December 22, 2012
Batteries not included
Retiree enjoys designing, building wooden models
Lawrence Pierce
Junior Sowards shows off a couple of years worth of hobby projects. Sowards makes toy-size heavy machinery out of scavenged wood.
Page 2 of 2
Lawrence Pierce
A lot of time and effort goes into each model. Everything is painted and detailed by hand.
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But he's always been a handy guy.

"I used to be a shade-tree mechanic," Sowards said. "When they started putting computers in all the cars, that's when I chopped my tree down and called it quits."

Sowards said he's always dabbled with one thing or another. He used to do metalwork, and for 34 years made his living building fiber drums for Sunoco.

"We built them to replace stainless steel drums."

Sowards retired from Sunoco in the late 1990s. In 2001, his wife, Rita, died.

"We were married for 46 years," he said. He remarried a few years later, to a widow who lived nearby.

"I've known Linda since she was 12 or 13 years old," he said. "She lived just right across the way, in this house her father built back in the 1950s."

They'd been friendly for a while, but one night, Sowards decided he didn't feel like cooking and didn't feel like eating alone. He called her up and asked her if she wanted to go get something to eat.

"And we ain't looked back since," he said.

That was nearly 10 years ago.

"It's been just wonderful," Sowards said. "This second-time-around thing, I would never have expected that."

Sowards said Linda has always encouraged him and supported him.

"She's the one who got me into this in the first place," he said.

Five years ago, Linda, tired of watching her husband sitting around, told him he needed to find something to do with his time. He took up woodwork.

Sowards acknowledged that between the tools, the projects and the materials, it all takes up quite a bit of space -- and as he completes new models, there's a little more clutter. "He's taken over my living room," she laughed. "But I don't mind. He enjoys it."

"I guess I'm just looking for the right people to give them to," he said. He points to a few that are already spoken for.

"The tractor-trailer there," he said, "I'm giving that to a 4-year-old boy."

A grandson.

Reach Bill Lynch at ly...@wvgazette.com or 304-348-5195.

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