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Racking up heavy meter fees in the parking lot outside an abandoned gold mine. Julian, CA.

All brazed, still needs a lot of filling and cleanup...

Why bother slicing a bike lock when you can just cut the rack! Bike thieves are so resourceful.

BBQ'd up a rack of local Lamb

A pillow rack

Last Quarter, 19th century, Ilocos

 

Narra

 

198.5 x 61.5 x 34 cm (78 1/4 x 23 3/4 x 13 1/4 in)

 

Almario is the name of bedroom furniture that held pillows, blankets and sleeping mats for airing; usually a chamber pot was kept inside the cabinet underneath, if any. The cabinet is carved on the front with sunbursts, fans, scallops, but the inside can be accessed through the side doors. The channel-carved posts are held in place by mortise and tenon joinings. Sunburst and finial decorate the corners of the arched crown. Dentil pattern is carved on the crown and the cabinet top edge. The ogival design of the apron is echoed by the flanges that hug the cabinet on either side. The unusual squared cabriole legs give this provincial piece a sensual appeal.

 

Estimate: PHP 25,000 - 28,000

 

Lot 397 of the Salcedo Auctions auction on 22 September 2018. Please see www.salcedoauctions.com for more information.

silver brazed, 1.4301 (304 stainless steel) 10mm tubes

Double decker bike racks at Valby Station.

Custom Rack stainless

Prince Valiant put together a new shoe rack for me - possibly as a gentle hint for me to put my shoes away more often? We will never know.

WAN comms rack in the new location

Touring bike with caliper brakes and Nitto front rack.

4x6 carry-on utility trailer rack and cross bars

 

Grew tired of the "steel" dish racks rusting out and think this Simplehuman rack may be the solution. Time will tell.

A long aluminum ladder supported between two saw horses serves as a simple high-capacity bike rack.

For Strobist Sundays: Food. I made this rack of lamb for a visit to my mom's home yesterday. There were 6 for dinner and now that we're back home, I'm thinking of making another one. Nikon 5700 ISO 100 f/3.0 Lighting was from a 50 watt overhead ceiling fan bulb aimed at the bones. The rest was from the afternoon sun from the blinds.

A fan has his cell phone out to capture an image of westbound Union Pacific auto rack train in Rochelle, Illinois. Note the former Milwaukee Road caboose on display at left.

A ladder reused to become a clothes rack

Notice the tie-downs on the upper deck. Detachable low rider racks.

Nicole and I closed up the shop at 6:00pm. Quickly sorted the rack and gathered provisions for the coming adventure, then ventured forth towards a pending adventure.

 

The goal: Climb The Angel’s Crest, a glorious adventure up the northern arete of the second peak of the Stawamus Chief. I had climbed this route a couple months back, but I was keen to get a chance to lead some of the pitches Dan led last time.

 

After catching the last ferry out of Victoria, and stopping briefly in Vancouver, we arrived at the trailhead on the logging road sometime beyond midnight. We were eager. We wanted to be early, and neither of us wanted to wait in lines. We wanted to be first on route, so we slept in the car, awoke before dawn, and an amazing day ensued.

 

What followed was one of the best days of rock climbing I have ever experienced! The weather was perfect, the rock was impeccable. It was one of those days when our cheeks hurt from the perma-grins we wore all day. If there was one word to describe it, it would have to be this: Elation.

 

After quickly sorting the rack, and opting to leave behind a second rope in favour of a bigger rack (we decided there was no WAY we were going to bail today, we were going to top out), we began the hike up the trail at about 6:30am. It took us about 15 minutes of walking through the forest floor to get to the base of the first pitch, a low 5th bushy, rooty, scramble. This brought us to a ledge and the beginning of the climb proper. Nicole took the sharp end and led this 5.7 groove which involves tree climbing and offers big gear and a piton. This brought us to the lower cruxes. A glorious 5.10b finger crack (the famed Angel Crack), which I led with much glee, and a short but solid 10c pitch. Some 5.7 climbing takes us up to the base of another steep 5.10a that begins with face climbing and leads into a glorious small finger crack high above the forest floor. The exposure really began in earnest at this point!

 

After giving Nicole back the rack on this gloriously small ledge-with-a-view, she led the next pitch. The guidebook says 5.5, but I'd give it 5.7. This took us to the halfway point: A narrow shelf between the expanse of Squamish and the north gully. The next pitch, pitch 8, ran at about 5.10a. It offered a good mix of face climbing and involved a committing step up onto a slabby arete and a narrow crack up to a lovely groove which I giddily climbed with a huge grin on my face. At this point this day is getting too good to be true.

 

This brought us to the Sasquatch Ledge. A narrow, vegetated ledge that runs across the top of the Sheriff's Badge. As we still had not been caught up to by other parties, and had some time, we belayed each other out onto it... The exposure here is massive, but dampened by the massive amount of bushes. Onward we went...

