Here are some resolutions for this woodworker for the New Year. 
1. I will find some good classes to go to.  Highland offers a  wonderful range of woodworking classes with the added advantage (for me)  of no air travel, and no hotel bills since I can come back to my own  house every night.  In addition, I plan to look into the John Campbell  Folk School https://www.folkschool.org/ just over the Georgia line in  North Carolina.  They offer a wonderful range of classes from a weekend  to a full week on a wide variety of subjects from kaleidoscopes to  quilting to calligraphy.  I kinda like the fly rod stuff.  Room and  board are included in their fees and you stay in a dorm on site and eat  family style in the dining room.  To be fair, for lunch Highland points  you to the saloon next door where you can eat family style with your  class and quite often the instructor too.   
2. I will clean the filters in my dust collectors.  I looked up at  the ambient air cleaner in the ceiling of the shop the other day and it  must have a pound of dust in it.  The filter  is two inches thick and it  costs upwards of thirty bucks when you buy a new one.  Sure would hate  to ruin it.  
3. I am moving out all the plywood and pegboard that I have in the  shop.  I do not like plywood and I do not like things made with plywood.   I had some plywood imported from Russia one time and it smelled like a  wet dog whenever you cut it.  Pegboard is a project killer for me.  I  am going to stick with real wood and concentrate on “fine” woodworking  (whatever that is).  
4. I will finish my sculptured rocker, the one on display at  Highland.  I want to rock in that bad boy and I want the right side to  match the left side when I finish it.  
5. I want to turn a hollow vessel.  It is one of the many gaps in my  turning skill set and I just think it is something I need to do well  before I can rightfully call myself a woodturner.  
6. Add the skew to that.  Still working on that boy.  
7. I plan on cleaning the shop very well at least one time this year.   I will get down on my hands and knees with the shop vac and clean  every square foot of the floor.  I also think it may be time to throw  away all those cut-offs I have been saving for heaven knows what.  They  tend to build up over the years, especially since I really hate to throw  wood away.  
8. Clamps are all over the floor.  I have no good place to store them  and it would be a real joy to have them in one place easily and quickly  accessible to a project.  I may do a cart or I may try to clean off a  wall somewhere and build a wall rack.    
9. My son laughs at me all the time for the roll top desk which has  been about 85% finished for the last 15 years.  Perhaps this is the  year.  Course he claims it is such a tradition seeing it there  unfinished, he would really miss it if it got finished and moved up to  the house.  Oh yeah, there is a tilt back rolling desk chair which is  only partially refinished.  And the new mahogany writing table.  Oh, and  the oak barrister’s bookcase.  The second cherry Shaker candle stand.     The walnut school house clock.  Plus about twenty bowls.  Better be a  long year.  
10. I’m going to fix the work table behind the table saw.  Right now,  it is about four inches higher than the table saw, so if I want to use  it as support when I push a board through the saw, it is too tall.   (Really helpful if I ever have another piece of plywood in the shop.)    Plus right now it has all those bowls and the clock on top of it in the  way.  I plan to clean it off, level it up and then mark the legs for  cutting to the saw height.  Same  way you level a chair.
11. And last, I want to learn to make my own custom moldings.  I find  the subject fascinating, both for the detail involved, the lack of  noise and dust, and the universality of the methods used.  It appears  that virtually any molding can be made entirely by hand and with a few  of the right tools, it is achievable by most of we amateurs.  Go look at  “Big Pink” (don’t ask) on the blog  http://musingsfrombigpink.blogspot.com/2011/11/result.html.  Course he  sells the tools also.  
12. Oh yes, I want to learn the bass guitar.  I find myself picking  out the bass line in any song and in another life if I could choose, I  would like to be able to sing bass in a Southern Gospel Quartet. Here’s  what I mean:  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LhAqojyHhc8&feature=related  Whenever  I find myself playing a little air guitar, it is always the bass line.   I’ll never be able to sing it, maybe I can learn to play it.
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