I have started part-time employment at my neighborhood hardware store. It is a national chain with several franchises here in the Twin Cities.
I spent a few hours last week doing on-line training. Today was my first day in the actual store. I was assigned as a cashier and shadowed a very friendly associate for a few minutes before turning the roles and he shadowed me.
The store is definitely a neighborhood kind of place where most people walk to the store and purchase smaller items. My largest sale in my 5 hour shift was for $95. And that was for a single item.
There were several house account customers. Mostly local apartment building types looking to purchase small repair project items.
The store is very busy with these small sale transactions but most interesting (and confusing) to me were the number of returns. Nearly every other transaction involved a return. I'm still not sure I got the process down completely because there a variety of steps ... or it may be it just seemed that way to me.
Before my shift was over I was on my own. Thankfully there is always someone to help just a headset call away.
Also, my first day I interacted with 3 people I knew including the owner of Isles Bun and Coffee, my old ophthalmologist and a customer from Juiced Nutrition. There was a fourth customer that I know from my store but he didn't see me.
I guess I did okay because I got my schedule for the rest of the week. Now I just need to learn where everything is in the store!
Monday, July 31, 2017
Thursday, July 27, 2017
Front Door Project
Making progress on one of my most difficult projects. Stripping hundred year old varnish and dirt from the front door.
The door weighs a ton and I have to take it down and put it back any time I leave and at night.
I first tried sanding off the mess but that didn't work. went on line and saw a demo using a heat gun. That worked well for the larger flat sections.
I was nervous about using the heat gun near the glass. And that proved valid. I tried and was fairly successful for a couple of panes but on the third I created a slight crack in the glass because of the heat from the gun.
I switched to stripper chemicals (citrus and 3M Safe Stripper). I've also sanded and applied post-stripper wash.
The door weighs a ton and I have to take it down and put it back any time I leave and at night.
I first tried sanding off the mess but that didn't work. went on line and saw a demo using a heat gun. That worked well for the larger flat sections.
I was nervous about using the heat gun near the glass. And that proved valid. I tried and was fairly successful for a couple of panes but on the third I created a slight crack in the glass because of the heat from the gun.
I switched to stripper chemicals (citrus and 3M Safe Stripper). I've also sanded and applied post-stripper wash.
Detail of the mess around the glass panes. |
Using heat gun. Pile of scrapped off varnish. |
Post heat gun treatment. |
Sunday, July 23, 2017
Thursday, July 20, 2017
New garage door
New door |
It wasn't just the door but the jam was also messed up. I found a complete exterior door at the Habitat For Humanity's ReStoreIt store. It was the correct size and opened the correct way. It only cost $45!
The locking door knob and dead bolt cost more than the door. The project came together without too much hassle ... which is a miracle at this place.
Old door |
While I was working in the backyard, I repaired a couple of sections of the patio (not pictured) and replaced the pressure-treated wood mini-retaining wall with railroad ties that I found for free on the NextDoor website.
Monday, July 10, 2017
Saturday, July 8, 2017
Cabin time
sun rise |
sun set |
fern cup |
Grand Marais selfie |
Matching t-shirts |
poop eating butteflies |
this year's puzzle |
Uno up north |
Uno was fascinated by the outdoor view |
the tree that blocked our way |
Labels:
Grand Marais,
Jenny,
Jenny and Andrew,
north cabin,
Uno
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