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

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  • #41
    Old barn wood can be remilled actually. It's a hot commodity currently with "green building." I saw several companies at GreenBuild this year in Boston that go to people that have old/falling down barns and buildings, make an offer on it, take the wood, remill it, then resell it to people doing restorations, wanting to make custom furniture, etc. Because of my family's construction and carpentry skills, after GreenBuild, I thought what a great business venture it would be....especially in the South.

    As for the horse stuff, I wanna take a U-Haul and make an offer on all of it. I love historic stuff...especially historic horsey stuff.

    To the OP, if you find some horsey stuff you can't identify, send some pictures my way, and I'll help you out
    If wishes were horses then beggars would ride...
    DLA: Draft Lovers Anonymous
    Originally posted by talkofthetown
    As in, the majikal butterfly-fahting gypsy vanners.

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    • Original Poster

      #42
      Thanks everyone! I knew folks would be excited to hear about it- but i wasnt execting this much excitment!

      I used pure neatsfoot oil on it (im not sure how to spell that)- but it is an animal oil and its one of the best ones to use on leather because it is an animal oil itself.

      As for the rest of the stuff- its all in my basement and i have loads of it. Im going to go down now and sort through it all and clean some of it. Most of it is all harness pieces from the old farm/work horses that lived there. I was at the house for an hour last night while the lady talked my ear off.

      She doesnt know ANY of the history. shes rented the house for 15 yrs and the majority of the stuff (except the modern day tack that was in there) came with the property when she moved in- so its been sitting there for a long time.

      Im not sure its going to be bulldozed. the barn will probably completely collapse with the rest of the snow from this winter or by next winters' snow load. The house has just been left to rot and the owners want nothing to do with fixing it up- they just want to gravel thats on the way other side of the property where their gravel pits are. The house will also probably be left to rot so long as they own the property.

      I asked her if she knew what the fate of the house was going to be and she said she had no clue. She lived in it as long as she could and the owners just let the place go, and now its unsafe to live in. terribly sad. The entire farm will probably be sold to development like the rest of the beautiful places around here....god i hate developement!

      Anyways-more pictures to come when i have time!

      Comment


      • #43
        Originally posted by JSwan View Post
        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.
        Oh, I have my trash too. The old furnace in the barn that was a mouse apartment building!!

        Digging up the metal bar to an old, old bed frame. Pulling engine wire harness out of the dirt. And the silo that is filled with all manner of 'stuff'.

        I did find a local guy who does recycling BIG time. He came and carefully removed the 8 cow stanchions without leaving anything dangerous behind, and he picked through quite a bit of what was in the silo. He salvaged some heater cores (copper) and sheet metal. We also gathered up all the old lightning rods and glass globes and wire. (I kept those). Apparently, 2 owners prior to me had sons that used the barn as their automotive repair shop... and tossed the debris anywhere. Including rags and a pair of jeans. (! ) ... no history there that **I** know of.

        A few old beer cans in a grain store room, a little milking stool with a star cut out of the seat. I "sold" that to the Amish man that I contracted with to do the roof. He wanted it for one of his daughters - one that I met who happens to LOVE horses.

        ah yes... old farms.

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        • #44
          One of the neat things I've found on a friend's rental property were old bottles. Off the side of Lookout Mountain (Georgia side) is a hill called "Insurance Hill." It's where people used to dump their cars to collect the insurance money on them. WAY back in the woods, there are some late 40s/mid 50s model cars, an old shack (burnt - looks like a squatter's house) whose door knob I took with me, and tons and tons of old glass bottles including milk glass, depression glass, "Simba" lemon-lime drink, cobalt glass, and more. I have cases upon cases of the glass bottles

          My friend's landlord said we were "doing him a favor" by collecting the bottles out of the woods
          If wishes were horses then beggars would ride...
          DLA: Draft Lovers Anonymous
          Originally posted by talkofthetown
          As in, the majikal butterfly-fahting gypsy vanners.

          Comment

          • Original Poster

            #45
            Please check my first post of this thread for the NEW stuff i went back and got the other night and photos of it all.

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            • #46
              You certainly have been busy!! Really wonderful stuff.

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              • #47
                Kentucky Horse Park - the guy that takes care of the leather for them, somehow I got a chance to talk with him and he suggested mink oil to condition the leather as with the neats foot oil that has a tendency to rot the stitching. Mink oil will condition it and not rot stuff. I brought back quite a few things with it.
                The View from Here

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                • Original Poster

                  #48
                  Thanks! Surprisingly, some of the stuff is held together with metal! I was looking at some of it and noticed some rusted stuff where stitching would normally be and its metal! pretty neat!

                  Ill have to go to the tack store and grab some mink oil. All the stuff needs to be oiled again. it sucked it right in after about 10 minutes and now it looks kind of dried up again, thanks!

                  Comment


                  • #49
                    I collect old farm equipment as I come across it...Ilove that stuff, plus I agree with all of you, it's history.

                    Farmgirl, its great to hear the excitement in your posts.

                    I am curious, where are you(generally) where they let old farm houses deterioriate? that is so sad.
                    save lives...spay/neuter/geld

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                    • Original Poster

                      #50
                      Connecticut. We're in an area where farming used to be very prominant. the city folks like the farming areas because they are very quiet, rural, and beautiful. development is running rampid right now because of this and taxes on land are through the roof ( i am not kidding). Its extremely hard for farmers to keep their land right now and make a profit off of it. Dairy used to be HUGE here. Now farmers are banding together and creating companies (The Farmers Cow) that are their own brands of CT Milk that has no G. Hormones or anything like that. They are doing very well because of this but it is very very hard for farmers to keep their land right now.

                      Our old houses around here are very very old. They are historical and very neat to go in. Quite a fe wof my close friends live in old, historical house, and they are just the neatest things. the wood floors creaking and stuff never gets old! They are a lot to maintain. Most of these houses, if not maintained regularly, will go down the drain quickly


                      Here is the link to The Farmer's Cow:

                      http://www.thefarmerscow.com/ctfamily_farms.html

                      The farm that pertains to this tack was owned by a gravel company who wanted nothing to do with the house/barn and only wanted the gravel off the back acres (you cant even see it). The house, now that it is unsafe for this woman to live in, will probably be boarded up and left to rot if someone with $$$ doesnt step up to the plate and fix it up. Theres another house on the same street that is completely boarded up and has been abandoned for YEARS. its all overgrown. beautiful old old home again with a gorgeous barn in the back to that looks to be in great shape. i think we're going to make a trip there and do some exploring too. We believe its owned by the same company.

                      Its not that people just let these houses deteriorate on a regular basis. They are a lot of maintenance and they cost a lot of money to maintain. Many of the folks that live in them just cant keep up with it. My friend lives in the house that belonged to the folks that gave the land to start the U. of Connecticut. The house was abandoned and practically falling down. They bought it from the state a few years back. You should of seen the place. It really was almost not even salvageable. They saved it and its really a great house an neat property to explore. lots of old things to be found!!!!

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                      • Original Poster

                        #51
                        Bumping this back up to the main page for those who wanted to see more pics but didnt know i posted this today

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                        • #52
                          What a fascinating thread - we did find some old work horse shoes on our property and a couple of little old flat irons. I'm thinking the lady of the house threw them at her husband - why else would they have been in the field?
                          Proud member of People Who Hate to Kill Wildlife clique

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