toxo Report post Posted August 5, 2023 3 hours ago, chuck123wapati said: i have a detector and a small tin of old coins and other metal stuff i found in my yard, Three rings, one is a very old silver ring that is a cross with Jesus, it turned sideways, the long part of the cross goes around the finger. On our family homestead i found an axe head which my dad cleaned up and re fitted a handle, unfortunately it cracked along the weld one day while i was using it. I've found some cool stuff around the country with it including arrow heads lol as your eyes are always watching the ground you find all kinds of non metallic items. Wish I'd had a decent sized "yard" to explore. You guys take that sort of thing for granted, over here there's far too many people for the amount of land hence the "portions" are smaller. Also, whenever someone buys so much as a garage they put a fence around it. That's the only thing I envy you guys for is the space and the freedom. You should cherish it cos someday some arsehole will try to change it. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
chuck123wapati Report post Posted August 6, 2023 17 hours ago, toxo said: Wish I'd had a decent sized "yard" to explore. You guys take that sort of thing for granted, over here there's far too many people for the amount of land hence the "portions" are smaller. Also, whenever someone buys so much as a garage they put a fence around it. That's the only thing I envy you guys for is the space and the freedom. You should cherish it cos someday some arsehole will try to change it. And grow a garden or own a few chickens or rabbits. i really appreciate that sentiment and believe me I don't take one bit of it for granted and cherish what i have been given for a life immensely. I cant even imagine living with that many people so close. Even though my place is fully paid off if I don't pay the arseholes their taxes yearly they will take it from me. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Handstitched Report post Posted August 6, 2023 18 hours ago, toxo said: You guys take that sort of thing for granted, No, never Don't wish to go too far off topic, but our lives can change in an instant. And as @chuck123wapati said, I cherish the space I have and what I have . I used to live in the southern ' burbs of Perth . I could never go back, it would make me feel claustrophobic , and, in all honesty, the busy crazy cities are f**ked !! Here, I have fresh air, I can see my my neighbors , but they are at a distance* . Its damn cold in Winter, stinking hot in summer, but I wouldn't change it for all the ' tea & china' . Apart from the utilities, govt. charges etc. nothing is owed, its all paid off. Not something too many people can state considering the misery people are facing when it comes to those stuck in a endless grind stone of debt,( monster) mortgages, high cost of living and so on. * the houses in Perth are now built so close together , you could literally jump from one roof to the other. " Little boxes on the hill side" My 2 cents worth...+ tax HS Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
fredk Report post Posted August 6, 2023 4 minutes ago, Handstitched said: * the houses in Perth are now built so close together , you could literally jump from one roof to the other. " Little boxes on the hill side" Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Handstitched Report post Posted August 6, 2023 (edited) @fredk and they don't have different colours, they all look the f**k'n same , drab & dreary ...and tacky . Kids in school could come up with better designs...and colours. We all use more colours in our leatherwork than they do on a house, crazy!! HS Edited August 6, 2023 by Handstitched Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Sheilajeanne Report post Posted August 6, 2023 (edited) On 8/5/2023 at 10:57 AM, chuck123wapati said: In my book it appears to be a Dickson point and 2000 is about mid point of when they were made 1500-3500 some of them were heat treated. Very cool point. Yeah, kind of hard to date them accurately, unless you know exactly where they were found, and can search the site for something that can be radio-carbon dated. It's pretty big, too, about 2 inches long, which I think is rather big for an arrowhead. Might have been a spearhead. AAaaand of course, now that i want to actually measure it, I can't find where I put the darn thing!! Fred, wow, that is interesting! I'm a horse person, and I never knew that about the origin of the term! I live in a small town, which has a variety store, a restaurant, a drug store and a post office. Anything else I need, I have to drive to the largest nearby town, which is only about 15 minutes away. I like it here. Everyone is on a septic systems, so the lots have to be quite large. It's nice to be surrounded by farmer's fields...well, maybe not so much during spreading season... The farmers have just harvested their grain, and are fertilizing and plowing the fields. Between that and the smoke from the forest fires, I've been keeping my windows closed a lot! Edited August 6, 2023 by Sheilajeanne Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
