Kyle Thomas

The Website of Kyle Thomas (KyleWith)

  • Blog
  • With Media
  • Yellowknife Online
  • Bush Order Provisions Ltd.

Jan 01 2016

The Wood-Fire

I’m currently reading Walden: Life in the Woods by Henry David Thoreau and within it recites a portion of the following poem. I quite enjoyed it so I thought I would look it up and post it so I can refer back to it later.

 

Woodfire

The Wood-Fire

This bright wood-fire
So like to that which warmed and lit
My youthful days—how doth it flit
Back on the periods nigher,
Relighting and rewarming with its glow
The bright scenes of my youth—all gone out now.
How eagerly its flickering blaze doth catch
On every point now wrapped in time’s deep shade,
Into what wild grotesqueness by its flash
And fitful checquering is the picture made!
When I am glad or gay,
Let me walk forth into the brilliant sun,
And with congenial rays be shone upon;
When I am sad, or thought-bewitched would be,
Let me glide forth in moonlight’s mystery,
But never, while I live this changeful life,
This past and future with all wonders rife,
Never, bright flame, may be denied to me
Thy dear, life-imaging, close sympathy.
What but my hopes shot upward e’er so bright?
What but my fortunes sunk so low in night?
Why art thou banished from our hearth and hall,
Thou who art welcomed and beloved by all?
Was thy existence then too fanciful
For our life’s common light, who are so dull?
Did thy bright gleam mysterious converse hold
With our congenial souls? secrets too bold?
Well, we are safe and strong, for now we sit
Beside a hearth where no dim shadows flit,
Where nothing cheers nor saddens, but a fire
Warms feet and hands—nor does to more aspire;
By whose compact, utilitarian heap
The present may sit down and go to sleep,
Nor fear the ghosts who from the dim past walked,
And with us by the unequal light of the old wood-fire talked.

The Dial (October 1840) p. 193 – Poem by Ellen Sturgis Hooper

Written by kylewith · Categorized: Journal

Jun 22 2015

Renovating a Camper into a Mobile Studio

For many years, I have wanted to renovate a camper into a mobile office or studio. I work from home or from a coffee shop so the concept of having a mobile office was fascinating to me. Hooking it up to the Jeep and just stopping anywhere to work. This beast might not yet make it down the highway, but you can bet I’ll tow it around town on occasion.

Lets start from the beginning. A friend calls, says he has a camper he wants to get rid of. I just at the opportunity to get it. I had a truck camper once and a similar camper to this one, both which I sold and then a couple years later regretted. Life goes on. I got an another one.

This one wasn’t pretty. I didn’t even take an initial ‘before’ photo, I just started ripping crap out of it. There was a ton of stuff. A couple dump runs worth, but I got it all cleaned out and stripped down to the bare minimum.

Camper turned into a Studio/Office

As you can see the outside is also not pretty and I have yet to do anything with it. It will remain crappy looking until such a time when I get ambitious again. Maybe next year.

Anyways, the interior, in all its glory, was gross and needed a fresh face. I was never going to strip it right down to the frame, that would be just too much work for me. One of my original plans was to have two walls covered in pallets and the other two white. This also changed as I realized how much work this would be. Harvesting pallets is no easy task. I also had to do something about the split level floor. Annoying.

Camper turned into a Studio/Office DSC_9455 Camper turned into a Studio/Office

Four coats of paint later. I’m not joking, four coats on all four walls and the ceiling. Everything was white. I really wanted a simple and minimalistic feel to the space and figured that white was a good starting point if I ever wanted to do something else with the space.

Sidenote: The table in the pictures directly below is a solid wood dining room table I sanded and refinished. I put IKEA table legs on it, but for how I want to use it, it is too big for the space.

Camper turned into a Studio/Office Camper turned into a Studio/Office

On to the floor. I wanted to fill in the lower level. Like I said, it was annoying now that the space is so open. I filled the space with stripped 2x4s and then sheeted the entire space with new plywood. Again, I had plans to do something nicer but things take more time then you always estimate.

To finish it all I did was put down two coats of polyurethane to seal and give the wood a bit of gloss.

Camper turned into a Studio/Office DSC_9648Camper turned into a Studio/Office

Once the flooring was done drying I got excited and decided to move in the actual desk I would be using in the new studio. It is another simple desk project: three core boxes put together, stained and sealed, with red IKEA table legs (yes I have a stockpile of IKEA legs).

DSC_9658 Camper turned into a Studio/Office Camper turned into a Studio/Office

What I am really excited about is what I’ll be using the studio for. I’m not ready to start talking about it, but it will be a video project. What I’m really hoping I can accomplish with my lighting rig is the ability to light the subject while also keeping what going on outside at a viewable exposure, so you can see the location the studio is in. I’ve going to neat location ideas. However, I think I may need a better video light.

