Friday, June 6, 2014

Sign Workdays 2014

Paul Groulx and Jason Morris at work
This year's sign workdays were as busy, noisy, and saw-dusty as ever.   The group on Day 1 included about ten people, only one of whom hadn't been to the sign days before.  We (staff) will take that as a good sign that volunteers keep coming back year after year!  People got right to work sanding, planing, stenciling, rasping, routing and staining, and by the end of the first day we'd gotten about 40 signs done through the first coat of brown stain.  Amazing!  I swear this group gets better and better every year.  For the first few years, Jason was the only one brave enough to route the signs, since free-hand routing does take some steady nerves... but this year we had 3 other volunteers routing at the same time as Jason, and I know there are others who want to try it next year.

Alan Cort routing a sign
Day 1 at lunch
The weather was less than beautiful to start Day 2 of the sign workshop, but the hive of activity continued undaunted.  The number of signs completed this year, from smaller trail markers to large wooden property signs, was a little more than 70 total.  Excellent job, and thank you to everyone who participated and loaned their power tools to the process as well.  The only thing left now is to paint a whole lot of white lettering... if you've got a steady hand to lend for that in the next few weeks, please shoot me an email!  We can set you up with some tunes and a brush and jar of paint anytime the office is open!

A little mid-work conference

New steward Mike Casino (the only newbie on Day 1) got right down to business


 Seth and Gale are our stenciling experts

Hiel and Todd run Todd's planer


Mike Carafiello routing away
The ever cheerful Todd
Beverly & Michael Bettencourt work on sanding

Fred in the new work shirt!
Jason and Mike collaborate on a unique triangular sign

Beverly staining a new sign

Chainsaw Safety

I have to admit, I didn't stay for much of the Chainsaw Safety and Maintenance workshop this spring, as I was busy wrapping up business from the annual Core Land Steward Training.  I do know that despite the blackflies and cool weather, a good group of stewards and members headed out with Wendy and Jake Bronnenberg to learn how to stay safe while operating their chainsaws.  No matter how many years people have been running a saw, they usually tell me that they got a lot out of this workshop, which is why we continue to run it twice a year!