Harvest Home!
Another Wildlife Report
We have been doing a bit of ground work in preparation for an addition to our house. I have shoveled a LOT of sand, which we had trucked in to fill our foundation. There are many of these little newts, and I also saw a big spotted salamander. Cute, isn't he?
There are nine species of newts and salamanders - eight of them are in North America. These creatures have the ability to regenerate missing limbs and are being studied by medical graduate students, I am sure.
How do you mend a broken harp?
We narrowly averted disaster on Saturday. We were engaged to play for a wedding and reception in Bar Harbor. When I was loading the car the harp slipped and I bumped the top of it. I didn't think anything about it at the time, but when we got to the wedding the harp was quite flat, which is unusual. As Julia was tuning up I realized that the pillar was broken.
I hoofed it to the other side of town and bought a couple of C-clamps (G-cramps if you're British) and Julia played with this extra temporary hardware on the front of the harp. We had to slack the strings in the lowest octave to get the clamps in there.
Don't try this at home!
I glued the break and added a brass plate to the far side of the joint. It looks OK on the back and the bolts on the front aren't too noticeable.
So far it's holding OK but I guess it's time to build her another one. I built this one for her in 1998 and it has been in and out of the car at least 2500 times, so I suppose it was bound to happen eventually.
Labels: grape receipe, harp repair, newts
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