Camper turned into a Studio/Office Camper turned into a Studio/Office

And just for the sake of it this is something like what it might look like. I’m happy.

Camper turned into a Studio/Office

What did I spend

  • Paint: $0 – Salvaged from the dump
  • Plywood: $0 – Salvaged
  • Sealer: $17/can
  • Core Boxes: $0 – Salvaged from old mine
  • Table Legs: $16 for 4 legs
  • Total: $33 + A lot of time.

What still needs to be done

I still have a list of things that need to be done in order to get this to a state in which I’m completely happy with it.

  • Baseboards
  • Baseboard/Plywood vent covers
  • Broken Window – I accidently smashed it moving the camper
  • Heater – I want to get a wall mounted propane heater for the back wall
  • Exterior – We’ve talked about this. 2016. Jeez, get off my back

I’m hoping to continue updating this article as I cross off those items.

So, what do you think?

Written by kylewith · Categorized: Journal · Tagged: camper, projects, renovations, studio

May 04 2015

On Technology in Scouts

I’m glad this article came up because I’ve had the conversation about electronics in Scouts a couple times since the Yellowknife Scouts snowmobile camp this past March. And I say electronics, not technology because technology can be any number of devices. Technically rope is a technology.

You might be surprised to know that I actually don’t like the idea of many electronics on Scouting trips. I don’t support the use electronics to fill time that could otherwise be used for activities that can be skill building and more practical.

However, this is not to say I don’t support the advancement of technology within Scouting. There are many digital technologies that can be deemed useful and align with the Scouting mission. Astronomy charts, GPS, Messaging systems, First Air, etc.

And at a certain point Scouts should be introduced to coding and development. As society moves forward into a digitally connected age, Scouts should understand how it works.

I’ve always considered a scout to be a jack-of-all-trades and a resource. They don’t just consume, they understand how things work so they can help when needed. They can sew, cook, work with wood, weld, perform basic automotive care, survive, adapt, work together and, eventually, code. They embrace learning new things for the betterment of society.

So yes, mindless digital games and endless pointless communication don’t have a place in Scouts, in my eyes, but new technology and how it contributes to society and those around us does. And as the author of the article points out, it is how Scouts approaches these new technologies and educates scouts about them that will make the difference.

Photo from BSA Flickr

Written by kylewith · Categorized: Journal

Apr 04 2015

Another weekend of fishing at Hidden Lake

When the weather is nice and you still have the means to get out to a remote cabin out of cell service where there are good drinks, good food, good fishing and good fishing stuff like best marine battery and good people, you just have to go.

Took a friend, Joe of Chasing Pisces, out to Hidden Lake to for a day of ice fishing. He was on a mission to catch a lake trout. Well, he caught one. Then caught another. And another. We found a sweet spot.

Preparing the ciscos started off the day, along with a big breakfast. With two lines set and the third hole drilled we were setting a line when the fish started to bite like crazy. one, two, three, four fish later we finally were able to leave to try for some whitefish. A venture which didn’t pan out.

While lounging around the next morning I thought to myself, Yellowknife is a place where you can start up until three in the morning swapping fish stories only to get up the next morning to make new ones. It is a beauty.

One my way back into town from the lake I stopped into the Scouts cabin on Pontoon Lake where an ice road was plowed into. The Scouts Cabin was a popular place for friends and I back eight years ago now. It is a little run down and is in need a major clean and renovation, but bits of history still hang on the walls.

Written by kylewith · Categorized: Journal · Tagged: fishing, hidden lake, ice fishing, trout

Mar 25 2015

Hiding at Hidden Lake

The first time I went out to Hidden Lake was as a Scout in 2002. It was the annual snowmobile camp where Scouts would spend 5 days out at a camp on Hidden Lake. We’d snowmobile right from town with all our gear, food and fuel for the week. During the week we’d spend it learning about the operations of a camp as well as many outdoor survival skills. Over the years we did many things. One of my most memorable trips was when we did a lake wide scavenger hunt that had us doing activities like shelter building, signal fire building and ice fishing, all guided by a compass and map.

I have gone out to Hidden Lake every year since with the exception of a couple of years where I was out of town. This year I tagged along with today’s Scouts and helped mentor them just like others did for me. One of my favourite events of the winter.

IMG_3924

 

IMG_3923

 

_DSF6644

 

_DSF6622

 

IMG_3909

 

IMG_3885

 

IMG_3846

 

IMG_3878

 

IMG_3860

 

Written by kylewith · Categorized: Journal · Tagged: hidden lake, scouts, snowmobile, Winter

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • …
  • 55
  • Next Page »

Copyright © 2025 · Altitude Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in