Monthly Archives: April 2009

No Animals were Harmed
in the Taking of this Sink

There’s a nice strong spring pissing about two gallons of water per minute out of the side of the hill, which might roughly translate to: the Crapshack will be flowing. We’re looking into hand-dug wells, which seem like the under-radar way to fly around it. And a recent experience being bucked off the mechanical bull of a two-man auger has us in decent shape to operate the basics.

(A sidenote: if you click the link to the auger and look at those two guys, patiently drilling away at the earth as if there’s nothing to it, know that it’s a TRAP! Augers like this are designed for men whose bellies protrude enough to rest atop the handles and provide extra stability so that when the drillbit becomes lodged on a rock, you both don’t go flying down the hill while the drill continues rotating unsupported in some goddamned science fiction IT’S ALIVE scenario.) But back to it– we’ll have running water!

To celebrate, we went out and promoted ourselves a sink. It’s charmingly dumpy in looks, isn’t it? We found it at the side of the road freshly disposed of by the local vegan B&B, about which some off-color jokes regarding what may have been an imagined mild essence of tabouli lurking about. And if you know anything about my general dietary preferences, which I’m sure you do, you know that it’s no more off-color than anything else about me.

crap-sink

And the sink may be a dumper, but we got ourselves a whole pile of sink bling, of which this is only some.

crap-sinkbits

These came from the Paula Pile, and will give the whole outfit a veneer of class. Even if we never, ever manage to scrub, bleach, or scour the tabouli smell out of the thing.

Change You Can Upheave In

So I’ve been a little remiss in updates. Not for lack of crap, that’s for sure. Let’s say it was a well-deserved break for springy ceremonial holidays, with blood of gefilte and easter bunny stew. That, and I keep forgetting to charge the battery in the camera.

In the meantime, here’s some tile, of the edging or dividing variety. Scott just had this idea for a way fancy tub, whose incongruity in a Crapshack is just the sort that sits well with me, so maybe this tile can line that. Or maybe it belongs around a flower bed or cozy secret-garden bench. Hell, it beats me… I’m the sort that’d use it to spell out highly offensive words on the ceiling. And I may not be good at a whole lot, but I’d be willing to bet money that the offensive words I know are the most offensive words there are.

Speaking of money, on popular request, I’ve added a donation link at the side. If you really want to send us some Crapshack Bucks, and you just can’t sleep till you do, I’m no longer going to stop you. But if you really want to send some, you’d better send a whole lot.

crap-tiles

How it got here: this, too, is from Paula’s Collection of Crap. What I’ve discovered in the first month or two of crap collection is that it’s really to nobody’s advantage but yours to hook up with benefactors with exquisite taste. One day I’ll post some of the other artifacts from Paula, and you’ll see that even the dropcloths are shiny and gorgeous.

Nice Knob (A Crass Tale)

I don’t know how many doors the Crapshack will have — probably not many, though I worry a little that depending on how much material we gather, we could be headed the way of the Winchester House (except, you know, about a thousand times smaller). And this wouldn’t be the worst way to head, and to get back to it, the point is: our doors are going to look hot-to-the-touch. In a good way.

These are all door accessories, in a sense. Knobs, bolts, handles, you know. I didn’t ask Paula why she had so many spare door parts, and I half expected to arrive at her apartment and find all her entryways naked out of some weird obsessive irrational aversion to door handles. But her doors looked perfectly clothed, so I don’t know, and it’s not my place to question. Because they’re ALL OURS NOW.

This is the first of what promises to be several featured items from the Pile of Paula’s Crap we inherited (with no short order of profound gratidude*) last week. Paula is brilliant in ways I’d disclose to you if that didn’t seem weird and effusive, given that she’s a former work colleague. But she also does wicked things with paper that you can see here. Among other things, she makes very clever cards, which you can buy from her and stuff with money and send to me.

crap-doors

Distance traveled: 300 miles of the scenic route

How it got here: well, I admit a sort of thrill at pulling the battered and bumpy truck in front of Paula’s doormen, loading up the cab country-transplant style, then really revving it hard as I pulled out.

(* That was a typo but a pretty good one, and has to stay.)

In a Sailor’s Lap

We got a huge heap of knotty pine that we were told was tongue-and-groove, but which Scott assures me is actually shiplap. I think BOTH tongue-and-groove AND ship’s-lap are perfectly tawdry and suggestible names for types of wood cut, and would be thrilled with either, but when I tried to make a joke about tongues and laps I was silenced by “this will make very fine wainscoting once we sand it and cut it down to size.”

And it will make very fine wainscoting. Even though now, by association, I can’t think of the word wainscoting without giggling and going all red-faced. I know only a few words funnier than tongue-and-groove, none of which I can mention here without attracting the wrong kind of crap-benefactor to this web site.

But it’s very nice and we’re looking forward to you coming around to help us rip the nails out, and sand it, and cut it down to size. This is from Agi, with a thousand thanks for saving it from the fate of Erik’s fire-happy maw. Here’re a few of them lined up, with the mountain of more in the background.

crap-wood

Distance traveled: a few miles

How it got here: well, that’s not as interesting as what happened this weekend. We went to the future home of the Crapshack to clear out some space for the Pre-Shacking Trailer, which involved cutting down a few overcrowded little birch trees that are in the way. And let me tell you, I suffered what might have been some sort of manic fit, thinking that maybe I’m the kind of asshole who poisons frogs in his pond because they’re keeping him up at night. The kind who moves next door to the dairy farm because she loves the bucolic idea of the farm, without realizing that, you know, it smells like shit. Or the kind who cuts trees so that she has a place to live.

(I can mail you that Harpers piece if you don’t have a subscription)

But I’m no dummy when it comes to trees, and I know what happens when they’re overgrown. They start out ambitiously growing up with no support, in a futile attempt at a fresh breath of sunlight, then get sad and lose their fight for life and start to bend over and droop. And it’s best for everybody to thin some of that crap out. But still, you try taking a bowsaw to a birch who was never given a chance. And try doing so with a three-day hangover. In the rain that’s just about to turn to snow. And tell me you wouldn’t shed a tear.

That’s what I thought — heartless bastards. Let’s get back to dirty puns on shiplap, and pretend this little intimate divulgence never happened.

Later in the week, stay tuned for the kitchen sink. Or parts thereof.

Power to the Peephole

The Crapshack will one day make its own power, thanks to the babble of a water source that runs right down our far-most boundary line, clearly on our side of the line, as far as you need to know. To get us started, we’ve got some battery chargers unwillingly donated by a big faceless company, which we’ll reveal soon enough. The Crapshack is all about the slow reveal– it’s a bit of a tease, but it will put out, if you call it pretty.

But until the Crapshack generates its own electricity, in the Camper and Foundation Days, we’re going to need to suck the nacreous teat of the big black grid.

And for that, there’s a power transformer that runs all the way up to (and, as far as you need to know, ONTO) our Southeastern corner. And there will need to be a Meter Socket, like THIS ONE, the SLOT B to the transformer’s FLAP A. And no, we don’t care which slot or flap you prefer. All orientations are welcome.

crap-power

Distance traveled: you know the story; same as this one and also this one. If you don’t, you should read it.

How it got here: it was in the back of the bumpy truck with the rest of the equipment from the mothership. We ripped this out of the ground on Christmas Day, which is what you do on Christmas in the southern parts. Shoot guns and dig in the mud and pillage from your own mother.