Joel_BC
Super Self-Sufficient
Yeah, "The Tool Shed" - sits well with me.
People are still getting to know me here, so I'll tell you why I like the idea of a shop forum. I believe we live in an era of disappearing practical skills. Young people today are skilled with the monitor, keyboard, and miniature 'texting' devices. They often know how to play elaborate digital games. But in a way, very many of them are cripples. Cripples in the realm of useful life skills. Because there's a huge realm of practical skills that people have decreasingly been exposed to - and the topics now covered on the SS site (budgeting, cost saving, re-purposing, food raising and preserving, recipes for cooking, etc) cover a lot of this ground, and that's admirable.
When I moved to my current home location, I was a young guy with the barest skills in carpentry, woodworking, house-electrical, and firewood cutting. I'd taken up residence on nine acres, and I wanted and needed to learn much more. The locals did not know me and had not known my family. The guys who had real tradesmen's skills would spend little or no time imparting them to me. Hence, I look back on it as a slow process of learning - some from this book, some from that; a bit from this guy, a bit from that; a lot from trial and error.
But now we have the internet. You can get info, audio-visual demonstrations, and advice. Things can be made easier for those who simply wish to learn.
My guess is a Tool Shed forum will not only stimulate more questions in this area but also attract new members to come here and share things that they know.
People are still getting to know me here, so I'll tell you why I like the idea of a shop forum. I believe we live in an era of disappearing practical skills. Young people today are skilled with the monitor, keyboard, and miniature 'texting' devices. They often know how to play elaborate digital games. But in a way, very many of them are cripples. Cripples in the realm of useful life skills. Because there's a huge realm of practical skills that people have decreasingly been exposed to - and the topics now covered on the SS site (budgeting, cost saving, re-purposing, food raising and preserving, recipes for cooking, etc) cover a lot of this ground, and that's admirable.
When I moved to my current home location, I was a young guy with the barest skills in carpentry, woodworking, house-electrical, and firewood cutting. I'd taken up residence on nine acres, and I wanted and needed to learn much more. The locals did not know me and had not known my family. The guys who had real tradesmen's skills would spend little or no time imparting them to me. Hence, I look back on it as a slow process of learning - some from this book, some from that; a bit from this guy, a bit from that; a lot from trial and error.
But now we have the internet. You can get info, audio-visual demonstrations, and advice. Things can be made easier for those who simply wish to learn.
My guess is a Tool Shed forum will not only stimulate more questions in this area but also attract new members to come here and share things that they know.