Our local hobby shop did not survive the pandemic. Though from the sign on their window, they never planned to. They have been struggling for years as "Amazon's showroom" where they would occasionally sell a few small items and people would look at the larger items in the store and then leave and order them on Amazon. That's rough. I understand the allure of a bargain, but I also understand supporting local business and the beauty of being able to walk into a store and buy something without having to wait for it to arrive in the mail. It was sad that they were closed.
Apparently they had recommended a couple of other fairly local hobby shops. The other day we went to one of them to see if they had some specific parts Ethan was looking for. I was still on the hunt for horses to fit my tiny green barn. I also always like to see diorama making materials and try to come up with ideas.
I asked the man behind the counter if there was a scale between N and HO and he said no. Which means if I want horses for my green barn, other than the wooden ones, I am going to have to make them myself. I don't see that happening any time soon. I didn't end up buying any items for making dioramas, since I didn't have anything I was thinking of making in mind at the time. But there is no reason I can't make some plans and gather supplies at another time. Now that I know what they carry. I did buy some more tiny Christmas lights for my tiny tree.
What I was not prepared for was having to tell Travis that all the toys he was asking about were in fact model kits. He asked for several and I said they are kits, you have to build them. And then he insisted he wanted to build them. I had no idea if that was true, or even if he fully grasped what that meant, but I said OK to the Mystery Machine set since it claimed to be an easy snap together model requiring no glue or paint. OK.
We did not put it together immediately when we got home, we waited until after supper, got everything set up, and then got to work. Ethan showed Travis how to put on the first wheel, then he put on the rest of them.Including putting together the 3 characters that came with it. Travis stayed entirely focused the entire time. It was very cool.
I had a significant model-building phase in my teenage years. I learned about mold lines, parts-fitting and glues, and that I could build anything - including Viking ships and race cars! I associate it with increased privacy -- it took place in the family trailer out back -- with increased respect for scratch-building, and with radio. The downside was that I came to hate glue fumes even more than I already did.
ReplyDeleteI hope Travis learns much from this phase.
This makes me so happy to hear Travis had a great time building his model. I'm sure he saw you hard at work on your projects. It turned out fantastic!
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