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jawjaboy
10-27-2008, 07:25 AM
This showed up at my place this past week. Unsolicited. Unknowing.

After communication with the sender, it's "well I just wanted you to have 'em."

There are really some fine, stand up, generous folks here. :drinks:

429244
429215
429421
429434
Small handles
Mixed brass

http://i56.photobucket.com/albums/g194/jawjaboy/IMG_0169.jpg

copdills
10-27-2008, 07:48 AM
Good Deal, yes thier are some mighty fine people here:drinks:

Calamity Jake
10-27-2008, 09:37 AM
You lucky dog!! [smilie=s:

Now Somebody send me Million dollars, QUICK :bigsmyl2:

Priority mail is fine :bigsmyl2:

docone31
10-27-2008, 10:06 AM
There are some good folks here.
I cannot tell you what I have learned that has really helped me!
The stuffy sillywetters at the range actually cover their loads when I go over to talk!
I have learned a lot here, and it has helped.

Bullshop
10-27-2008, 10:17 AM
Well God bless ya! What goes around comes around, REMEMBER?
BTW our chickens are warm and happy and we are getting eggs. May not seem strange to you down there but we are runnung at zero F at night now and no one else we know is getting eggs. Blessings on ya!
BIC/Daniel

jawjaboy
10-27-2008, 01:05 PM
Oh yeah, I remember. That's good to hear about the eggs. Zero F? Tonight will be our first night below the 50's. Suppose to be ~36F. I'm shaking already. :lol:

Pepe Ray
10-27-2008, 01:16 PM
Jawjaboy;
I'd venture a guess that there's someone out there who needs a prayer or two.
Pepe Ray

jawjaboy
10-27-2008, 02:07 PM
Yessir, there sure is PR. Sure is. In this case though, all is well with the sender.

cajun shooter
10-27-2008, 04:41 PM
Hey Bullshop, You are making me jealous talking about them fresh eggs. My wife and I have lost all our laying hens but 1 due to coons and possum. The last hen goes into a carrier at night and put in a locked shed. I have set out a trap baited with raw chicken and so far the count is 6 coons; 3 possums and one cat. When the outlaw critters stop being trapped we are going to restock. Nothing better than fresh eggs with those door knob yolks; the city folk won't know what that means. HA!! HA!! Take Care

Shotgun Luckey
10-27-2008, 05:24 PM
Hey Bullshop, You are making me jealous talking about them fresh eggs. My wife and I have lost all our laying hens but 1 due to coons and possum. The last hen goes into a carrier at night and put in a locked shed. I have set out a trap baited with raw chicken and so far the count is 6 coons; 3 possums and one cat. When the outlaw critters stop being trapped we are going to restock. Nothing better than fresh eggs with those door knob yolks; the city folk won't know what that means. HA!! HA!! Take Care

Ya mean a yolk that is actually YELLOW???

jawjaboy
10-27-2008, 06:06 PM
Included in the care package I got last week was a .429 hollow point mould(200gr). Never used one before, so it was puttin a crawl all over me. I washed/scoured 'er up real good. Dried 'er out real good. Set off to the shop a hoppin 'n skippin. Joy to me.

Got all the gear stoked up, started castin. Biggest mess I ever seen in my life. After about 10 minutes I shut everything down before I hurt somebody.

The mould is in pristeen condition, jes got a lot a dried on oil? on it. Soon as it got to cookin temp there was oil puddlin everywhere. Boolits were wrinkle city. Plus I was makin a lot a d/a moves. I think the joy jes overcome my sensibilities.

I'll give the mould a proper south GA scour as time allows, and get back with ya.

http://i56.photobucket.com/albums/g194/jawjaboy/IMG_0172.jpg

DLCTEX
10-27-2008, 06:16 PM
Some of those yolks are closer to orange when the free range chickens are getting greens. We've been down to the freezing mark a couple of times lately, that's cold enough, but we may get down to that zero later. The best deterrent for critters has been a hot wire at the top of the fence and a good dog. You can hear the coons squall when it gets them. We haven't had chickens for a while now, but I'm getting the itch. DALE

jawjaboy
10-27-2008, 06:29 PM
The chickens is the lil womans deal. Empty nest syndrome and all I think, kids all gone from home. I'm just the coop/pen engineer in the scope of things. They are a hoot to watch though.

http://i56.photobucket.com/albums/g194/jawjaboy/IMG_0128.jpg

http://i56.photobucket.com/albums/g194/jawjaboy/IMG_0130.jpg

http://i56.photobucket.com/albums/g194/jawjaboy/IMG_0145.jpg

http://i56.photobucket.com/albums/g194/jawjaboy/IMG_0144.jpg

http://i56.photobucket.com/albums/g194/jawjaboy/IMG_0146.jpg

mainiac
10-27-2008, 06:32 PM
I really,really miss my hens too! A home grown egg will stand up proud and pretty in the spider, unlike the friggen things sold at the grocery store that runs half way across pan!

