So anyway...where was I?
Back when I was camping the first time (late 1970s), my wife, of that time, did all the packing. It was a chaotic hodgepodge of grocery bags, laundry baskets, and styrofoam coolers, randomly piled in the car. I never knew were a particular thing was, as there was no organization whatsoever.
Drove me nuts.
Here we are, way in the future (no Jetsons cars, as yet) and I'm camping again; and this time, I'M doing the packing.
I embarked upon a mission of making a sturdy wooden box for my Coleman gas-bottle lantern.
I planned out the interior and started sawing, sanding, glueing and clamping.
As I was working I started thinking of this box as the prototype for a larger project - a series of "camping boxes" in uniform sizes and stackable.
I routed a pocket on the bottom of each to accommodate the handle of the one stacked below it.
I love making the chips fly...and man, do I love retirement!
Here's the finished lantern box. All of the corners are reinforced with steel corners, there is a heavy duty handle on the lid, and a hasp to keep it closed. I darkened all of the steel fittings with gun blue. There was no room on the inside of the box for the lantern bail, so I mounted four small screws on the front into which the bail fits snugly.
The inside is lined with sponge-foam and the lantern fits very securely with plenty of anti-shock cushioning.
After field-testing the lantern box, production started on the rest.
Four of the boxes were all uniform in dimension, the others were custom-made to accommodate specific items.
Now I have a very compact, orderly, and organized load.
Now I needed a place to store the various boxes and other equipment between camping trips and during the off-season.
I started work on a large rolling cabinet with sliding doors. My goal was to use as much salvaged material as possible. In the end, the only material that I purchased were the sliding-door tracks.
The Old Ranger says: "safety first."
I carried a government credit card for sixteen years, this was the first time that I used it.
The heavy rolling base is from a dumpster behind a Barnes and Noble that had undergone a renovation. It is very heavy, can support an enormous amount of weight and glides on it's casters with the effort of two fingers. The MDF was left over from a friend's project and I've had it laying around for nearly ten years.
The completed cabinet doubles as a rock-solid tool-stand for my chop-saw.
A tight squeeze, but everything fits.
Here's the finished project ready for set-up at Greenbrier State Park.
I'll see you next time with more outdoor fun. Please leave a comment, I'd love to hear from you.
Mannie
(the Old Ranger)
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