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LOOK at what i found- MORE STUFF & PICS! (First Post)

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  • Original Poster

    #21
    I got the gun holster that was in the pile of crap too. It needs some serious cleaning though.

    I have some really old work-horse stuff with some great copper accents and hardware including some great detail in the leather. that should be an easy clean.

    The lady said the guy who owned the property some 20+ years ago had a gun shop where he restored and fixed guns. That could be how the old cavalry stuff got there- but im doubting it with where all the stuff was located and how it was in just a pile of junk and rotting leather on the floor of the poor barn. I guess ill never know the entire story behind it.

    The lady said the people who own the property currently is actually a company that owns a huge plot of the land and uses the far (you cant even see it) back half to use for gravel. The main plot is hay fields, the barn and old pastures, and the main colonial farm house. She said the owners dont care about the house or the barn and she lived in it as long as time would let her, until its now just not livable because the owners have let it go to such disrepair. Its really sad.

    Im sure it could be fixed with some money but it needs some help. very sad though

    Comment


    • #22
      how interesting! Please more photos!

      Comment


      • #23
        That is too cool! I can't wait to see the photos of the other treasures you've rescued. Well done!

        And I agree - it IS a shame when those lovely historical homes are left to rot.
        In loving memory of Laura Jahnke.
        A life lived by example, done too soon.
        www.caringbridge.org/page/laurajahnke/

        Comment


        • #24
          Amazing what a little TLC will do! It looks great--you are very lucky to have found that treasure trove.

          Comment


          • #25
            That bridle is fabulous! Makes you laugh when people say today they have a REALLY old bridle. Then add "....it's AT LEAST 7 years old...." !!!

            Comment


            • #26
              Can I make a suggestion? Well, I guess it doesn't matter what the answer to that is, as I'm going to make a suggestion anyway! Contact your local museum for advice on caring for very old leather. I work at a museum, but I'm not a conservator. In general, what the previous poster said is correct: do as little to it as possible. Museum supply companies have products that treat potential problems with old leather... the white powdery stuff, the red powdery stuff (see, I told you I'm not a conservator). If you're going to condition it, I wouldn't use anything but the British Museum's leather formula and the NY Public Library's leather dressing. It is a really light conditioner meant to prepare leather for long-term storage. Any heavy oils will attract dirt and cause rot. And never use glycerine on a very old piece!

              Comment


              • #27
                WOW! What a find. Don't you wish it could talk? Imagine the stories it could tell! Good on you for saving it all.
                ** I LOVE PUIKA & SHELLA FAN CLUB*** member
                Originally posted by 2DogsFarm
                Good job R&G!
                You may now add Horsesaver Extraordinaire to your resume

                Comment


                • #28
                  So back and buy all that other great stuff and clean it up and offer it on ebay or in a local resale tack shop.

                  People would love to buy some of those items, as the PMs you have probably received would indicate.

                  Comment


                  • #29
                    This is from a Canadian catalogue, but I know you can get it in the US.

                    http://www.carrmclean.ca/CategoryGro...x?GroupNo=1735

                    http://www.carrmclean.ca/CategoryGro...x?GroupNo=1733

                    Comment


                    • #30
                      Originally posted by cloudyandcallie View Post
                      So back and buy all that other great stuff and clean it up and offer it on ebay or in a local resale tack shop.

                      People would love to buy some of those items, as the PMs you have probably received would indicate.

                      Or to a museum. They issue tax receipts. And they can do a search on the property where you bought it, and figure out a provenance.

                      Comment


                      • #31
                        WOW WOW WOW WOW


                        Hey - if the place is going to be bulldozed any chance you could alert local woodworkers?

                        They'll give their eyeteeth for old wood.

                        Congratulations on the fabulous find. Many people would just throw that stuff out but it really should be preserved. It's history!


                        Mayhew - The product you linked to seems pretty similar to Flexalan. Are you familiar with Flexalan?
                        Brothers and sisters, I bid you beware
                        Of giving your heart to a dog to tear.
                        -Rudyard Kipling

                        Comment


                        • #32
                          No, I'm not, JSwan. I'll have a look.

                          Comment


                          • #33
                            Originally posted by Reds-n-Greys View Post
                            WOW! What a find. Don't you wish it could talk? Imagine the stories it could tell!....
                            That's exactly what I was thinking! I LOVE old historical stuff (used to live in a 200-yr-old farmhouse and often imagined who had walked those old oak floors, how they lived, etc.).

                            One of my favorite places to ride is a local historical battlefield - great for meandering down the trails, reading the historical markers and imagining "way back then"...

                            OP hit the jackpot! I'm so jealous (green with envy!)
                            Equus Keepus Brokus

                            Comment


                            • #34
                              WOW - way to go. I loved poking around in my old barn when I first moved here.

                              For the barn, there is a salvage company in the PNW that loves to get old wood. He contacted me about my barn when I was trying to figure out what to do with it. I decided to remove the old half-round roof and put trusses in it. Long story.

