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Max Jeweler

Aug04
by Greg Cravens on August 4, 2011 at 8:03 am
Posted In: Non-Hubris comics

This is the March 1999 cartoon I did for The Bench Jeweler, a trade newspaper published by a large jewelry wholesaler (Fargotstein’s & Sons- Great people). I don’t remember how often I did these cartoons. It may have been monthly, bi-monthly or even quarterly or even all three, depending on the year. but I started doing them before I had a computer in the studio and they ended in, I think, 2000. I still very occasionally have someone track me down to ask if there was ever a book or anything. I doubt there were ever enough cartoons to do a whole book- maybe fifty exist. Because they were done so infrequently and over such a long period and drawn at different sizes, the art style changes a bit. I may try to dig up one of the earlier originals (they were done on 22 inch bristol paper) and scan one in to color and include here one day. That’d be cool. This one was drawn, scanned, and turned into vector art for coloring:

└ Tags: bench, book, cartoon, comic, comic strip, cravens, Fargotstein, greg, Greg Cravens, hardware, James Delgadillo, jeweler, jewelry, Junior, keyboard, Max, Maxtoon, printer, store, typewriter, wholesale
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Pack a Stack

Aug02
by Greg Cravens on August 2, 2011 at 7:49 am
Posted In: Talk About Toys

Jeff Outdoors –
The man abuses outdoor gear, so you don’t have to

OR Drycomp Summit Sack

I scheduled a motorcycle trip across my old stomping grounds with my dad and brother, but I don’t have a motorcycle. I arranged to borrow a motorcycle from my cousin, and I bought an OR waterproof back sack. I used the pack as a carry-on on my flight, then converted it to my motorcycle pack by using a couple of borrowed bungee cords.

I chose the waterproof bag wisely. On the day we left, it was raining. A hundred or so miles into the trip, we rode into a hailstorm with sideways rain. The pack probably survived because my body took the brunt of the hail, rain, and animals that were falling from the sky. After verifying that the four horsemen did not accompany the storm, I was able to change into bone-dry clothes from my new bombproof pack.
Since then, it has turned into my climbing pack. I can tell that the material will not be waterproof much longer if I continue to drag it over granite and sit on it, but so far, so good.
It has one compartment which is a top loader like a dry bag. Imagine a really big compression sack with lightly padded shoulder straps.

Pros
• It’s super light
• It’s strong and well made
• It has compression straps
• It’s simple
• It’s waterproof – really

Cons
• There’s no waist strap, so if you cram your rope, rack, shoes, harness, and water bottle into it, your shoulders will be upset.
• It needs a small separate compartment or pocket for keys, wallet, and chap stick

Bottom Line
It can take a beating despite seeming very flimsy. If you need the volume of a big daypack, but don’t need support or a waist belt, you can’t go wrong.

http://outside2day.blogspot.com/

└ Tags: adventure, backpack, bike, bombproof, compression, cravens, dry bag, Drycomp, gear abuse, hail, hailstorm, jeff, motorbike, motorcycle, mountain, OR, outdoor, outdoor retail, outdoors, outside, pack, product, rain, review, rock, sack, summit, waterproof
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BoatBall

Jul31
by Greg Cravens on July 31, 2011 at 9:06 am
Posted In: Play Nice

There’s such a thing as kayak polo in the same way that there’s such a thing as kid’s sports organized by adults.
There’s such a thing as BoatBall in the same way that kids with a stick and a rock will occasionally play ball together.

If you have some kayakers, the requisite gear, a lake, a couple of floats attached to a couple of weights, a kayak polo ball or similarly sized tough ball, and everyone agrees to play nice, then you can play boatball.
Easy. Two teams. We have, in the past, tried to visually separate the teams with sets of XXL T-shirts (to fit over PFDs) and with Do-Rags over our helmets, but really, this is sandlot sports. Just remember who’s on your team, alright?

One team ‘kicks off’ to the other, and the ball’s in play. When you catch or pick up the ball, you cannot paddle. When multiple players reach in to pick up a ball, the paddles come away. No using paddles to shove boats or other players. You can use a paddle to block a pass, but not at the expense of anyone’s fingers. The paddle rules are probably the most important and the most broken. It’s tough to get into the heat of a game and let go of that paddle to do something else.

