lightly and carefully sanding and b) applying some highly diluted varnish (ie. the water from my brush cleaning pot...), you can turn it into a matte finish!

(Pictures of the wheels installed on the table in next toot)

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As promised, the remaining pictures of the wheels (and feet) installed on the table!

I did a little experiment today and figured out a new painting technique: using a (very wide) putty knife to paint a desktop!

The goal was to get a smooth, even layer of paint down, with no visible strokes; on top of a desktop that was already in quite poor shape, with some bits bulging out slightly.

Will have to see how it dries, of course, but so far the results are looking very promising!

(well, barely, it's an old IKEA desktop so it's more cardboard than wood probably)

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