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I Forge Iron

Ferrous Beuler

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Posts posted by Ferrous Beuler


  1. There were moved up the road a bit:

    http://torontothenandnow.blogspot.com/2010/10/9-haunted-royal-ontario-museum-then-and.html

    http://maps.google.com/maps?ll=43.66696,-79.395217&spn=0.01,0.01&t=m&q=43.66696,-79.395217
    (go to the street view and you can see a picture of them, along with that...interesting...new design for the museum)

    Cool. It's nice to know they are still there after all these years. Too bad about the huge amount of wrought iron work lost in Europe with all the bombing, etc. in WWII. Haven't been up to Toronto in a few years, maybe I'll make it a point to get there for the St. Patrick's Day parade in '11. I've been to a few of those in Toronto and they're always great.
  2. Could prove to be the best twenty dollars you ever spent. I spent about twenty minutes just glancing around and learned a bucket full of stuff right there...

    Hey- Anybody here from Toronto ???
    Have a look at page 42 and notice the picture of the wrought iron work then located atop the Alexandra gates at Queens Park in Toronto. It would be very interesting to see if that work is still there today.

  3. I've had the usual assortment of intruders, weird spiders, birds, bats, mice, northern water snake, stray cats and potentially the scariest of all because it could have gone bad- a three year old boy.
    I had been in the shop, a one car garage which is only about five steps from my back door. Came into the house to answer the phone and was back out in the shop in less than two minutes, there he was just standing there in the middle of the floor. Right in front of him was the anvil with a hinge resting on it that had faded to black but was still screaming hot, hot tongs, hot hammer, could have been really really bad. Just as soon as I saw him there through the open front doors his Grandma, my neighbor emerged from her back door and said have you seen... I just pointed at him and she called his name. I don't think little Tommie will be back any time soon after getting his hide tanned by Grandma...

    I'll wager I've had the biggest foreign critter of anyone in their shop- a Belgian draught horse that wandered in from the next road over when I lived in Geneseo. That shop was in the barn there which had no doors on one end so he just wandered in and hung out for awhile. Scared the crap out of me because it was dark and I had gone out to retrieve something, turned the corner and was face to face with likely the biggest horse in the county. He was real freindly though and had feet bigger than Frosty's :)

  4. Congrats Sam, nice anvil.

    Looks just like mine which I think is a PW but I'm not sure, mine has no maker's marks anywhere just 2-1-17 in the waist. Mine has a 1 1/4" hardy hole. I found it at a barn sale back in 2001, asked the pair of old ladies what they wanted and they had to make a call to old lady #3 as it was hers but she was at home and not at the sale. The phone was so loud I could hear every word. "Not a penny less than $65"!!! She put her hand over the mouth piece and said to me "would $65 be alright"? I tried to give the impression that it was a hard decision... ;)

  5. Oh, I thought that said "Folger's elbow" which I think I may have (and "Molson's elbow" which I know for sure I have).
    Seriously though, my wife had surgery on one elbow two years ago to correct a torn tendon, scraped the bone and reattached it and then a LOT of PT but now it is fine.

    Perhaps you could look into incorporating a flypress into your shop as a means to alleviate some stress. Also there is an Israeli smith named Uri Hoffi who has done a lot for smithing with an eye toward minimal impact on the body, he is on this site now & then.

    In any event I would get a referal to see a physical therapist and see what their input might be. One in a while a bit of the afformentioned beverage therapy works wonders... :)

  6. How well can you drive a skid-steer? Seriously, take a drive just outside of town and talk to some farmers.
    There is always work that needs to get done on a farm and only so many hours in the farmer's day. Also with money being always tight on a farm they are often agreeable to work for trade, etc.
    Perhaps you could put in some time doing odd jobs/ farm chores to earn a little hammer time and a corner to keep a small gas forge and an anvil.
    I did this for years when I lived in town to earn deer hunting privileges, worked out just fine. Good luck.


  7. I dont have what larry does... but this is everything I have and I mean it I dont have a savings account this is it.


    I know once I get it into use fully and dont have to work for others it will pay itself off.

    not to mention being able to learn on your own

    the picture of the wheel is the once shattered bandsaw lower wheel. the old man tig welded it back together over 20 years ago it still works fine today

    my uncle gave me the old miller ac stick machine its circa the 50's and works fine it has no fan in it at all and never did.
    Very nice and complete shop Bryce. Everything any smith would need to do just about anything. My shop is minimalist and entirely manual, even the drill press. My idea of a power hammer is a can of spinach, ugh ugh ugh!
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