Lunch today is going to be on the fly - some fast food joint. Probably Wendy's and if so I will get a Southwest Taco salad with some refreshing beveridge.
I gotta admit lunch is usually pretty perfunctory for me. Just want to get something in my gut. I have no problem with fast food joints but limit myself to maybe one visit a week. When it comes to salads I do like Wendys. When it comes to burgers I am a stone cold Hardees guy although there are those days when only a Big Mac will do. For my daughter it is Happy Meal Chicken McNuggets. I don't know who invented the idea of putting some little toy in those things but they did not pay that guy near enough.
So how about the rest of ya'll. Is lunch a bright spot of your day or just a bit of time you take to wolf something down?
Yesterday I alluded to my semi-ownership of a G&L geetar. I have not owned a ton of G&Ls. To date I have had me one Broadcaster, two 1986 ASATs, a butterscotch Classic S, and a 1985 Interceptor. All were great instruments but the two I liked the best were a black '86 ASAT (which zapcosongs is currrently having a good time with) and the Interecptor. I had played a 1958 Tele for a whole lotta decades and when I first showed up with that Interceptor my friends darn near called an intervention on my butt. I gotta admit it took me a bit to warm up to the looks but I ended up liking that guitar so much that after I sold it once I bought it back. I ended up having to sell it again and now I am buying it back again. All I need is to get the rest of the cash together. I just cannot get that guitar out of my head and I am thinking the third time will be the charm.
Drumroll please...


So, has anybody else out there sold a guitar and then missed it so much you bought it back?
Here is another one of my acoustic kids. This little beauty is what I consider the best bang for your buck acoustic out there - a 1958-62 (no date stamp on this one) Harmony Sovereign jumbo. All solid wood - a bookmatched spruce top, mahogany sides and one piece mahogany back (try finding that today on a guitar), pinless bridge, bound body and neck, and shellac finish. This one is showing alot of battle scars. Nah, it ain't a Martin D-18 but for $100 (plus the cost of a neck reset) it sure does get me into the ballpark. Since this pic was taken I have oiled the board which was about as dry as I have ever seen, put on a truss rod cover scrounged from another Harmony and a repro tort pickguard.

Happy Lunch Ya'll.