Wednesday, 7 September 2011

Fletcher's Fletching!

Well it has been 7 months since I made a post! not good at all, still we have been keeping busy with quite a few different things. One of the hobbies I have wanted to do for ages and have recently taken up (well last year) was Archery, a friend of mine has a few bows and I was itching to have a go at shooting. Well after several damaged trees, targets and a shed! I now have my own longbow.

Of course with a bow you also need some arrows, I was quite keen to make my own arrows and so below is a step by step guide on how I made mine and should help anyone thinking of making their own.

Parts list:
  • Wooden Shafts (these come in different thickness, I'm using 11/32")
  • Taper Tool mine was 11/32" (Point/Nock Sharpener)
  • Ferr-L-Tite (a type of resin glue)
  • Points/ Piles
  • Nocks
  • Fletching Glue
  • Fletchings
  • Fletching Jig
I'm not going to go into full detail of what items to choose for arrows because it depends on the bow your shooting, but can give advice if anyone reads this and needs info on what to choose. First up we need the wooden shafts, I bought mine made from Port Orford Cedar (Poc) as it is one of the best materials. Secondly you need a Taper tool (looks like a Sharpener) to make the point and nock ends.

 (click images for bigger pictures)
Port Orford Cedar Shafts
 
Taper Tool - Ferr L Tite glue


 First I made the point end, using the thicker section of the taper tool, my piles are also tapered so will fit snugly together when done. As you can see from the picture below it doesn't taper to a point like a pencil would.
Tapered shaft - Pile end

The taper tool is made in a way that you can't sharpen too much off the shaft, so keep doing it until the shaft spins in the tool without shaving any wood off. Next up we have to get some of the resin glue onto the shaft, so you have to head this cement up gently (i use a tealight to do it)

 
Gently heating the Ferr-L-Tite
Once the Ferr-L-Tite is soft enough you then apply that to the shaft until it is coated but not too thick, too much glue can be as bad as too little. It should look a bit like the picture below.
Glued Shaft
The next step is to attach your Pile (the pointy end) to the shaft, there are many different types of piles you can choose from and they vary from size/shape to weight etc. I chose metal field points for mine because I'm doing traditional archery I want to make my arrows look a bit more traditional. To get the pile onto the shaft you need to heat it up hot enough so that it melts the cement on contact. You then push the two ends together and let if cool, this can be aided with a cold damp cloth.
Piles
Heating the pile up
 The once that had cooled down, the next step is to get the nock on. First you have to sharpen the other end of the shaft using the smaller and pointer section of the taper tool. Again this will only sharpen so far and then it is ready, once that is done you then apply the normal fletching glue (not the Ferr-L-Tite) and push the two ends together.
Nock
Once that dries (fletching glue is pretty quick) you then have a fully unfletched arrow! (Yay) it looks ok but it doesn't fly very far.
Unfletched Arrow (and now empty tea cup)
The next important thing to do is choose your fletchings, generally you will have two feathers of one colour with the cock feather being a different colour to help identify it. (this doesn't have to be the case though, it is up to you) The easiest way is to buy pre-cut feathers which I have done here, however when I can find a good supply of turkey feathers I will try to make my own.
A black/white Cock feather and two orange all from the left wing
It is important to make sure all the feathers are from the same wing of the bird (either all left or all right) as this determines which way the arrow flies, if you have two different ones on the same arrow then it will not spin properly. Next up we have to get the fletching jig set up, this tool allows you to attach three or four feathers to a shaft at exactly the right place. I'm using three feathers as is most common.
The main section of the fletching tool
The nocks I am using have a little nib on them which indicates where the cock feather should be, you line this up with the first position on the fletching jig and then all your feathers should fall into place. (well not full exactly). To attach the feather you have to align it up in the clamp section of the jig and then run a thin line of fletching glue along the base of the feather, the clamp then attaches to the main section of the Jig using magnets, you gently push the clamp down until the fletching is touching the shaft. You then wait for it to dry.
Fletching Clamp - line up the base of the feather with the dial on the clamp
Once the glue has dried for the first feather all you need to do is remove the clamp gently, then spin the shaft using the jig, it should click into the next correct position, then set up your next feather in the clamp and repeat, do that for all 3 of your feathers.
Arrow in fletching jig with arrows waiting to be done
Once all three are done and dry you then have an arrow ready to be shot! however I would recommend you put a layer or two of varnish onto the shafts so that they are weather proof and a bit more hardy. The picture below is the final finished arrow, I have also tried using a binding technique on the fletching to make it look a bit more traditional, this was my first attempt at that and so I need a bit more practice.
Final Arrow
I hope you liked the pictures and if you have a bow and need some arrows then I hope you will give making your own a try. Any comments or questions please leave them below. I will take some pictures of my Longbow and other equipment later!

