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Joined: May 2024
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It started innocently enough....
[Linked Image from i.imgur.com]

But then it got serious...
[Linked Image from i.imgur.com]

And it started to snowball
[Linked Image from i.imgur.com]

and it just keeps getting better.
[Linked Image from i.imgur.com]

It sure beats playing golf

1 member likes this: Stanton Hillis
Joined: Nov 2021
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My life has been all over the map. I was poor as a church mouse as a kid and started designing and building things I couldn't have. Never stopped. I taught myself trigonometry from an old textbook I got at Goodwill for 10 cents. I was 9 years old at the time. I took my dad's tools (he was a carpenter) some scrap from a heap and built myself a workable transit. I ended up getting a Masters in Chemical Engineering with a Minor in Math. Always liked woodworking due to going to jobsites and staying all day with my Dad when I was 4 years old. Ended up working with him on construction jobs until I started college. When I got married I built most of the furniture for our first house. I built our first three homes myself on nights and weekends.

By my count, I have owned over 100 cars in my life. Aside from daily drivers they were mostly sports cars and European cars. Most were oddities such as a first year Opal GT with a tiny 1100 engine. Only rule was they had to be interesting. I didn't collect much, just bought, fixed up, drove and sold. My only keeper was an MGA MK II 1962, which was very nearly the last A made. I did a frame up restoration, twice, down to the last nut bolt, and did all the work myself except for paint. Kept it over 40 years.

Always into photography, I moved into large format landscape for years (Ansel Adams and Group f/64 junkie). Winning several national awards and a State Fair exhibition led to a little commercial work (calendars and business building decoration). In keeping with the making theme I built a couple of cutting edge modern view cameras that worked well.

Always liked string instruments and built my first one for my future wife while in college. She appeared in a yearly mountain music festival with original instruments and I built her a dulcimer before the craze for roots music was really a big thing. She used it to perform at a travel convention show in the fairground stadium in Louisville before 11000 people. Later my Dad started making the design and sold them through craft fairs. Over the years I made guitars, fiddles, dobroes, mandolins, bazoukis, wooden percussion instruments etc. I also got into buying and rebuilding vintage instruments. The favorite guitar I own is a 1931 Martin 12 fret O-17 with bar frets. Bought it as a wreck, took it apart and rebuilt it with original parts. Most people think it is the sweetest sounding finger picking machine they have ever played.

I was drawn early to fishing and hunting and became interested in boats. I have owned a boat of some kind continuously for over 60 years. Our most active period was the 10 years we owned a home on the Florida panhandle. We kept a bay boat in a dry facility all that time and fished the region constantly when we were there. Our fishing log showed that we boated 38 different species during that time. I also built a number of boats during the time including canoes, prams and small sailboats. I was a fly fisherman since young and built a lot of my tackle.

Firearms early became my everlasting hobby. I have bought an sold at least hundreds of guns in my life. Trained myself to do about anything I needed on one. Strangely enough, the three areas I always loved were double shotguns, extreme accuracy rigs (mostly smallbore) and large caliber dangerous game guns. I built more than half of the rifles I owned and a lot of those were wildcat rounds simply because of the interest. When I was building a lot, I bought a pantograph to save money (and mostly time) in the stock making. I built a lot of medium and large bore rifles in the prewar English style. Late in life (after I was 65) I finally started shooting some benchrest. I confined it to rimfire and started shooting an organized version of autoloading BR. I built 8 or 10 rifles over a year and ended up winning 3 National Championships and several State Championships in three years with rifles I built. The three Nationals were in three different categories. I don't shoot so much due to the strain of travelling all over the eastern US for a lot of three years. I now mostly collect and again the dominant theme is "interesting" although I have been gravitating almost exclusively to the 1850-1900 era.

I have other interests but draw short of calling them hobbies. I have played golf off and on over my life but spent a lot of that time supporting both my daughters when they were in High School golf. I built most of their clubs and any that the boys team members wanted to try. I am now following my only grandson who is a whiz on their middle school team. He shoots par from the 5200 yard tees and a 6th grade 11 year old. We are going to Pinehearst for a tournament over Thanksgiving.

I retired when I was 57, I retired on the same day that my wife qualified in her Federal job. Everyone I talked to asked me if I thought I would be bored after I retired. I couldn't believe they were asking me that. I had been looking forward to it for years. We had just sold my wife's 300 acre farm, but after 10 years of retirement, we ended up buying two more.

If you stay busy doing things you like, you will never be bored.

Last edited by AGS; 11/21/24 12:16 PM.
4 members like this: Dan S. W., Ted Schefelbein, Stanton Hillis, David Williamson
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[Linked Image from imagizer.imageshack.com]
Knit

[Linked Image from imagizer.imageshack.com]
Play with bikes

[Linked Image from imagizer.imageshack.com]
Prospect a little

[Linked Image from imagizer.imageshack.com]
Play with boats for fishing, bow fishing and hunting

[Linked Image from imagizer.imageshack.com]
I sew items I need, rebuilt this old Pfaff and converted it to treadle, needed a non-electric sewing machine when I live in a tent and took in mending for beer money

[Linked Image from imagizer.imageshack.com]
My latest project, bought it as a junker and am doing a total rebuild/restore/upgrade.

