Tag Archives: Fun

Cure for the common cold

Like almost everyone else in the United States, I seem to have gotten some sort of cold.  Upon recommendation of my Dad, I tried some Theraflu and it is really pretty amazing stuff.  It soothed my throat and dried up my snot-maker.  I still feel pretty miserable though so I decided to amp it up a bit.

Ginger brandy for what ails you!

I remember my Grandpa sipping on ginger brandy when he had a cold.  He wasn’t a drinker at all so for him to hit the brandy, it must have been effective.  I headed to the local drug store tonight.  After slinking through the liquor aisle, I found a bottle of the exact brand of ginger brandy Grandpa used to drink.  Like Grandpa, I am not much of a drinker.  I had no idea how to drink brandy so I figured I would start with a straw.  It worked but it didn’t seem too tough drinking hooch through a straw.  I considered how they drink on tv so I decided to do brandy shots.  I can report that after 11 shots, I am not feeling any pain at all.  I have developed a red nose though.

Anyhow, I am definitely feeling no pain, but I don’t know that I truly knocked out the cold.  With a bit of scientific Google research, I found a few more home remedies to try out.  I read that zinc can shorten the life of a cold.  I didn’t have any zinc laying around but I know that pennies are made partly of zinc.  The above study said 15 mg of zinc is the recommended dose for men.  Pennies are 97.5% zinc and 2.5% copper.  An individual penny weighs 2.5 grams.  Though I am in an altered state, I believe that means that each penny has 2437.5 mg of zinc.  As always, if some is good, more is better so I swallowed 2 pennies and another shot of brandy.  I also discovered that increased copper will help reduce LDL cholesterol and lower blood pressure…awesome!  And another shot of brandy for health!

I found a listing of all sorts of home remedies as well.  Some were easy to try.  One suggestion is that lemon and some honey mixed in water would reduce the length of a cold.  I have honey from my bees but I am a little short on lemons.  The kids still had some Halloween candy so I swiped a packet of lemonheads from their stash and chased them with a tablespoon of honey.  Now, I expect that some of this stuff will help my cold.  By the way, is a headache part of the recovery from a cold?  I am starting to get a bit of a headache and a cottony mouth…we’ll see how that turns out.  Anyhow, does anyone else have any home remedies that work?  I am in need!

Adventure at the Clay Center

Fun at the Clay Center

We used to live in Nashville, TN before moving to WV.  On a visit back to TN last year, we took a tour of the Adventure Science Center.  We decided to buy a family membership which is good at many museums and centers across the country…including the Clay Center in WV.  This weekend, we decided to head for the Clay Center to see what we could get into.  We arrived at 11:45 or so on Sunday morning and basically had the place to ourselves.  We took in a planetarium show which included the movie, “Space Oddities”  as well as the typical tour of the constellations (which was excellent).  Fun at the Clay Center

We exited out of the planetarium directly into the art gallery which had a special display of WV artists in addition to the gallery-owned pieces.  We each picked our favorite pieces.

Fun at the Clay Center

In particular, Abigail liked a modern piece and wanted a picture.  Of course, we couldn’t take a picture so she is determined to write the artist a letter asking for a print of the piece.  I suspect she will succeed.  Anyhow, it was great to see them excited to pick their favorites (though they were ready to move on as soon as they had found their pieces).  We ventured into two displays they had including Milton Gardener’s Earth City and Health Royale.

Fun at the Clay Center

Fun at the Clay Center

Earth City was a cool model of an old-timey road-side attraction where the kids could play with water to discover how it flows as well as see all sorts of gizmos to move water and soak unsuspecting bystanders.  They had boots attached to a conveyor belt that the kids manually operated to fill a bin that occasionally dumped.  We watched as water trickled down through all sorts of things and saw how steam (fog) travels through a valley.

Fun at the Clay Center

In Health Royale, there were a number of games, but in particular the kids enjoyed a Hollywood-squares-esque game where various body parts helped the kids answer questions about oral hygeine.  Isaac loved the talking brain especially.

Fun at the Clay Center

Finally, we went to an exhibit called the Gizmo Factory that was all about fun with physics.  The kids got to reflect lasers through fog via mirrors, pull themselves up in a chair with pulleys, see how a computer translated their dance into sounds, play a laser harp, and watch water and a ball defy gravity.

All told, we spent 3 full hours exploring the fun at the museum.  The best part was that it was all free (aside from our membership which has already paid for itself).  

