We
have been visiting places where we can see natural resources in their natural
state. Now, the past couple of days we are visiting factories and centers where
we see how those natural resources become processed and manufactured! It is one
aspect of my major that I haven’t really studied, so I was interested to see
how these raw materials are being constructed into things that people need/use
every day.
So
after the tomato harvesting activity on Tuesday, we left Meifeng Farm and traveled
to lower elevation to check into the Shueili Wood Utilization Center. This
place had the factory just a walk away from the building we would be staying
for two days. When we came to the building with our entire luggage, an
energetic black dog came to us as if to say ‘welcome!’ He was so adorable,
leaning against our legs to get a pet from us. We learned later that his name
was Happy, which suited him so well! Our
dinner got many surprised gasps because we had nuggets and French fries for a
portion of the dishes, which was so different from the traditional Taiwanese
dishes we have been having for every meal, every day. We had one more activity
planned this day, and it was making a Rubin Lock. After
sanding each piece, then coating it with a sealant, we were frantically
practicing putting together the complicated puzzle. Everyone was trying to beat
their best time because we were going to have a competition. Vico and I won,
and got a baseball bat? Haha, my initial thought was “cool”, but right after I was
like “how am I going to fit it in my suitcase?”
the rubin lock all put together!
The
next morning was wholly dedicated to a DIY project! The previous years students
made a whole bench! But based on the fact that many of them couldn’t transport
it back to their home, our project this year was to make a tissue box. It took
me back to my middle school woodshop class in 7th grade, ohhhh Mr.
Kuhn, I wonder if he is his still kooky self.
Sanding took the longest time, then a primer coat was sprayed and left to dry as we all had our lunch break. I accidently got some glue on the sides of my box, so when I primed it, and eventually painted it, there are some blotch spots, oh well, it gives it character :) I like all of these DIY stuff; more things to bring back to the States!
After we all finished our boxes, we all got to go on a tour of the wood factory. We got to see the wood's different stages, as it becomes various usable products. A humungo saw easily sliced through the logs as it they were butter. It was pretty cool, but a little scary because wood chips were flying everywhere. I was really surprised that all of the workers weren't wearing any safety goggles! Some were even wearing flipflops around these big dangerous machines. I guess safety regulations aren't as strict as they are in the States. We watched master cut and carve my baseball bat out of a block of wood! It was pretty neat to see the process of actually making it. The master carpenter also demonstrated how to sharpen one of the huge belt saws. After he showed off his "saw bending and twisting" skills haha.
After we all finished our boxes, we all got to go on a tour of the wood factory. We got to see the wood's different stages, as it becomes various usable products. A humungo saw easily sliced through the logs as it they were butter. It was pretty cool, but a little scary because wood chips were flying everywhere. I was really surprised that all of the workers weren't wearing any safety goggles! Some were even wearing flipflops around these big dangerous machines. I guess safety regulations aren't as strict as they are in the States. We watched master cut and carve my baseball bat out of a block of wood! It was pretty neat to see the process of actually making it. The master carpenter also demonstrated how to sharpen one of the huge belt saws. After he showed off his "saw bending and twisting" skills haha.
Sanding away!
The machine that sharpens the saw, sparks!
And finally, making the baseball bat!
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