Frozen Forge, thank you for the dating on my Trenton. I knew it was close to turn of the century and for a 113 year old anvil it looked and sounded to be in great condition. Just setting it on my wood work bench to go over every inch of the face with a hammer to test for dead spots it had a very pleasant ring. I am excited to get it mounted. Frosty, you're welcome! and you are quite right I have a line of items I am selling but I want to do a bit of value added work with hand forging various parts and items. I have tinkered with "kind of" forging in the last couple months. I hammered some bottle openers out of half horseshoes and other items using my oxy-acetylene set a 3# hand sledge and an old andiron that was made from a piece of train rail. I have read a blacksmithing primer and the backyard blacksmith cover to cover and reread the chapters I felt I didn't fully take in. I planned this addition for a couple of months and now I am in the process of implementing it. I am a bit scared of the financial cost of doing it but since I am already in the shop welding out items for customers anyways I will get to practice a lot more when I am waiting on orders or hit a slow period. I plan on doing some small items for my wife to take to farmers market as well. I like re-purposing items used in the equine world after they have ended their duty cycle into unique new useable items. I find working with steel to be relaxing, almost cathartic. I like taking something hard and turning it into a useable item that people want in their homes. I have a full blown wood shop as well. I could open a cabinet shop but I like the fact that unlike wood if a measurement is read wrong you can add a bit more to it and not lose your piece because of a slight miscalculation. The shear fact of the matter is it is fun playing with fire and making something that is near unbreakable bend to my will! Does it help as therapy, i think that any person needs a hobby. One that makes them feel relaxed, that they can focus energy into and produce something that is of use to someone. If it art, music, or underwater basket weaving, it doesn't matter as long as you take pleasure in it and yes a bit of pride in accomplishing it. so short answer yes. So the question i put out to everyone what would the best style of stand be for this anvil? I would like to make the stand somewhat portable. My thought was welding one out of square tubing and an angle iron base. Fill the square tubing legs with sand, cap them, then weld the legs to an angle iron base. On the angle iron base welding ears for mounting a bolted on cross bar to go over the feet of the anvil. I thought of using 1/4" steel on it and using the sand to add mass to the base. other option is I go out and cut a 21" slab of a ponderosa pine or other similar local tree. I don't know anywhere around me that has any downed cotton wood. Thoughts or suggestions would be appreciated.