bookmark_borderOn vacation for 2023

I'm currently on vacation, partaking in my annual road trip across the U.S. and Canada. I had originally planned on having at least the first entry of my upcoming blog series completed by my departure date of 10/6, but for various reasons that didn't happen. After my return home sometime next week, I'll resume work on that series and also post one or two other entries that are nearly ready to go. In the meantime, I am taking time off from things to have some adventures up here north of the border.

bookmark_borderThrift store and secondhand finds

I like to hit the thrift stores from time to time looking for clothes, older electronics, music, or just the random unexpected item I can't live without. These are some of my best scores to date.

VitaMix 3600

One afternoon in 2013, while the rounds of the K Avenue thrift stores in Plano, I stumbled upon an incredible find. It was the base and motor portion of an old Vitamix 3600, which dates to sometime in the late 1960s. Vitamixes are renowned for their power, longevity, and long-term reliability, and after plugging it into an outlet I was able to confirm that the motor worked as well as ever. Unfortunately, there was no price tag on the base, and the rest of the unit was missing. I took it up to the checkout counter and asked for a price, only to be told that the manager would need to look at it and get back to me. A couple of days later, I was able to finally get a price quote... ten dollars. I sourced a vintage carafe, lid, and Action Dome off eBay (not dirt cheap, but still much better than trying to buy a complete unit) and using them I was able to assemble a completed machine. As I already owned my own high powered Vitamix blender, I gave the thrift store one to Hannah (she of the lemonade post), who I knew would appreciate it. Top notch new Vitamixes can retail for $500 to as much as $1,000.
Hannah showing off the fully reassembled Vita-Mix 3600.  Photo by Corey Geloneck. Hannah showing off the fully reassembled Vita-Mix 3600. Photo by Corey Geloneck.
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bookmark_borderHomemade vegetable stock/broth

Vegetable stock
Vegetable stock

There are plenty of vegetable stock recipes out there. This is one I've come up with that has worked so far for me. There is no salt or pepper in my version, and as usual for my recipes, this uses fresh (not canned!) ingredients.

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bookmark_borderUpdate concerning future and ongoing projects

I tend to always have multiple things going on creatively, with as many as five or six projects in progress at one time in various stages of completeness. As a result, new material on this site tends to go up in spurts, with large amounts of content being added all at once as a project is completed. Even this blog is usually updated in spurts, which several entries being edited simultaneously and ultimately posted in groups of two or three, all of them post-dated to go live at a later date. This entry here is no exception. But there's a lot of other work going on in the background for which these semi-regular blog posts are biding time.

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bookmark_borderAn illustrated camera chronology

This is an illustrated chronology of all the cameras I have used over the years from the very beginning up until the present day, with the exception of cell phones and one-offs taken using other people's equipment. I still have most of these in my possession.

1995

Kodak Tele-Instamatic 608

Kodak Tele-Instamatic 608 camera
The camera I started with in late spring 1995. My original unit was my mother's old camera, which I used for a few months until light leakage problems became too serious to ignore. This was not a great photographic tool by any stretch, but we all have to start somewhere.
Scott Frederick, taken June 1995
Taken in June 1995 using the Tele-Instamatic
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