...where do you get the blue wedges?
What's up with that bracelet on your wrist?
Sorry, man fergot to answer.
.. Yeah, man those are all from Madsen's. The one's I have in the vid are not that great since they have a bit steeper taper, but the OLD ones the Blue Ox's... now those were the stuff... they were just a bit wider, but appreciably shallower on the taper, so they stacked like a dream and lifted the world. The new ones we only use for single drives. If you have to stack, then you usually have to go with the red and white KandH's from Medford. ABS plastic is really weird. It appears that something as subtle as the type of dye used in the mix will actually affect the durometer of the plastic. Even the old Blue Ox's were just a bit too hard to stack super well. You almost need em a bit softer (again KandH's are the stuff!) to grip each other really well on the double-up. All ABS plastic has higher compression strength (I think) than any North American wood, so, to me the durometer is really a moot point, except that the harder ones can tend to be just a bit more durable in some ways, but then, when you miss, they "chip" a lot worse (rather than mushroom) than the softer stuff. Just about all Washingtonian fallers are K and H men... unless they got a better deal on other stuff. That color blue shows up really well in a dark wood.
That is an Orthodox prayer bracelet, which is usually only worn by monastics, and which 90% of Orthodox would consider way too sanctimonious to ever be caught dead with in public. Outside of monastic circles they are generally only worn by extreme Orthodox "newbies," which I certainly am. They are designed to get a man away from that silly sort of Protestant, extemporaneous type of prayer that I grew up with. You know: the kind that begins with a diagnosis of the patient's condition, followed by priceless advice for how the Great Physician should best go about treating the condition. (Just as if He shouldn't be expected to know best.) Instead, for each of the fifty beads on the bracelet, one has only to picture the person (even yourself) one is praying for in one's head, and repeat the phrase, "Lord have mercy," for each bead in rapid succession. You finish on the fiftieth (and largest, cross-shaped bead) with the phrase, "Lord, Jesus Christ, Son of God, have mercy on me." I only wear mine because a dude from our church went to a monastery in Serbia and brought it back for me. That, and it's already gotten me out of a couple of jambs already. Works a treat! Try it Butch!!