One can ‘dribble’, meaning you can toss the ball ahead of you and paddle to it, stop paddling long enough to throw it again and paddle to it. This is nearly impossible in a crowd, of course. The long pass often sets up some lucky player to try out these yards-eating moves. When everyone is clumped up around one end-zone, and a defensive player can hurl the ball halfway down the ‘court’ to a teammate, that teammate has some room to work for a minute. Only a minute, of course, because that whole crowd that used to be lumped up at one end is coming after him now, hoping to reach him before he scores. Once the crowd forms, and he has the ball, he (or she, you know what I mean) can use his (or her, whatever.) hands to steer or even set the ball on his spray skirt and try to make distance by paddling with his hands. Or you can pass to another teammate. Things move fast.

He, or anyone else for that matter, scores by carrying the ball or completing a pass with the ball across the imaginary line upon which a float is sitting. Remember those big bouncy toys you had a kid- the giant rubber balls with a handle molded into it? Those work well. You tie a rope into the handle and tie a boat anchor of some kind to the other end of the rope.

That’s where the ‘Play Nice’ part of this article comes in. If you’ve got people who are dead invested in Who Wins to the point that they’ll argue a pass and whether the line is “here” or six inches from “here” and whether the point is earned or not, then you don’t have a BoatBall game happening. You have AngryPaddlerBall happening. The BoatBallers here in town are notoriously bad at keeping up with the score, and as time to leave the park draws near, a player usually shouts “Next point wins!” and it’s on. The next point wins… unless it happens too fast and then everyone says, “Whoever makes the NEXT point wins!” and it’s on again.

Ten minutes later when everyone is loading boats onto their cars, it doesn’t matter who won, because everyone is still a paddler, the teams were different last week and they’ll be different again next week. AngryPaddlerBall players will either learn to relax or go play something else eventually.

So. BoatBall games generate wonderful stories. The time that everyone is wired up and play has been so fast and furious that when a goose flys just overhead, he’s nearly brained by a player who thought he was a ball being passed and acted automatically. The time that one player sees a lazy pass being set up that will pass just out of his reach and lurches out of his boat, managing to run off his own bow and interfere with the pass. The time that a player did three handrolls, clutching the ball, to alternating sides of his boat trying to get a clear pass. Maybe you have to be there for these stories to be any good, and that’s what this is about. You. Your friends. Go play BoatBall.

└ Tags: Ball, boat, Boatball, cartoon, comic, comic strip, cravens, game, Greg Cravens, kayak, lake, outdoor, outdoors, outside, paddle, park, play, polo
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Confusedly Pithy

Jul30
by Greg Cravens on July 30, 2011 at 8:01 am
Posted In: Non-Hubris comics

I mentioned before that YEARS ago, I drew a comic panel called ‘The Adventures Of Lord Lionel’. The syndicates weren’t interested, as I’m sure it seemed to them to be a one-trick pony. This is the web, though, where you can trot out a pony and see who likes its looks. So, from a twenty-odd year old comic book, here’s Lord Lionel for you.

If you like the concept, there’s another cartoonist who’s breathing life into a similar theme now (Were we all so very influenced by Hope & Crosby road movies, New Yorker cartoons and Gary Larson cartoons? I guess so.) But go check out http://www.mysterysolvedcomic.com/ by Zack Kruse and friends. The English Noble Explorer goes on and on!

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Paddle in a Muddled Fashion

Jul28
by Greg Cravens on July 28, 2011 at 7:31 am
Posted In: Dirty Pictures

When I first started paddling, I was told that if your gear all matched, you looked as if you bought it all at the same time, and were therefore a noob and a poser. My paddling skills have always made me look like a noob and a poser, but my gear has almost always been mismatched. Except for this one time when my boat and most of my gear had some kind of purple on it. Savage Fury boat, Lotus pfd, I forget the helmet company and watershoe brand… but I once wore and paddled in a color-coordinated fashion. It had to end. Nothing to do but buy new gear and trade the boat. And thus I got a black and aqua RPM, a red pfd, dug a non-purple helmet out of the closet (always a good idea), kept my greenish paddle with the red duct tape on it, and found a blue rashguard shirt that was very cheap.

└ Tags: adventure, cravens, Dagger, fury, greg, helmet, hubris, kayak, life jacket, Lotus, mountain, outdoor, outdoors, outside, paddle, PFD, purple, rapid, rashguard, River, rock, RPM, savage, spray skirt, water shoe, whitewater
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