chuck123wapati Report post Posted August 7, 2023 15 hours ago, Sheilajeanne said: Yeah, kind of hard to date them accurately, unless you know exactly where they were found, and can search the site for something that can be radio-carbon dated. It's pretty big, too, about 2 inches long, which I think is rather big for an arrowhead. Might have been a spearhead. AAaaand of course, now that i want to actually measure it, I can't find where I put the darn thing!! Fred, wow, that is interesting! I'm a horse person, and I never knew that about the origin of the term! I live in a small town, which has a variety store, a restaurant, a drug store and a post office. Anything else I need, I have to drive to the largest nearby town, which is only about 15 minutes away. I like it here. Everyone is on a septic systems, so the lots have to be quite large. It's nice to be surrounded by farmer's fields...well, maybe not so much during spreading season... The farmers have just harvested their grain, and are fertilizing and plowing the fields. Between that and the smoke from the forest fires, I've been keeping my windows closed a lot! We call most stone tools arrow heads out of habit. This could very well have been used as a knife or a hafted as a spear there is as much speculation as there are facts about the origin and use of many of these stone tools unless as you say are found with some proof of their usage.. I have found about 50 probably over the years some as small as a finger nail and some as large as three inches. I've even tried to make a few they are so interesting thinking about the man whose work you can see. Each flake tells a story of his ability. some are really exquisite then others look as if a child made them which could very well have been. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
chuck123wapati Report post Posted August 7, 2023 here are a couple of fossil surface finds i picked up while metal detecting this summer i would love to know what they are. The two oval shaped pieces have a very thin iridescent shell. the other is just weird. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
tsunkasapa Report post Posted August 8, 2023 6 hours ago, chuck123wapati said: here are a couple of fossil surface finds i picked up while metal detecting this summer i would love to know what they are. The two oval shaped pieces have a very thin iridescent shell. the other is just weird. The one looks like either coral or a sponge. Or really old cauliflower. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Handstitched Report post Posted August 8, 2023 Not sure what fossilsed bones look like, but thats what came to mind. The two pieces centre and right have an almost even shape, as for the one on the left , fossilised alien?? Good find though. Any paleontologists on here ?? HS Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
blue duck Report post Posted August 8, 2023 (edited) Morning all, Far from an expert, but those are Baculites. We have them all over the hell creek formation in Montana. Kids love to find dinosaur parts. Edited August 8, 2023 by blue duck Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Sheilajeanne Report post Posted August 8, 2023 Had to Google that. They are an extinct form of sea creature, distantly related to the octopus: https://www.google.com/search?q=Baculites&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8 Cool! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
chuck123wapati Report post Posted August 8, 2023 34 minutes ago, blue duck said: Morning all, Far from an expert, but those are Baculites. We have them all over the hell creek formation in Montana. Kids love to find dinosaur parts. thank you I knew they were from the cretaceous period but i didn't know much more. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
chuck123wapati Report post Posted August 8, 2023 39 minutes ago, chuck123wapati said: thank you I knew they were from the cretaceous period but i didn't know much more. I actually figured the Mesozoic era but cretaceous is part of it. https://www.wsgs.wyo.gov/wyoming-geology/paleontology.aspx Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Handstitched Report post Posted August 8, 2023 19 minutes ago, chuck123wapati said: I actually figured the Mesozoic era but cretaceous is part of it. They are turning out to be quite a significant find there chuck Apologies to Fred K , this is his ' rambling' thread HS Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
fredk Report post Posted August 8, 2023 ramble away peeps Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
chuck123wapati Report post Posted August 25, 2023 On 8/8/2023 at 4:46 PM, fredk said: ramble away peeps Como bluffs dig!!! https://bigfoot99.com/bigfoot99-news/horse-rescue-holding-fossil-dig-fundraiser/ Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
fredk Report post Posted August 25, 2023 Good name for the horse rescue outfit One in Ireland is called 'My lovely horse' after a 'song' in a Father Ted episode Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
