Thanks, I am really glad that you enjoy it all!
Here in a small village at the end of a road in eastern Poland, gaining access to interesting bicycle components is always a challenge. When I moved here some 25 years ago bikes were almost non-existent in the city where we lived and everyone told me that it was too dangerous to ride them, and out in the country it was mostly older people still riding their old bikes, generally folders. Since then there has been a massive upsurge in bikes, home produced and imported, and now they are everywhere, but finding interesting old bikes and parts like you have in the States is almost impossible.
Now I know that there are a ton of old bike parts in the thousands of small farm barns here because everyone has trollies using old bike wheels, and while people keep telling me that they have old bikes, which I know are old Romet and Ukraine bikes, but anyway they are farmers and like to keep everything. Instead I spend a lot of my time sorting out our own barns and chopping vast quantities of wood to keep us warm during the winter, while fixing up my workshop as I go.
Here is my workshop a year ago, with the brick floor only visible in photos and my prototype bench made out of a bed and an old table top.
The entrance hall in our farmhouse, with the original electrical system, steps/ladder to the attic on the right and the leather pull strap in the corner to open the attic roof entrance.
Here is our kitchen, with hot water tank, stove/heater and our impressive plumbing system in the background - with wifie on the right and our niece on the left.
This is the separate heater in our bedroom, and our guests desperately trying to get warm...
I have no welding gear, just a powered drill and a jig saw, and limited access to interesting parts, so everything has to grow out of what I can do with that, which as an engineer is an interesting challenge. Every build I do here means fixing a lot of other things along the way, so it got my workshop built last year and my parts storage area this year.
Next year I have no idea what I will do, yet, but I hope that the Russians do not come and I get to build something else from my stock of bits. I suppose what I do is more like dealing with Lego sets than actual bikes.