Captain, thank you for saying this so eloquently. I'm sure in Britainyou have an expression for this; in America we call it "Yankee Ingenuity." The idea of repairing something before replacing it is economically sound and the hallmark of a craftsman. It's why I spend money getting new soles on old shoes -- the uppers are still good, and the shoe comfortable -- I don't need new shoes if just the soles are worn.
My father and grandfather taught me: "don't throw it out until it's used up." During the Great Depression, my grandfather, who was ably employed at the time, went to the dump every Saturday to scrounge parts to rebuild everything from radios to washing machines. He'd work the weekend making repairable scrap whole again. Then he'd sell or give what he fixed to people who were up against hard times. Your "make do" and "improvise" is the spirit of a true artisan. Thanks for keeping this philosophy alive.Information
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