chuck123wapati Report post Posted August 25, 2023 1 hour ago, fredk said: Good name for the horse rescue outfit One in Ireland is called 'My lovely horse' after a 'song' in a Father Ted episode yea but this dig is super coool this place is on private ground and has been closed for years. https://www.wyohistory.org/encyclopedia/como-bluff Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Sheilajeanne Report post Posted August 25, 2023 Wow, if I lived close by, I'd be there for sure! Both to help the horses, and to dig for fossils! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
fredk Report post Posted August 26, 2023 I did it again, almost I got 1st, 2nd and 3rd in my class with some leatherwork at the annual craft show today Its a kinda hollow victory though My Class was for 'miscellaneous' crafts. The judge decided to sub-divide the Class and judge all the leather work against itself rather than against other crafts. I had 10 items in. My entries were the only ones so I won against my self! I thought I had missed it this year and only found out late Wednesday afternoon it was on. So I dug out some things ready made and made 4 new items. One of those got 3rd place. One really old thing got 1st place, a medieval style belt pouch I made about 10 years ago. I put it in just to make up numbers The over-all winner was a hand made child's 'push' car. Looked like a 1/2 scale Austin 7 like mine. It was fully detailed with real instruments and lights When I get the photos off my pocket camera I'll put some up for youse to see Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
fredk Report post Posted August 26, 2023 Some photos; my items on the display table. 10 items. 4 of mine in current use, 2 old items and 4 newly made items In traditional reverse order; 3rd Place, a Novelty Knitting Belt Pouch. I had some of the parts for this ready cut and in a plastic box for several years so I got stuck in and made it. Its actually terrible, worse than it looks! That sewing is really ragged In 2nd Place, my currently in use Coffee Cup Cuff (or Sleeve) And in 1st Place, a copy of a Medieval Girdle (Belt) Pouch. I made this maybe 14 or 16 years ago. I put it into this event just to make up numbers. I got the design from 'Purses in Pieces' by Olaf Goubitz. #3 son used to wear it when we played at medieval things, thus the turned up corner on the flap As far as I know, this was the overall winner. A child's 'push' car. Its big. About 6 ft long. Its like a 1/2 scale version of my Austin 7 Ulster my Austin 7 I got to the venue early to set up and didn't see much of the other entries, actually I only saw a couple. I planned to go back well before the show closed to view the other entries but I was delayed and saw nothing. The show officially closed at 4.30. I arrived at 3 and only my stuff and a few other entries were left, and they were packing up. Everyone else had taken their items shortly after 2.30, the official time that entries could be removed. This happens at a lot of shows and events here; people take their items or close their stalls early. Why? My #1 and I do a toy car fair twice a year. The toy fair starts at 4.30 / 5pm. It closes at 8pm. All the other traders are packed and gone by 7pm. We stay on till the very end and we get good sales in that hour. One time #1 took in over £100 just in that hour. People came to buy and spend and we sold I've started planning for next year! Watch this pace. Same time, Same Channel. I'll be back after a word from my sponsors I now have a reputation to up-hold Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
chuck123wapati Report post Posted August 26, 2023 Congrats Fred you did well indeed!! Sounds like the best part was the fun time you had. That Austin is making me drool. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Handstitched Report post Posted August 27, 2023 (edited) My my my, haven't you done well Love the car push chair ...and your car It feels good to get something for your hard work , its an acknowledgement of your craft, ...and good advertising. Its also great fun !! At one of the shows I Judged at, I did see a beautifully crafted English E-R Red Post box ( pillar box) ,made out of wood, complete with wood letters inside. I didn't put any leather exhibits in our shed this year at our local show, I wasn't happy with way it was run last year, and what they did, I really don't think its permissible . Exhibitors are not allowed into the shed to hand their exhibits to the stewards a few days before the show, WTF ?? thats not on.. Instead, there were 3-4 blokes ( not stewards) out the front with tables , to receive the exhibits and take them into the shed, food, produce, flowers, crafts etc. I am a Show Judge, and the only people that can touch the exhibits are the exhibitors, to hand them over, , the stewards, and the Judges. The less people that touch the exhibits the better , it reduces any perceived bias or interference ...and damage. Needless to say, they have lost my support. My 2 cents worth + tax HS Edited August 27, 2023 by Handstitched Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
fredk Report post Posted November 23, 2023 I bought this last week, arrived this morning. A repro medieval lunette and awl. Its in an 'unfinished' condition. Its surface is very rough It needs a lot of cleaning up and polishing Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites