709-218-7927

The Landfall Garden House

60 Canon Bayley Road

CANADA A0C 1B0

CPRGreaves@gmail.com

Home

Christopher Greaves

Drop-Leaf Table

Saturday, February 09, 2008

And it's Ho! Let’s make a drop-leaf table!

It’s so easy.

Christopher Greaves IMG_4607.JPG

Start by catching the cat and plastering over the hole in the bathroom wall made when the plumbers installed new cold-water pipes in this part of the building.

Christopher Greaves IMG_4608.JPG

With the cat safely tucked away, lay out the nineteen feet of curtain track and count the brackets, rollers etc, there being no cat interrupting the proceedings.

Christopher Greaves IMG_4609.JPG

In order to gain access to the stretch of wall along the window, you will have to empty the ten bookcases along the inside wall and move them away from the end wall ...

Christopher Greaves IMG_4610.JPG

… storing the books between two bookcases used as bookends.

You may need to tie an old piece of flex to stop one or both bookcases parallelgramming outwards.

You should have thought of that first.

Christopher Greaves IMG_4611.JPG

Assemble the brackets, rollers, book and mug of coffee.

This part of the job can take the longest time depending on the book, the volume of coffee left in the jug, and how you feel after a bad night’s sleep.

Christopher Greaves IMG_4612.JPG

Assemble your hoard of plastic plugs which you have been saving against the day when you can safely spread them out without them being attacked as a horde of gaily-coloured cockroaches.

Christopher Greaves IMG_4613.JPG

Spread the tools you require along a window ledge.

These tools will travel with you until you drop one of them, at which time you will dislodge the others as you climb down from the table you are using as a step-ladder.

Christopher Greaves IMG_4614.JPG

You will need a sharp masonry bit in your trusty electric drill.

Failing that, make do with a masonry bit from your drill-bit collection.

Note that in computer parlance a masonry bit is either “in” or “out”.

If you are listening to the “Ill met by goonlight” Goon Show, you will hear them landing on the beach at Crete. “This beach is hard”. “Then it must be concrete!”.

Moving right along …..

Christopher Greaves IMG_4615.JPG

Here is a view of much of the curtain track in place. The rubber bands used as temporary supports have been removed.

Christopher Greaves IMG_4616.JPG

Stand on the table and drill directly upwards, exerting maximum strength as this is the last hole of the job, and the coffee pot calls.

The edge of the table on which you are standing will fracture, depositing you and all you are holding (in your hands, mouth, under your armpit etc.) onto the electric wall heater.

Christopher Greaves IMG_4617.JPG

Let the cat out of the wall and let the cat let himself out of the window.

Christopher Greaves IMG_4618.JPG

Once the cat is sitting on a carpet of snow …

Christopher Greaves IMG_4619.JPG

… close the window and settle down to a peaceful mug of coffee and another good book.

Will the cat survive outside in the cold, cold snow?

Stay tuned for next weekend’s project: “It’s curtains for the cat!”

7092187927 CPRGreaves@gmail.com

Bonavista, Friday, November 27, 2020 8:32 PM

Copyright © 1996-2020 Chris Greaves. All Rights Reserved.