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Location
Loomis, NE
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Looks GREAT !!! The sheath looks like it won't bounce around during riding and looks like a safe way to have a straight blade if the rider accidentally gets dumped too.
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Idle talk, Who is your favorite Blacksmith from the movies?
Grundgedog replied to PCornett's topic in Everything Else
Alan Hale was the blacksmith when Clint Eastwood came to arrest him in Hang'em High, he looked the part but I can't remember what he was doing at the anvil now that I think of it.... The worst was the "new" Rambo, Stallone kept heating this bar, and beat on it once in a while. -
I have moved from Golden Co to Kearney Ne
Grundgedog replied to matto's topic in Shop Tips n' Tricks
Matto, Every 4th Friday, the blacksmith from the Stuhr museum in GI has a hammer in, if you want to carpool to go to one, I'd be happy to pick you up !! http://pba.abana-chapter.com/ I live thirty miles southwest of you, but I am always in Kearney doing something or another. I was thinking my cousin's son did some work at Trails and Rails, we need to get together and chat !!! Kevin -
My daughter and son-in-law have a mailbox on a post that is about to fall apart, I am planning on a real nice stand for them. A little scroll work, maybe their last initial incorporated into the design. I better get to it!!
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Wow, looks great! I have a Buffalo forge with a huge crack in the firepot, if I go to new one, something yours would definately work! Do you have a cover for the fan inlet? Around here if the forge sat idle for a while, I would wind up with a wasp nest in it !!!
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The WPA built a dam for a farm pond in our pasture. It had a huge cement spillway. Granddad said you were paid a $1 a day OR if you brought a team of horses it was $1.50. There were so many WPA guys working on this and they were going everywhere, so G'pa would say, "2 a comin', 2 a goin', 2 a $hittin', 2 a mowin'...... The dam lasted very well, we had three large rainstorms in a row one time and a little water got under the concrete and it was gone overnight after being there for 60 years. There was a small building that workers could warm up in, but I can't remember what the hardware looked like.
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Ding, Ding, Ding !!! Maillemaker won ! By the time me and my buddies stripped that thing down, there was hardly anything to haul away ! The glass was broken out, thus the interior was shot so not much value there, but I think we got the goodie out of it. Dad is just happy getting it off the place, I'll have to hammer out something for him...
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Outside craft shows (My first... and last)
Grundgedog replied to Naz's topic in Blacksmithing, General Discussion
We had the wind blow hard all one day, it was hot, too, at a flea market we were selling antiques at, what a pain and NOBODY was buying in that weather. But at least my EZup's still had the legs attached !! The next day was nice and we really did well. Looks like you have some very nice things on your table, good thing you weren't at the flea market I went to, my wife would be mad at me for hanging out at your booth !!! -
As I am a newbie, could you explain more about this? There is a demonstration Saturday and Sunday, and a class Monday and Tuesday,right? Do I need to register for attending Saturday and Sunday? What is the cost? Do you have an agenda? What are the hours? I cannot get off work Monday or Tuesday, but if there is something fun happening Saturday and Sunday, I sure want to be part of it !! Thanks, Kevin
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My doctor buddy says, "Drink water until you pee, then keep on drinking." Avoid sodas and alcohol, they might taste good, but they aren't good for you on a hot day. Get in the cool once in a while and take a break. To cool down faster, run a fan on yourself, even in an air-conditioned house, it helps me get back to work faster. I have been working on the west side of a house this week and the afternoons have been dang near unbearable..... I used to service irrigation engines, 454 Chevy's, 636 Jimmy's, 534 Fords etc. in the summertime. When I would first walk up to them the pipes would be hot enough to glow red and light your cigarette. Then I would change oil, do a tune up, replace parts, standing right next to them of course. No matter how hot it was, just being away from those things felt good. I was MUCH younger then....
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How do I cut a horseshoeing rasp?
Grundgedog replied to Grundgedog's topic in Blacksmithing, General Discussion
Thanks guys, I will give the grinder a try, then when I round up the right tools, I will work on doing a hot cut.