Retired at 62 and 15 years later there still arent enough hours in the day

Last edited by oskar; 11/21/24 02:35 PM.

After the first shot the rest are just noise.
1 member likes this: Stanton Hillis
Joined: Oct 2019
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Miller (2Piper) is no longer with us but he would love this thread. Don’t I remember that he had extensive knowledge about and a large collection of antique sewing machines?


Speude Bradeos
2 members like this: Stanton Hillis, Geo. Newbern
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Those baskets are so cool!

Joined: Feb 2007
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Last edited by NCTarheel; 11/21/24 03:53 PM.
1 member likes this: Stanton Hillis
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There have been a number of other interests over the years that I could mention such as fly tying and fly fishing and reading and building a library but I will just highlight two that I've developed since retirement.

1. taking my best girl of 55 years for regular lunch trips/roadster runs in our MX-5 GT - this is somewhere along the Peak to Peak Highway.

[Linked Image from i.imgur.com]

and 2. an interest that developed accidentally. I was straightening up my reloading bench one day and realized that I had a pretty extensive collection of gun cleaning odds and ends. As I sorted them I saw patterns with missing pieces here and there. Since the wife and I enjoy walking through antique malls I began watching for items I didn't have.

Standard brands such as ...
[Linked Image from i.imgur.com]
and
[Linked Image from i.imgur.com]
as well as
[Linked Image from i.imgur.com]
and
[Linked Image from i.imgur.com]

And then there were the brands of my childhood: Sears Roebuck and Montgomery Ward.

[Linked Image from i.imgur.com]
[Linked Image from i.imgur.com]

And lastly, the most important one for a midwest farm kid growing up in a small town after WWII, Western Auto and its Revelation brand.

[Linked Image from i.imgur.com]

Last edited by FallCreekFan; 12/20/24 07:28 PM.

Speude Bradeos
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That's quite a collection of gun care product, I've used most of them at one time. My problem I just tossed them when they were empty they usually didn't last long enough to become collectable.


After the first shot the rest are just noise.
Joined: Jan 2004
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I spend most of my hobby time shooting NRA BPCR and BPTR and similar competitions. This year, I spent close to 2 months on the road, traveling around the country to shoot. These use either blackpowder cartridge rifles or long range muzzleloaders, so there is much time spent building custom rifles as well as inventing, testing, and reinventing bullets and loading ammo. Right now I'm on a third of the way into a 12-day run to cast 1500 .45 bullets. Here is 240 bullets from today and yesterday.

[Linked Image from i.imgur.com]

I also have a woodshop, and my own private stock of walnut, cherry, oak, and others from my own property. Lately, I've been learning to turn on a lathe. Something I last did about over 50 yrs ago. I'm slowly catching on with this spalted walnut bowl that I'm planning to hold my curried pheasant dinner soon.

[Linked Image from i.imgur.com]

And I needed a small cup to hold a few sips of fine Islay scotch, so I turned this oak cup. The color in the photo is a little off. I'm getting better, but have a long way to go.


[Linked Image from i.imgur.com]

But this time of year, Dusty and me are mostly bird hunting.

[Linked Image from i.imgur.com]


_________
BrentD, (Professor - just for Stan)
=>/

[Linked Image from i.imgur.com]


Joined: Jan 2002
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My son and I are long time members of the local English bicycle club. We have been doing the Lake Pepin 3 Speed Tour since he was 5.

[Linked Image from i.ibb.co]

I’ve been known to work on a bicycle. 1974 Raleigh International that had been parted for its Campagnolo kit, and left for dead, with a bunch of good alloy parts thrown at it, 27” wheels built by me with an AW hub that I converted to S5, two stage paint by me with new H. Lloyd transfers buried in the clear coat.

[Linked Image from i.ibb.co]

Work on cars, too. I restored this 1967 442 25 years ago. Not a race car, just a California dreamer that had the option book thrown at it.

[Linked Image from i.ibb.co]

One old car, one old motorcycle. It is interesting keeping a 35 year old sport bike on the road, I’d be truly lost without the internet and the FJ1200 website. There are about a dozen well documented modifications that the bikes need, that bring them up to being pretty much as state of the art today, as they were all those years ago. Sport Touring, defined.

[Linked Image from i.ibb.co]

I’m a Setter guy. There has been one in my life since 1972, when my Dad bought my Mom an Irish Setter show dog that we figured out would hunt. I might not hunt if it weren’t for my dogs.


[Linked Image from i.ibb.co]


Best,
Ted

2 members like this: craigd, Stanton Hillis
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