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The,"Squirrel Cracker"

safariknut

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Joined
Mar 28, 2015
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388
Location
Michigan
Found this little gem at a garage sale on Saturday for $5.Marked,"Woldert Grocery Co. Tyler Texas & Chicago" on the handle.Body is marked,"Squirrel Catcher Patented May 13 1913". Clamps to a table either horizontally or vertically and requires pressure on the jaw to actuate the ratcheting mechanism.Lifting the handle to vertical allows the jaw to slide up and down.
I probably needed this item like I need a third arm coming out of the middle of my forehead but I'm a sucker for old a goofy tools.
 

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eddieK

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Mar 2, 2017
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695
Location
Nampa Idaho
Found this little gem at a garage sale on Saturday for $5.Marked,"Woldert Grocery Co. Tyler Texas & Chicago" on the handle.Body is marked,"Squirrel Catcher Patented May 13 1913". Clamps to a table either horizontally or vertically and requires pressure on the jaw to actuate the ratcheting mechanism.Lifting the handle to vertical allows the jaw to slide up and down.
I probably needed this item like I need a third arm coming out of the middle of my forehead but I'm a sucker for old a goofy tools.

I probably needed this item like I need a third arm coming out of the middle of my forehead

That sounds like my wife when I bring some of things home I find...
 

ilovevocs

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Joined
Jun 26, 2009
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1,966
Location
Toledo, Ohio
I would have bought that up in a second.

Nuts go good with beer in the shop when work is over.

Nice score man. Thanks for sharing.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
 

unknownroad

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Joined
Mar 5, 2018
Messages
206
Location
WNC
I can't imagine being so committed to eating nuts that I'd need a bench-mounted ratcheting nutcracker, but I probably would have bought the thing just like you. Pretty neat!
 
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GonnesChmidt

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May 7, 2018
Messages
1
Same company in Tyler, Texas but different cracker. I'm guessing by the name it is for Black Walnuts. If you crack walnuts will you still need to crack squirrels?
 

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Provincial

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Sep 21, 2011
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Near Salem, OR
Black Walnuts are extremely hard to crack. The shells are much thicker and cross-braced compared to common walnuts. Black Brute is an answer to that. Look at the handle!
 

humber2

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Joined
Feb 13, 2011
Messages
1,761
Location
Downunder
In my neck of the woods Macadamia nuts are the toughest nuts to crack.

There doesn’t appear to be any hand operated system that is quick and easy available.
 

Mintgrun

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Joined
Oct 7, 2015
Messages
2,113
Location
Kingston, Wa.
In my neck of the woods Macadamia nuts are the toughest nuts to crack.

"Macadamia nut. That was the one that would send her into... goin' crazy."


The patents on mine aren't quite as old, but the one from Waco TX. is close. The hinged one doesn't have any other markings.
IMG_5282.jpeg

I haven't tried the top one, but the bottom two work well on macadamia nuts. The inner jaw on the hinged one pinches pretty hard and so does that big screw. I assume the indents in the bottom are for little rubber feet.

IMG_5291.jpeg IMG_5292.jpeg

The printing on this one seems upside down.

IMG_5287.jpeg
No markings on this one.
IMG_5284.jpeg


Tom
 

four.cycle

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Joined
Oct 19, 2015
Messages
28,654
Location
Tacoma, Washington

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four.cycle

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^ The primary staple food source of the Modoc tribe of Northern California was the acorn.

I'm sure they would have found a device like that to have come in handy. (y)
 

bwringer

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Joined
Jan 1, 2013
Messages
10,257
Location
Indianapolis
I am descended from folk who had a taste for squirrel brains on toast.

I swear that when I read the title and first few posts, I thought it had to do with more easily cracking squirrel skulls to extract their wee little thinkers.

Oh, it's for cracking nuts. Like a squirrel.

Well. How boring.


A few years back, after some cases of a very rare and nasty brain disease, the state had to issue a warning to the folk of southern Indiana that squirrel brains are probably not safe to eat.
 
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