Wood back-scratchers with a small hand on the end proved to be popular with buyers who stopped by the table of Don Trost and Fred Gerlinger at the Avalon Gardens craft fair in November.
But by the end of the sale, the two residents had sold lots of their original wood creations.
鈥淲e did all right,鈥 said Trost, 96. 鈥淲e made a few hundred bucks anyway, and and we donate part of that into our entertainment fund.鈥
When Trost arrived at Avalon Gardens five years ago, he had downsized from a Murrayville condo and before that, had lived many years in a home in Brookswood. The downsizing included his shop where he had done his woodworking.
He was pleased to find that some of the Avalon residents before him 鈥 including Gerlinger 鈥 had a small area set up for woodwork.
Sure, it was rudimentary, a slab of plywood on scaffolding, but it gave several residents the opportunity to keep their minds and hands busy doing something they enjoyed.
Trost, who had spent his working life at the Saskatchewan Wheat Board elevators in Thunder Bay, Ont., was carrying on skills he learned at a young age.
鈥淢y father used to do it when we were children,鈥 he explained.
Gerlinger, 95, was one of the original handful of men who started the wood shop. A longtime member of the Kelowna fire service, he had moved to the Coast to be near family and moved to Avalon Gardens after the passing of his wife in 2010. The original group pitched in $20 each for supplies. Gerlinger is the last of the founders.
Over time the shop has been improved and more features added 鈥 doors, security, and equipment. Trost was able to get his wood lathe back from a relative to add to the amenities.
Through the years, the two men have made all sorts of decor items, puzzles, cradles, rocking horses, models of classic cars, and practical things, such as a combination table and tray for beside a person鈥檚 easy chair.
Lots of their creations have gone to family and lots are under Christmas trees for 2022.
鈥淚t makes me happy thinking that I can help someone else,鈥 Trost said.
He was asked to refurbish a rocking horse he made for a grandchild, so she could give it to her grandchild. He knows some of his wood creations are in Florida and England, and all across the country. One of his favourite items to create are wood models of cars 鈥 from the 1926 to 1932 era, when the vehicles were more square and therefore easier to fashion.
鈥淚鈥檝e made over 100 that I鈥檝e given away, just in the cars,鈥 he said.
They include a surprise for the recipient.
鈥淲e put a music box under the hood,鈥 Trost said.
From what the Avalon Gardens woodworkers sell, some of the proceeds are kept to cover the cost of supplies, but they have donated to their seniors complex, as well as to causes such as 91原创 Memorial Hospital, and the food bank.
The payoff for the two men is having something to do that they enjoy 鈥 particularly during the pandemic 鈥 and moreover it鈥檚 something that brings pleasure to others.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 know what I would have been doing if I didn鈥檛 have something. I had a hobby to go to,鈥 Gerlinger said.
He took Sunday after the craft sale to rest and watch the Grey Cup, but was already looking to the future, thinking about what to fashion out of wood next.
鈥淣ow we鈥檙e already getting another kick at it for next year,鈥 he said.
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