Saturday, 19 February 2011

Birthday "break"

Although we have not finished every room in the house, we have decided to take a break from decorating and building work. Instead I've been force to organise (booo) slowly putting things in the place they are suppose to be!

Due to this change this blog will now become more about crafting projects we like to do as well as holiday snaps to share with the family! rest assured any more building work we get done will be posted here.


Jo's **rd Birthday has just passed and we decided to have a weekend break in London and go see a show. We went to see the preview of "The Wizard of Oz" you know, the one from the silly telly show that I definitely do not watch! Surprisingly it turned out to be one of the best shows we have seen in London and was very well put together.

It's the first ever show Danielle Hope has starred in and she was flawless! amazing voice and brilliantly acted, however she was unfortunately upstaged by Toto, there are several Toto's that have been trained for the role which you can see below!




(only downside is that Toto is suppose to be a Cairn!) All of the main actors in this were actually fantastic and got great laughs as they acted out their characters. If you enjoy a trip to the theatre this is definitely one to go and watch!

When I say it was a weekend break we didn't actually stop! we made sure we could fit in as much as possible. We also went to Shakespeare's Globe Theatre, which was interesting to see and makes you want to come back and see a show there (unfortunately they don't start until May)





With 2 for 1 offer with our train tickets it was definitely worth a walk around. We also went to The Imperial War Museum which is free to get into, the trench and blitz experiences were pretty good in there and there is a big exhibition on about the Holocaust at the moment, it was awful to see but extremely interesting and worth a look if your in London.

Lastly we went to London Zoo, the queues were huge and had us waiting for over an hour up the street and just when you thought you were about to get in there was another long queue. They said that they were not expecting so many visitors for at least another two weeks; so they didn't have all the booths open to let people in. If that wasn't bad enough after 50 mins of waiting they decided instead of opening more ticket booths they would have staff take pictures of you as you enter the Zoo so they can sell you the pictures on the way out grrr. Well I couldn't do a whole post without a moan!

I will sign out on an up though; even with the waiting London Zoo was once again well worth the visit, the place has much improved since our last visit with much better enclosures for the animals. The tropical rainforest is very well done, you now walk through the enclosure with branches going over your heads and the monkeys have free reign to explore. (oh and for those numpties with IPhones... you don't have to put the phone right in the monkeys face to take a picture!!!!) A new enclosure is due to open later this year for the penguins and by the plans it looks to be amazing!

It seems the zoo is working towards having bigger enclosures for all their animals and in my opinion this can only be a good thing!

Monday, 20 December 2010

Nice snowing you!

Well it has been over a year since my last post. I cant believe a year has even passed and to look at the picture below you wouldn't believe it either. Snow has once again covered Cardiff (or perhaps just our road!) with over 12 inches of snow.



As usual there is one suspect who is much more excited about the snow than anyone else. Yep our little Rosie is now worse than ever as she now cries by the backdoor because she wants to go out and play.



The downside to where we live is the two hills we have to navigate to get here! On your average day of the week this wouldn't be a problem, however add a blanket of snow, a sprinkle of ice and an empty grit bucket (grrr) we get a couple of ski slopes instead! I did try to dig our road out as the first two pictures show, I got most of the way up the road before cold, wet, white drops of snow decided to thwart me!



It didn't take long for inches more snow to fill back all the hard work I had done, luckily I managed to get my car to the top of the first hill at least.



The second hill where we are and the MAIN!!! roads near us really didn't look much better.




So as you can see we cant go very far at the moment. Enough of the grumbling anyway below are some nice pictures of the snow around us. Including pictures of the Long-tailed tit gang that ambushes our bird feeder (more so when we stick mince pies out!)





Finally, part of the reason we haven't done any posts during the year as it has been very hectic, we have been doing a lot of interior decorating as well as putting in a new kitchen, our new folding sliding doors and many other things! I will have to do a house update later to show what its like now. Below you can see a random sneak peak of what the kitchen now looks like.

Wednesday, 16 December 2009

Where did the time go?

4 Months! I must have blinked and not noticed! Sorry for the lack of updates but since the builders "finished" it seems like life got even more hectic. I cant believe we haven't even put a picture of the finished article, well the outside at least (just don't look at the paint) So here it is before and after! (The before isn't too great I'm afraid)


Of course it doesn't all end there, oh no, because we now have the interior to finish and decorate. We still have no handrail up on the stairs because I wanted to decorate the hall first but to do the hall I would need to do the woodwork. To do the woodwork meant lots of sanding, filling, priming, undercoating, glossing and.. I'm sure you get the picture. I started of quite well by mist coating (very watered down paint mix) all the walls and ceilings that had new plaster on them some needing two coats as it just drank the stuff.