The kids had a blast and would have stayed longer if we would have let them.

We’ll definitely go back and soon.  Next week they decorate for Christmas which includes a display of model trains and trees decorated in various styles from around the world.  I can’t wait to go back!

Fun at the Clay Center

Fun at the Clay Center

Fun at the Clay Center

Fun at the Clay Center

Fun at the Clay Center

Junk vibrobot

Junk vibrobot

There is a category of electric critters called vibrobots.  I hesitate to call them robots , but I guess they are autonomous moving things.  Anyhow, as usual, I have bits of junk laying around that tend to rear up and get in the way now and then.  I have an old motor I salvaged out of a vcr or something.  I also had wire insulation hangers from my crawlspace insulation project.  That’s about all you need to build a junk vibrobot.  I bent a paperclip in an L-shape and taped a screw to one end of it.  The screw attached off center of the motor shaft throws the balance of the motor off so it vibrates.  Since it is attached to rigid, skinny wire feet, the vibrations through those feet on a hard surface translate into motion…random motion!

Junk vibrobot

So, I zip-tied the end of the paperclip without the screw to the shaft of the motor.  I then bent the insulation hangers in an arc and zip-tied the 2 sets of legs around the motor.  I hooked a 9-volt battery to the motor contacts and away it went.   I tried putting little rubber feet on it but the bare wire on hardwood jittered the best.

Mo, our silly cat had to get in on the fun.  The kids had a blast running the v-bot around Mo.  They had it timed perfectly so he would jump in the air when it started spinning.  For a cheap toy, it was quite a bit of fun!  Just a word of warning though…if you do this on your dining room table, be sure the cat is not around.  Also, be sure your wife is not around as she will not be impressed with the cat on the table or with the little scratches the v-bot feet leave.  Of course, this is certainly not the first time I have scratched the dining room table…but that’s another story.


Click the image for a short video

Here are some other vibrobots that other people have made.  I have seen some that are solar powered, some that look just like bugs, and some that are made or worse junk than mine.

Itty bitty vibrobot
Bristlebot
Minty vibrobot

Chinese – making our fortune…cookies

making fortune cookies

I was reading the Y-2K Hippie blog last week and saw they had posted a recipe for fortune cookies.  I love Chinese food but am usually not brave enough to eat it at a Chinese restaurant.  That leaves us with typically not eating Chinese…but the homemade fortune cookies seemed like a really cool idea so we decided to make some and along with a Chinese entree.  I cut come strips of paper and asked the kids to write some fortunes.  Being young and inexperienced at it, they quickly ran out of wisdom to impart.

making fortune cookies

I said, “just write anything, draw a picture…just fill out all the papers.”  Well, they made up in ink what they lacked in content.  Isaac drew all sorts of epic battles on his half-inch wide sheets.  Abigail wrote things like, “dog, dog, cat, cat, Dad, Dad, Mom, Mom”.  Oh, the fortunes we’re great fun.  They were certainly cryptic which made them feel more fortune-like.  Anyhow, we mixed up the recipe :

making fortune cookies

Fortune Cookies
1 cup Margarine
1/2 cup sugar
1 egg
2 1/2 teaspoons vanilla
3 1/4 cups of flour
1/2 teaspoon of baking powder
2 tablespoons of lemon juice
I kneaded it some and then rolled it out thin (though not thin enough….it needs to be really thin).  We cut circles with our biscuit cutter, added the fortunes, then folded the circles in half, then in half again.  We baked at 425 for 10 min….and then 5 minutes more.

making fortune cookies

Ok, the most important part was done. We also stir-fried some beef and broccoli with a seasoning packet we bought at the store. Based on the fact that we had to add soy sauce and some other stuff, I am pretty sure we just bought a packet of corn starch with Chinese lettering. As we cooked, Mohinder our cat bravely wandered into the kitchen. He made a lot of racket and never realized the fate he could have met.

Chinese cooking

Anyhow, Emily and I stirred and tended the stuff with bamboo cookware (just to be authentic – plus, it is all we have) and bowed to each other a lot (apologies to all my Asian friends for all of the terrible cliches and inaccuracies).

Chinese cooking

It was a lot of fun! Anyhow, it cooked up great along with some delicious fried rice. We plowed through every bit of what we cooked as well as a plate full of cupcakes the kids and their Mommaw decorated. Our fortunes were interesting, but I am sure I found my real fortune in good food and good times!

