



Results 1 to 15 of 20
-
11th October 2006, 10:34 PM #1
Sharing your childhood with your children
Jasmin wanted to fly a kite the other day. Instead of going out and buy one from the shop I spent a little bit of time with her to make a real kite. As a child I used to make my own toy and I thought it would be good to show jasmin little bit of my childhood.
It is pretty straight forward really The pictures tell the story. Picture 2 is a roller which is very handy for releasing and retrieving the string quickly.
We went to park for a test flight. It just took off and it went higher and higher. We had some much fun together.
The trouble is if I show Jasmin all of my tricks then I will have nothing left to impress Emily.Visit my website at www.myFineWoodWork.com
-
11th October 2006, 10:39 PM #2
Wongo,
They must think You to be the best dad, Well done.
These times are the ones they remember, and so will you.I may not have gone where I intended to go, but I think I have ended up where I needed to be.
My Other Toys
-
11th October 2006, 10:46 PM #3
Kites! I love kites. I used to go down to the beach in autumn and there was always an off-shore breeze. My mate and I made kites from sticks and garbage bags but they had two lines so you could do stunts. We used to dogfight and do this trick where you wrap your lines around the other guy's lines. You have to count the turns, and then you can reverse and undo the twist. Great fun
You have given me an idea, Scott. Thanks
-
11th October 2006, 10:52 PM #4
-
11th October 2006, 10:53 PM #5
In my day, we had no glass powder string. You got shot down and five seconds later you took to the sky again. Work with me here, mate
-
11th October 2006, 10:54 PM #6
-
11th October 2006, 11:04 PM #7
I'm sorry to hear that. I think this runs very deep in your psyche, Scott. Tell us more about it. How did it make you feel?
-
11th October 2006, 11:06 PM #8
I grew up in the bush with one tiny li'l paddock out the back of the house.
I reckon I became an expert at making kites out of nothing... you know the kite-eating tree in the Peanuts (Charlie Brown) cartoon? I was in the middle of thousands of the mongrels. On a clear day, you could see the broken corpses of my birds scattered randomly throughout the treetops for acres. [sigh]
Then I took up model planes, those things with glow-plug driven woodchippers bolted to the front, and spent quite some time planning my vengeance. Only to discover that the only thing that had really changed was the cost of the corpses littering those damned treetops.
'Twas fun though. Wonder why I ever stopped? :confused: (And now you know the real reason I became a woody. Revenge!)
- Andy Mc
-
11th October 2006, 11:15 PM #9
If you had taken her out to the park last weekend, you could have saved a lot of kite building, just have tied a rope around her waist an dhse could have been her own kite
Next you have to build her a Hargrave-style square body box kite and a triangular body box kite with wings
-
11th October 2006, 11:25 PM #10
Kites for me were absolute proof that there was such a thing as Murphy's Law. No sooner had I finished attaching the last newspaper bow to the tail than the wind which not 5 mins before, was knocking down large trees and un-roofing houses, would stop immediately.
-
11th October 2006, 11:47 PM #11
I remember about 15 years ago my kids got in the car & passed me a tape & said "Here Dad, stick that in the player." :confused:
It was an Ugly Kid Joe tape & they thought they were going to shock me out of my socks.
I turned it up NICE & LOUD & yelled over the top of it that they were about 18 years too late 'cos that was the sort of stuff I had listened to at school.
2nd hijack, ever made boomerangs for/with the kids & gone to the park & hung a few in the trees?
Quick & dirty, bit of 3 ply, jigsaw & a disk or belt sander.
Freehand draw a boomerang on the ply, cut it out with the jigsaw, then sand a chamfer on the bottom edge on one side only of one arm/leg/wing/blade & the opposite side bottom edge of the other arm/leg/wing/blade.
Now head for the paddock, hold it with you thumb & index finger like an upside down L with the top arm/leg/wing/blade pointing away from you & throw it.
You can muck around for hours with the profile but it isn't worth it 'cos you are bound to hang it in a tree or on somebody's roof anyway.
PS. Don't forget to watch where it goes & DUCK!Cliff.
If you find a post of mine that is missing a pic that you'd like to see, let me know & I'll see if I can find a copy.
-
11th October 2006, 11:55 PM #12
We used to make these boomerang-like things from paddlepop sticks. The brilliant thing about them was they would shatter into exactly 4 pieces when they hit a solid object
-
12th October 2006, 12:03 AM #13
Scott,
great kite. Seeing the pic takes me back about 37 years ago to when I was in primary school in one of the world's windiest places. I would make kites that looked like the one you made. Bamboo, brown paper, glue and lots of light wieght material for the tail and of course lots of string. During school time I would always look thru the window just before home time to check the wind availability. I was NEVER disappointed as Port Elizabeth in South Africa had all the wind you ever needed for kite flying. I loved those carefree days of my life.
Regards
Les
-
12th October 2006, 12:14 AM #14
Scott,
Thanks for re awakening long forgotten memories. With the pressures of work and life these days, the simple pleasures have long since been neglected. I'm goin to make myself a kite this weekend. I've gown up & grown old so I reckon that I'm alloowed to be a big kid again.:eek:
Regards,
Barry
-
12th October 2006, 09:21 AM #15
Cliff,
To continue the hijack - there used to be a place at one of the crater lakes on the Atherton Tableland - Barrine, I think it was, I think Eacham had the water ski-ing , anyway they used to sell those plywood boomerangs for a few bob - not very expensive because I could afford them out of my pocket money- and they were pretty good.
My grandfather had a cabinet making business in Mareeba so getting scraps of plywood was a no-brainer - copied the pattern and made heaps of them - good memories - taught my kids to throw them and even catch a few when they (mostly) came back.
Ian
Similar Threads
-
Children
By Gino in forum JOKESReplies: 9Last Post: 21st February 2006, 11:39 PM -
Get Frivolous Children
By ozwinner in forum HAVE YOUR SAYReplies: 56Last Post: 21st February 2006, 08:38 PM -
Children
By RETIRED in forum JOKESReplies: 1Last Post: 21st September 2005, 09:38 AM -
Follow these 15 simple tests before you decide to have children...
By Wayne Davy in forum JOKESReplies: 9Last Post: 25th January 2004, 09:51 PM -
Things I've Learned from My Children
By DavidG in forum JOKESReplies: 0Last Post: 14th April 2003, 11:16 PM
Bookmarks