 

The next pitch ran at 5.9 and was another nice little corner finger crack into some face climbing to deposit us in the hanging forest. Here we coiled the rope and gathered our stuff for a five minute walk/scramble up to the base of the aptly named Acrophobes Towers. Halfway up this forest, there is a totem pole. The story of how it got here is really neat to read, and it can be found *HERE*. We snapped some photos, marveled at the sight, and the logisitics of hauling this thing up here, and carried on...

 

When we saw the Acrophobes, we were in awe. These gigantic teeth-like spires shoot up out of the ridge like knife blades, and the exposure is immense! On the left, a huge drop into the gully. On the right, an even bigger drop way down to the valley below.

 

We ate lunch here, talked for a while, smiled and laughed, and eventually decided that I should grab the rack and lead the pitch. While the protection is sparse, the climbing is easy. And the position is nothing short of incredible! I think both Nicole and I took far longer than we needed to to climb this, and both of us laughed, grinned, and smiled our way through the traverse. A short rappell of the high tower, followed by a scamper through a notch, brought us to the base of pitch 11, a loose and exposed 5.8 that offeres both good and bad protection is a very airy setting. Rope drag was a big issue here, and in retrospect I will bring some massive slings net time to mitigate this. After bringing up Nicole, we looked back along the route, we could see a party down below on the top of the acrophobes. It looks far more exposed from above. Wow!

 

Next was a 5.7 that starts with another couple moves up a tree and in to a very large (BD #3) crack, that leads up to a hyper-exposed slabby arete that tops out at the most exposed belay ledge of the climb, a 30cm wide ledge on a vertical wall high above the valley floor. Fun!

 

Next came the crux. a 10b that feels move like a 10d the first time leading it. It was glorious! It involved pulling a bulge to start, then either a wide hand crack or shallow finger cracks that take you up to a roof. Pulling this move through the roof is spectacular! I looked at my feet mid move, and could see nothing but the treetops 700m below! After this move its a solid mix of laybacks and jams to the top of the pitch.

 

After this, we enjoyed the view for a bit from our last belay ledge, then crawled (!!!) the narrow and exposed ledge to the final chimney pitch. This was so fun to lead! Super easy but mega awkward. I laughed my way up the whole thing, as I used a variety of both graceful and grace-less techniques. But I did eventually top out, and let out a massive yell of glee upon doing so, then quickly set up belay to bring up Nicole. She arrived 10 minutes later, and a celebration ensued. We just climbed Angel's Crest! What a day!

 

All in all, we took our time, all 12 hours of it. Despite this, we still felt like we had the route to ourselves; the other parties always a ways behind. It was a spectacularly enjoyable day! We waled the last little bit to the main second summit, then down to a nice viewpoint. Here we smiled and laughed and talked of the greatness of the day. Sipped some summit whiskey, and made our way down, vowing we will return to climb more... and soon. :)

 

K

 

Most every data center has a rack where the random stuff goes. This is ours. These are the SCCM server (and database storage), our three spam firewalls, two or three app-specific systems, one requiring a dongle(!), the Mac servers, and video storage for the Athletics department.

A fun, fast train chase is one of the great joys of life...especially when it's vintage, like RJ Corman's gorgeous red-and-sliver tuxedo F-units from the Old Kentucky Dinner Train.

 

A bonus opportunity...a l-o-o-n-g loaded CSX auto rack train splits the signals at HK Tower before heading north up the former L&N LCL to Cincinnati.

yeah thats my wine rack i made in metals enjoy it

We racked our wine a few weeks ago. Early in January we will rack it

again and then about a month from that point the wine gets bottled up.

Foldable enamelled rack for clothing

Rack Room Shoes #491 (6,000 square feet)

6610-T Mooretown Road, Williamsburg Marketcenter, Williamsburg, VA

 

This location opened in September 2006 and closed in fall 2010. It became Buzz Picasso in June 2018, which closed in 2023.

Hand-made porteur rack plus Kogswell low-trail conversion fork. Hand-made LED headlamp, too.

- lower legs fit to rear dropout eye

- vertical adjustable slots at rear top corner for mounting twist-plate hardware

- twist plates attach to boss or P-clamp positioned at top of fork leg

Rack of Lamb, mash, roasted carrots and gravy

Ready for commuting and groceries!

Silverware rack, kitchen supply hooks.

Sprayed the rack today. It's not quite as dark as I expected, the walnut is quite blonde, but I like it a lot.

Carlton Bale's Home Theater Equipment Rack

 

Carlton Bale's Home Theater Equipment Rack

 

Middle Atlantic Equipment Rack, Middle Atlantic Rack Light (top, retracted), Panamax Max 5300 Surge Protector, Philips RFX9600 remote control base station, TiVo HD, Windows Media Center PC w/Touch Screen, Anthem Statement D2 Pre-amp/Processor, Sherbourne 7/2100A amplifier, Velodyne HGS15 subwoofer

A very 70s smoked glass effect plastic magazine rack, taken from below and looking up at the wonderful dome.

 

From the flickrmeet at Central Library

Fried chicken and bbq ribs from Rack and Soul. Harlem, New York City.

 

For The L Magazine

frenched, seared, then roasted

arranged with tossed oven rösti

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