Ship in a lightbulb

Cutting a lightbulb

In addition to checking Woot every day, there is another site that I check pretty regularly called Instructables.  Last week I was browsing and found an instructable on how to build a ship in a lightbulb.  In an effort to postpone several of the projects that I really should be working on, I decided to build myself a ship in a lightbulb.

Erasers for ship in a lightbulb

A few things I learned:

1.  It’s never as easy as they say to get the base off of a lightbulb.

2.  Never try to get the base off of a lightbulb in shorts and barefeet.

3.  Never try to get the base off of a lighbulb over a couch or carpet.

4.  A shattering lightbulb will send glass many feet in all directions.

This is just stuff I heard about…don’t really know if any of it is true!

Ship in a lightbulb

OK, so I couldn’t get the base off like the article suggested.  Fortunately, I have tinkered with stained glass so I know how to cut glass.  Cutting the base off of a light bulb is not easy since the glass is incredibly thin.  Once that’s off, the rest is simple.  We’re not much for drinking wine (though cutting the bulb nearly drove me to drink!), so we didn’t have any corks laying around.  Of course, I rarely follow directions either so I was still in good shape as far as the instructable goes.

Ship in a lightbulb

Instead, I got some erasers and made my boat from them.  I painted it and made a mast.  Setting the mast up was pretty simple which was a surprise.  I was very excited when I got it done.  I showed the kids my creation and they were only slightly curious how I got the ship inside.  I tried to convince them of all sorts of trickery, but Isaac called my bluff.  He finally said, “Yeah, whatever Dad.”  Still, they sort of got a kick out of it and I had some fun too!  I put it on the top shelf of one of our bookcases where it can showcase our extensive dust collection!

My first time…

Knifty knitter loom

They say you never forget your first time…knitting.  This weekend will forever be in my memory.  This special time of my life was beyond my expectation.  Why do people have such a hard time talking to the kids about…knitting?

So I was inspired by the folks at Children in the Corn to try this form of loom knitting.  I have never been one to have enough patience to sit down and do stuff like this so their mention of knocking out a hat in an evening was appealing.  I have never heard of Knifty Knitter looms so I wandered out to our local junk retailer and bought the cheapest one they had.  There are a variety of looms for making all sorts of things but I wanted to ease into this.  My wife accuses me of too often jumping into things with both feet so I decided to honor her and only spend $4 on this newest hobby (if it becomes that).  So, the cheapest loom that the junk retailer had was the flower loom.  The package assured me that I could make all sorts of things besides flowers so I figured I was set for life.  Never mind the pink loom or the purple hook.  I was about to be a knitter.

Knifty knitter loom knitting

What I didn’t know was that the only pattern that came with the loom was for flowers.  A quick internet search turned up the only other pattern for that loom – the friendze scarf.  Cool…I have a daughter…she’ll dig a friendze scarf knitted by her Dad on a pink loom.  This isn’t wierd at all.  Sure enough, Abigail loved the first scarf I knitted.  She danced around as I worked on the first one.  She sang and laughted and giggled and hung around while I worked.  She even said she loved me for knitting her a scarf.  She took it to school to show her friends and teacher.  I really like knitting now…that’s the easiest $4 I ever spent!

I learned a few things along the way…superglue every other peg into the loom if you never plan to make flowers.  The pegs are designed to pull out for flowers but are a real pain for scarves.

Work around the loom clockwise but wrap the thread around individual pegs counter clockwise. If you don’t, you’ll gnaw off your own arm and beat yourself senseless with it…trust me on this one lefty.

Single color yarn is more difficult to work with than variegated.  Both are cool though.

Friendze scarf

Get more looms.  My daughter liked the first two scarves but I think she is ready for something cooler and bigger now.  These things are so simple to use that I will likely buy more and make more stuff.  I need to wear a winter hat in the cold as I have no hair to protect my noggin.  I tend to go through knit hats like I change underwear…at least once a month.  Being able to knit my own in an hour or so sounds pretty good to me.

If you buy a pink loom, don’t let your son catch you using it.  My boy doesn’t know why he teases me but he knows it’s funny.  That’s all I will say about that.

Special times…I will never forget my first time…knitting.  Now that I have done it, I can’t get enough.  I want to knit all the time – in the car, watching tv, outside in the woods, while other people watch.  I am a knit-o-maniac!