 Hi, my name is Patrick Flord, and I'm the creator of this sculpture here, Armolary, that I made in year 2000 for the City of Portland. It was a gift to the Portland trails from the Rotary Club, and they commissioned they commissioned me to to make a directional indicator for the start of the trail, started out being a compass in the sidewalk, and we decided that it wouldn't be seen in the winter with all the snow and ice, so we grew it up out of the sidewalk with the help of some committee members and and came up with a hybrid armillary. Normally armillaries don't have a globe within them, but I put one in there in order to include elements of Maine which the continents are represent, and you can see some pair of loons, a lobster, an ear of corn, a Maine guide, which happens to be the profile of my grandfather, secret, and there's 35 or 36, 37 different elements pictured in the globe that refer to Maine in some way. I built it at my studio in New Gloucester with the help of a contractor, some contractors out in the metal fabrication contractors, and and City of Portland put in a substantial base for me to bolt it to and hired a boom truck, lifted it into place, bolted it down, pointed it towards north, somewhat, and here it's been sitting for 15 years, rusting away, and I think it's attained a pretty good patina. I'm still satisfied with it. It's in pretty good shape, considering there's been climbed on for many years. This represents Australia, for instance, and is the ski slope at Sugarloaf. Loons, see the two loons? Lobsters, lobster claws, lobster tail, an ear of corn upside down, India, Africa. Yeah, the bean boot, right. The bean boot. The tip of Africa. The bean boot is tip of Africa. Here's the main guide with an old felt hat on. Profile of my grandfather was his glasses. At South America, pinecone. Here's a pinecone in South America. Here's the hunts scene with a bow and arrow. It's actually taken from a petroglyph. These represent hurricane flags. Next to the lighthouse. I am still working in steel, still working in my shop in New Gloucester, New Shop, and presently I'm using recycled vintage shovels to produce large-sized pinecones, which have done pretty well. I sell and get lots of contact from my website, PatFloor.com, and ship them all over the United States and Canada. So that's what I'm working on right now.