@@faceedgewoodworking Jack LaLanne was a legendary fitness guru. I think he may have started the whole fitness craze? The guy was in great shape. He was the healthiest guy that ever died. Me, I want to be on my last legs when I go. I haven't even weighed myself in years now. I don't want to know!
@@faceedgewoodworking every year on his birthday Jack would do some wild stunt. It was a media event. He'd get a blurb on the evening news or something. He had his own fitness brand that he promoted. So he was an institution. A regular household name.
@@1pcfred 😆Awesome, no cake, just be a tug boat for a day. Fair play to him. If I can get to nearly 100 years old and still be in good shape I'll be very satisfied.
great advice, i have 2 hard point saws 1 is a fine 16 point Bahco, my friend has a Japanese saw he paid 28 quid for, it cuts really fine and such a smooth cut its great.
Man, your level of frustration with people is reaching John Heisz levels. That is not healthy :). Please do not disappear again :). Jokes aside, I can relate. I try to choose good things to focus on. For example, yesterday I met a 6.7, 350 pond guy who knits hypoalergenic dolls for prematurely born children because they apparently stimulate their tactile development :)
🤣 th-cam.com/video/mv0onXhyLlE/w-d-xo.html Hey, I do keep positive. I think having to be "professional" when client facing can reduce my tolerance when I don't need to be. I'm trying to be "respectfully assertive". You make a great point, I do view the society I experience as a miracle. So many people doing good things go totally unnoticed, your example is great. Thanks for watching.
@@williamlattanziobill2475 so you think soda is sweet? You may just be onto something there. I think soda has acid in it just so they can dissolve more sugar into the liquid. That's my theory.
😂 It never fails to amuse me how people are so sure they're right 😂. Nice try Jim, do some, research It's both. I'm from the UK and that is how we spell it here. vice3 /vʌɪs/ noun noun: vice; plural noun: vices; noun: vise; plural noun: vises a metal tool with movable jaws which are used to hold an object firmly in place while work is done on it, typically attached to a workbench. "hold the rail in the vice" Origin Middle English (denoting a screw or winch): from Old French vis, from Latin vitis ‘vine’.
Paul Sellers calls the gut, the relaxed muscle. We can't all be Jack LaLanne.
😂 Nice! I checked him out, now I understand why he turned up in the Simpsons towing a boat behind him (LaLane that is).
@@faceedgewoodworking Jack LaLanne was a legendary fitness guru. I think he may have started the whole fitness craze? The guy was in great shape. He was the healthiest guy that ever died. Me, I want to be on my last legs when I go. I haven't even weighed myself in years now. I don't want to know!
@@1pcfred Yeah, some of those swimming challenges he did seem pretty crazy!
@@faceedgewoodworking every year on his birthday Jack would do some wild stunt. It was a media event. He'd get a blurb on the evening news or something. He had his own fitness brand that he promoted. So he was an institution. A regular household name.
@@1pcfred 😆Awesome, no cake, just be a tug boat for a day. Fair play to him. If I can get to nearly 100 years old and still be in good shape I'll be very satisfied.
Thanks very much for showing how your saw vice is put together. I think I have a better idea of how to put one together now.
No worries Richard. I didn't do a get great job of sharing the details but it gives a pretty good idea.
great advice, i have 2 hard point saws 1 is a fine 16 point Bahco, my friend has a Japanese saw he paid 28 quid for, it cuts really fine and such a smooth cut its great.
Thanks Kieran. In the ideal world it's nice to have saws we take care of ourselves. But, sometimes we have to be pragmatic!
I'm doing slimming world! Doing well just can't quite give up the beer yet
We all have to have priorities. It's good to hear you're keeping yours straight too! Beer builds better bodies. Beer is just bread without the flour.
Great effort!! Keep the discipline and may you achieve your goal 👌.
Man, your level of frustration with people is reaching John Heisz levels. That is not healthy :). Please do not disappear again :). Jokes aside, I can relate. I try to choose good things to focus on. For example, yesterday I met a 6.7, 350 pond guy who knits hypoalergenic dolls for prematurely born children because they apparently stimulate their tactile development :)
🤣 th-cam.com/video/mv0onXhyLlE/w-d-xo.html
Hey, I do keep positive. I think having to be "professional" when client facing can reduce my tolerance when I don't need to be. I'm trying to be "respectfully assertive".
You make a great point, I do view the society I experience as a miracle. So many people doing good things go totally unnoticed, your example is great. Thanks for watching.
@@faceedgewoodworking Basil needs anger management :D
We’re on the same program….I’ve been on something of a diet as well…mainly cutting out sodas and such.
That's great Bill. It's amazing how a few changes can add up to a big difference over time.
Soda is disgusting. It's so harsh. How anyone calls soda a soft drink is beyond me. At least cut it with some rum or something.
@@1pcfred I like Coca Cola, but that’s about it. That being said I haven’t had any in several weeks. Most soda I find overly sweet.
@@williamlattanziobill2475 so you think soda is sweet? You may just be onto something there. I think soda has acid in it just so they can dissolve more sugar into the liquid. That's my theory.
@@1pcfred there’s a soda called Mountain Dew and I don’t know how people drink it. It tastes like liquified cotton candy.
It’s VISE not VICE.
😂 It never fails to amuse me how people are so sure they're right 😂. Nice try Jim, do some, research It's both. I'm from the UK and that is how we spell it here.
vice3
/vʌɪs/
noun
noun: vice; plural noun: vices; noun: vise; plural noun: vises
a metal tool with movable jaws which are used to hold an object firmly in place while work is done on it, typically attached to a workbench.
"hold the rail in the vice"
Origin
Middle English (denoting a screw or winch): from Old French vis, from Latin vitis ‘vine’.