No_1
10-27-2008, 07:16 PM
I reconize those boolits on the right as H/P's, the middle one looks like the fable wide flat base the is suppose to seal in even the biggest bores. The one on the left looks like the long pointed flat nose. What top punch you use with that one? :kidding:
Robert



Included in the care package I got last week was a .429 hollow point mould(200gr). Never used one before, so it was puttin a crawl all over me. I washed/scoured 'er up real good. Dried 'er out real good. Set off to the shop a hoppin 'n skippin. Joy to me.

Got all the gear stoked up, started castin. Biggest mess I ever seen in my life. After about 10 minutes I shut everything down before I hurt somebody.

The mould is in pristeen condition, jes got a lot a dried on oil? on it. Soon as it got to cookin temp there was oil puddlin everywhere. Boolits were wrinkle city. Plus I was makin a lot a d/a moves. I think the joy jes overcome my sensibilities.

I'll give the mould a proper south GA scour as time allows, and get back with ya.

http://i56.photobucket.com/albums/g194/jawjaboy/IMG_0172.jpg

cajun shooter
10-27-2008, 08:07 PM
JJboy; Not trying to steal the thread but the chickens are my wifes thing also. She had each one named and talks with them every morning ; squaking out the back door. Thanks for including the pics as my wife looked at them and said "honey" we could do that !! And look what he did; thats a great idea with the plastic containers.

oneokie
10-27-2008, 08:25 PM
The one on the left looks like the long pointed flat nose.
Robert


No_1, that is the rare, vintage needle nosed Skeeter Skewer. [smilie=1:

jawjaboy
10-27-2008, 08:49 PM
Well, I told y'all up front that I made dummass errors. Ain't too proud to show ya either. I'm fair and honest. And human. :mrgreen:

Good deal Cajun Shooter. Granny loves her chickens. I abide. :lol:

Oneokie, I called the one on the left a different name. :lol:

Bullshop
10-27-2008, 10:11 PM
Say I think I got that mold. Mine makes a 215gn boolit and it shoots good too. I make them without the nose and base enhancments though.
Thats a perty nice chicken house there. My chickens would be jelous.
BIC/BS

Buckshot
10-28-2008, 03:35 AM
:hijack:..............We had Banty chickens when I was a little kid, and that was in the suburbs! Us 3 boys each had our 'pet' hen. Mine was an orange one, and she once got over the 5' block wall into the neighbors yard and their dog killed her. I was devastated. There was one rooster, and he was as black as coal. Shined with an electric blue tint in the sun. For some odd reason we named him Blacky. He wasn't mean but you could tell he had an attitude :-) We'd go our before school each morning and gather up those small speckled eggs.

Neighbors began to complain about the rooster so we had to get rid of them. My dad, being an old Arkansas depression era farm boy killed'em, cleaned'em, and then froze'em. Mom refused to cook them and us kids couldn't have taken a bite, so after awile dad threw them out.

When we moved out to the country we had chickens. It just ain't country without a few chickens running around the place! We had 6 Rhode Island Reds and 6 Barred Rocks and a really cranky irritating rooster. They all laid well so we had eggs running out our ears. Before work I go gather eggs. Sometimes the hen might still be in the box and a tad resentfull of you stealing her egg so you'd get a peck on the back of your hand. On those chilly mornings it was nice and warm reaching under them.

I'd leave the henhouse door open and they'd all troop out on their missions. In the evening they'd all wander back to the henhouse and go inside. We had a couple that would want to fly up into the lower branches of a tree, but a broom would get them down and back into the henhouse.

I spent many an afternoon sitting on the back steps watching them clucking, scratching and running around. Pretty good entertainment. Every now and then one would be scratching around and somehting would startle them. They'd squawk and shoot up in the air like they'd been shot from a mortar :-) Simple things for simple minds I guess.

..................Buckshot

P Patcher
10-28-2008, 05:14 AM
I really,really miss my hens too! A home grown egg will stand up proud and pretty in the spider, unlike the friggen things sold at the grocery store that runs half way across pan!

I'ts been a long time since I've heard someone call a cast iron frying pan buy it's real name, " A Spider"! I think you got to be from New England to know that one.
Addison