Things were going a little too easy at this point so our one and only shower in the house decided it was going to leak on us, I found this one afternoon when a big wet patch had formed on the carpet outside the bathroom. Further investigation found a big wet patch in the living room ceiling below as well eek! Oddly the wall where the shower was mounted was dry so we thought it was leaking around the base of the shower. A bit of sealant and a couple of showers later the wet patch was getting worse. I pulled a bit of the wall off to see where the pipes were and ended up pulling the whole section of wall down where the shower was to find an isolation valve in the wall, drip drip dripping!! Sadly I thought I had some pictures of this but I can't find them so just imagine a stud wall with no plaster board on it!!!

After the wall was then plastered a new we decided to get a new chippy in to come and complete all the skirting and architrave around the doors (yay more wood for me to treat!) By the time all this was done we decided to concentrate on getting the front "guest" bedroom done, which will become our bedroom until we get our main room done one day (years away at this rate) after much deliberation we went for... magnolia in the room, the colour would come from the curtains and bedsheets. "Bedsheets can be changed, paint isn't as easy" or so I was told. So here are some pictures of the room and the new curtains and curtain poles etc.





(we know the bed covers don't quite match but its the closest we can find at the moment, it seems impossible to find a nice raspberry looking bed cover) Oh I almost forgot the bathroom door put us even further behind. We decided to try and get our pine doors to match the oak stair rail we would soon have up, we knew you wouldn't get an exact match but we thought it would be nice to have similar tones. So we bought some Fiddes hard wax oil, English Oak, I did exactly what it said on the tin, sanded it back with 150 grade paper and, well, lets just say it had less than perfect results!

As you can see it went on dark and very patchy! needless to say Jo was not very impressed when she came home from work (why oh why did I keep putting it on!!) So, my next 3 days were taken up sanding the door back down to its bare bones!


That was half way through the process, eventually I got it looking as new (almost) and we decided to go for the CLEAR hard wax oil in the end which looked a lot better. We finally moved into the bedroom last weekend (yay!) we wont even mention that the bathroom grout had cracked a bit in the shower unit so I had to seal that up.

Monday, 3 August 2009

Done But Not Yet Dusted

Well its finally the last day of the building (apart from a bit of minor plumbing). Tony came around and I was happy to shake his hand and hand over the last of the money. Andy came to do a bit of rendering around the bay window which felt nice because the job started with Andy and now its ended with him Ahhh... Anyway enough of sentimentals we now have to start the big clean up and get decorating.
So who do we remember
  • Dell - loves to Party in Prague
  • Andy our lovable Brickie
  • Buster - Hang on he's on the phone....
  • Ed the apprentice chippie - omg he's now qualified!
  • Nick - its an optical illusion honest
  • Starbuck Steve the coffee drinkin chippie
  • Ghost Loris - the lighting expert
  • Al - please don't box my pipes in they are so shiny
  • Richie the skim - he's like lightning when he gets going.....
  • Jimmy the Lone Ranger (hes a marvel with that gun)
  • Tonto Wayne - always rides with Jimmy
And finally
  • Tony who's not so good on Thursdays!

Saturday, 1 August 2009

Its Just An Illusion

Week 19
After the Builders left we decided we also needed some chillout time so on Monday we went to Lynmouth for a well deserved break. We chatted to the Building Inspector who was fab and letters and emails were sent. Things were pretty dire and the hope of achieving any form of resolution was dwindling rapidly.
Week 20 (89 - 90)
On Monday I started to organise new quotes to finish the work, one of the builders I contacted put the willies up me by pointing out serious "faults". I called the Building Inspector who again was brilliant and agreed to visit and bring Tony along so that he could comment, so on the big day (Wednesday) they both arrived. Tensions were running high and I really couldn't see us achieving much. After looking over the house with its "faults" we were all stood in the hallway and the Building Inspector was trying to urge us to talk things over, again the air was thick with tension but Tim saved the day with his suggestion for compromise and we all sat down and chatted. Eventually we came to an agreement and kissed and made up!
The builders returned on Saturday and Sunday and built the framework for the canopy and screed the floor in the hallway. The radiators in the hall and lounge we also fitted.


Week 21 (91 - 95)
Work continued in dribs and drabs with the canopy getting tiled and trimmed up. We finally got our new front door and garage door fitted on Thursday and the windows were fitted with the correct handles and glass. Buster worked over the weekend finishing off skirting and putting in some of the glass
in the hallway. Unfortunately the panels that were meant to go up the stairs had to returned because the pattern was on the wrongside!

Week 22 (96 - 102)
Buster had a weeks holiday!!!
This meant we got Nick who is a lovely bloke but sadly not a "finisher". Bits and bobs got done throughout the week, filling, plastering, painting, trimming up windows, brickying and rendering, culminating in Busters return at the weekend to fit the remaining glass panels and the coving going up which really made it feel like we were now done! Saturday night we opened the bubbly and gave a big sigh of relief!