These days we don’t think much about axes. They’re
kinda old fashioned and they are too closely associated with manual
labor for them to be very popular. It’s a shame, too, because there
is lore to an ax. There are proper and improper ways to sharpen one,
for instance.
There are proper and improper ways to fell a tree with one, to limb
a fallen tree, to split firewood. Replacing the handle on an ax
could make the subject of a very interesting small book, even.
Marvin always puts a coating of fiberglass around the handle just
below the head to keep firewood from chewing up the handle, for
instance. Dud has been known to soak an ax handle in a large tube of
kerosene before using it to give it longer life.
In fact, Dud has made ax work into something of an art form. If you
need your ax sharpened, Dud’s the guy to see. He has an
old-fashioned grindstone with a water drip. He’ll tell you it’s
important not to get the steel too hot and therefore take the temper
out of it. And when he finishes sharpening your ax, you can shave
with it. If you really want to.
[to top of second
column] |
But if they gave doctor’s
degrees in ax use, ol’ Jasper Blankenship, up in the mountains,
would get the first one around here. He built his cabin with just an
ax, in fact. The whole thing. It was while Jasper was showing his
new cabin to some tourist ladies that his ax became legendary around
here.
“You see that ax?” he asked them. “That was George Washington’s ax.
Yep, the same one he used to chop down the cherry tree. ‘Course it’s
been through 42 handles and six heads since then.”
Think about it.
[Text from file received from
Slim Randles]
Brought to
you by Home Country (the book), published by Rio Grande Press and
now available as a Kindle ebook on Amazon
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