Lunch today is a ham sandwich, a cup of coffee and a banananana. Ham was on mega special at the shop on the weekend, it actually cost less per kilo than apples. Being a fat, meat eating bastard I bought half a leg of it.
Here's what my build looked like this morning:

That's filler all over the body. I tried my hardest to get rid of the orange peel by sanding and got very close but the filler was needed. It will look different tomorrow, I'm ready to start top-coating. Anyone want to fancy a guess as to what colour it’s going to be?
Jeremy asked about my plan for the neck – I bought one from Musikraft, it’s an all maple number with a boat-V contour and 21x6105 frets. It fits into the neck pocket as snugly as on any guitar I’ve seen. It will have a satin finish. I’m going to follow the setup procedure in the gallery section of the forum for getting it to seat properly and adjusting the truss rod.
Something I really enjoy is cooking, particularly on a Weber BBQ and especially when there’s a duck involved. Anyone else enjoy cooking? Here’s something I made on Sunday, a recipe of my own - Roast duck a’la Moroccan style. You mix together a spoon of salt, three spoons of cumin and the peel of an orange or two, finely shredded. Make four incisions in the skin, one on each breast and leg, and loosen it by sticking your finger in the hole and moving it around. If the duck grins at this stage you’ll need to kill it. Stuff the flavouring mixture along with a couple of pieces of cinnamon bark (from the Indian grocer, it’s waaaaaaay nicer than the powder) in there. Cut the orange from which you took the rind into 8 bits and put that in the cavity along with a few more cinammon sticks and a few crushed cardamom pods. Put it on the Weber with some hickory for smoky flavour. Put the lid on and a little over an hour later this is what you have.

It would have looked more appetising if I'd cut the neck off....
Amplification. What directions you’d like to see manufacturers take?
I’m an admirer of simplicity in an amplifier. I love the amps of the ‘50s and early ‘60s – volume, tone and maybe a tremolo - because I have to do is turn it on and set it so it produces a sound I like, which is very easy. Quite a few manufacturers are making amps like this still, which is wonderful. But to keep redesigning, or reissuing, the classics has it’s limitations, and with good quality tubes being harder to come by this cant sustain itself forever. I recently bought a ZT Club amp and I love it. It occurred to me that it is very modern – it’s efficient, it’s stylish, it’s high tech, it’s inexpensive. It’s also solid state (gasp!), making it very reliable and low maintenance, and it sounds fantastic. I have a feeling that a lot of work went into it, and that work was done towards a very particular goal. That's what I'd like to see more of.
Enjoy your day fellers.