^ When I finally discovered "Atlas" rubber-coated gloves - no more blisters.
Real game changer.
Also helps to wrap up the handle with "athletic tape" (think Hockey Stick.) Works wonders.
Due to the joys of modern transportation and World Trade, we have now introduced the Emerald Ash Borer to the USA. Here in Oregon, the experts forecast the devastation of our Ash trees. Kind of like the fate of Elm and Chestnut trees in the past.Well, I love old mauls because I grew up using one, my old man was too cheap to buy a gas-powered log-splitter as long as he had me around to swing one of these, and I spent summers splitting so much that the skin on my hands would be torn, calloused, blistered and ****** even though wearing leather gloves. This old maul I found in the basement of an abandoned house, used it for splitting, broke it's original handle because it was probably dry-rotted inside, and made a new one out of wood from an ash-tree my brother felled in my father's woods.
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Due to the joys of modern transportation and World Trade, we have now introduced the Emerald Ash Borer to the USA. Here in Oregon, the experts forecast the devastation of our Ash trees. Kind of like the fate of Elm and Chestnut trees in the past.
We would dump lime dust piles on frozen lakes in lower Pa to help balance the PH. Wintertime is best to let it slowly melt in the ice and ground.That would be great if it works! Hard to do out in the forest. Lots of Ash near the streams here, and their demise may make for higher water temperatures in the summer. Not good for the fish.
^ It was a rough learning curve.How nice for you.


That is a gem. I like the unusual phantom groves. Any idea who made it?Another oldie, this one with a dry-rotted handle. From the design of the forging it looks like something made in the last few decades of the 19th century up to about WWI is my guess. It took me a number of years to get this axe, as the 90 year-old guy who had it used it to chop roots etc. in his garden. After he died his son who is one of my oldest friends gave it to me.
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That is a gem. I like the unusual phantom groves. Any idea who made it?
I totally agree with you and how people get so intrigued on the maker. And that is the fun of it all. That design is possibly the first phantom design. I think you are on to something being near Pittsburgh. Did you not find it in Pa?
Wow. Thanks 4cyl. That will take a while and in many directions. See ya.this guy
http://www.yesteryearstools.com/
and these guys
Are great sources of information.
I think perhaps part of the reason for the fascination with "who" is the fact there were literally hundreds of small, independent axe makers in the 19th century, most of whom went by the wayside, and many of which were absorbed into...
American / American Axe & Tool Co., Glassport, PA / http://www.yesteryearstools.com/Yesteryears Tools/American Axe & Tool Co..html / https://mycompanies.fandom.com/wiki/American_Axe_&_Tool_Company /
... which became the de facto 800-pound gorilla in the axe world.
Those small independent makers were scattered all over the country, and some of them were in the immediate proximity of the men who are now avid collectors.
Part of it is just the fun of solving the puzzle - you just never know what you'll turn up when you start searching.
Part of it is just the fun of solving the puzzle - you just never know what you'll turn up when you start searching.








Any hardware store. I used the Home Depot near my house.Where y’all buy boiled linseed oil
Is that a British broad-arrow variation? I know it shouldn't be, but it sure resembles one.
Boyscout hatchet?
Yeah, I've knocked a few chunks of metal off one or two of them in the past with sledge hammer.More grinding needed on those wedges...
Time to invest in a spare grinding wheel.Yeah, I've knocked a few chunks of metal off one or two of them in the past with sledge hammer.
I prefer Raw Linseed oil. It dries a lot slower, allowing it to soak in more.Where y’all buy boiled linseed oil