                              But I found some pretty old stuff in my barn too. I took it to an Amish leather person and unfortunately - the majority of it was too dry-rotted to salvage. I did have him work on one of the driving bridles and the long reins - which looked to be much newer than the bridle. And, I kept a small driving bit that was leather covered. Very interesting and I've found out a little more about that bit and it's purpose.

                              I kept the driving harness with bit and long reins. The leather guy burned the other stuff.

                              The house I lived in, built in 1852, we found some old bottles in the walls and other places. LOL... The label on one was VERY interesting, the product cost 5 cents - had a picture of a horse and a man on it. It was "Gargling Oil - Good for Man or Beast" ... LOL... I found 2 of those and another one with no label - slightly different bottle shape. diagonal ridges on the bottle where it was cast - one still had pieces of a cork stopper in it.

                              Comment


                              • #35
                                mayhew - forgot to include a link.

                                http://www.flexalan.com/leather_dressing.cfm


                                I use this on my tack. As far as I know the only ingredient is lanolin. The tack I use for hunting goes through the wringer but has held up very well.

                                If there is something better out there I'd be interested in buying it but am curious as to how these two products compare.

                                All y'all are lucky to find these cool things. When we moved here, all we found was 28 acres of trash and a crawlspace filled with moonshine.
                                Brothers and sisters, I bid you beware
                                Of giving your heart to a dog to tear.
                                -Rudyard Kipling

                                Comment


                                • #36
                                  re: The wood. The wood from the old, old barns is from trees that grew very slowly and had VERY tight grain. There's not much that can replace that wood.

                                  With my barn, the roof supports were multi-layered pieces of wood to make them curved for the round roof. They were so filled with nails, to nail all the layers together, there was little to salvage. We had to burn it. Then I had several hundred pounds of steel. Some went to the nearby steel recycling center - but a majority of it went into a dumpster. The few beams that were cut, some were burned and some are in my barn. We used a couple of the nearly full round beams to replace 2 that had rotted and fallen in.

                                  Yes. History is great. The 1852 house I had, I knew who built it and all that. In fact, only 2 families lived in it. Generations of one family, then my ex's family bought it.
                                  I recently learned about the farm I'm on now. It was bought for $7000, with a $700 down payment, by a man who lives down the road from me. I think it was 50 or more years ago. I have to talk with him more to get more info.

                                  Comment


                                  • #37
                                    Originally posted by JSwan View Post
                                    mayhew - forgot to include a link.

                                    http://www.flexalan.com/leather_dressing.cfm


                                    I use this on my tack. As far as I know the only ingredient is lanolin. The tack I use for hunting goes through the wringer but has held up very well.

                                    If there is something better out there I'd be interested in buying it but am curious as to how these two products compare.

                                    All y'all are lucky to find these cool things. When we moved here, all we found was 28 acres of trash and a crawlspace filled with moonshine.
                                    Thanks--I'm a leather products junkie, so I'll have to track some down and try it! What I like about the museum products is that they leave the leather perfectly neutral--not dry, but with absolutely no leftover grease or gunk--perfect for storage. I'm not sure if they would provide enough moisture to replace the oils lost through a weekly cleaning after a romp in the mud, though. I'll try both and report back!

                                    And I hear you, on the trash and moonshine. The former owner of this place was a real dump diver. His own trash wasn't enough--he wanted other peoples' too. Maybe the land is cursed--my husband was so thrilled when he found an enamel bedpan out in the woods that it is still sitting on our porch, close to two years later.

                                    Comment


                                    • #38
                                      Originally posted by mayhew View Post
                                      Maybe the land is cursed--my husband was so thrilled when he found an enamel bedpan out in the woods that it is still sitting on our porch, close to two years later.
                                      Please tell me he at least turned it into a planter.

                                      We did find a horse drawn corn planter in the woods. We took it out and put it on the lawn as yard art and weeds grew out from under it. So now it looks like a big patch of 3ft tall weeds.

                                      Tres chic.

                                      I like the Flexalan as it does not make my tack greasy. The leather just becomes supple and I've never had any trouble with mold or mildew on stored tack. (I only use my hunting tack for hunting - not for daily riding)

                                      Let me know what you think.
                                      Brothers and sisters, I bid you beware
                                      Of giving your heart to a dog to tear.
                                      -Rudyard Kipling

                                      Comment


                                      • #39
                                        Originally posted by JSwan View Post
                                        Please tell me he at least turned it into a planter.
                                        Worse. It's the dog's water bowl. I tried to stop him. Really, I did.

                                        Comment


                                        • #40
                                          Oh man!! That is incredible. I am an antique collector and I would have wet myself if I was there! Sounds like you need to take this stuff to the Antiques Roadshow. Make sure you get as much history about it as possible. The more the better. Even the tools and soda boxes are worth money. You could be sitting on a fortune. Keep posting pics I want to see all of it.

                                          Congrats!
                                          Ms Robin
                                          Farm Websites & SEO, Low Prices, Barter available!
                                          ~No Horses to Slaughter clique~

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