It is in really nice condition after a couple weeks in vinegar..I thought about putting a handle on it and giving it to my grandson but I'm sure his mother wouldn't be happy with that..lol. I was already rejected on a bb gunIt looks to KT like one of those toy metal axe heads that kids had back in the 1950s, when kids were kids and toys were made out of real metal. It had a wooden handle that has completed composted itself away! Heaven forbid any boy having that fun toy today! That item brought back fond memories of KT's childhood from the early 50's through the early 1960s! You could clean that up, put a new handle in it, and toss it in your camping equipment!
lol thanks...good infoWhy are you asking permission, just give it to him and then ask for forgiveness. If you get caught. Nice find most old catalogs list a boy's hatchet. Not a toy but a tool to learn a needed skill and responsibility.
Shows you how kids are raised different now. The Queen and I bought a BB gun, Red Rider, for our son for Christmas when he was 6, and also got one for each of us. We shot up many pounds of BBs at those dangerous cans we had hanging around in our backyard….an activity we all enjoyed as a family! And later when he was a Boy Scout and off at summer camp, he was noticed by the BB range control scout as being really good with their BB guns, so his second year at camp, he ran the BB gun firing range. The next year he graduated to the Shot Gun Range as a marksman, and then the following year he ran that range! It’s all about gun safety, you understand, and obeying the rules. One year my statewide motorcycle safety rider’s club had a skeet shooting contest, lasted all day. He was 16 at the time so competed in the pre-adult category, but he won the overall trophy also, because he had the highest score out of over 40 participants! He still has that trophy somewhere in his Royal Bedroom! Ha ha.It is in really nice condition after a couple weeks in vinegar..I thought about putting a handle on it and giving it to my grandson but I'm sure his mother wouldn't be happy with that..lol. I was already rejected on a bb gun
Great story! I grew up shooting cans with a bb gun with my parents and as I got older graduated to a 22. It's a different culture now as bb and cap guns are shunned while the kids play and watch violent video games rewarding players that kill the most people.Shows you how kids are raised different now. The Queen and I bought a BB gun, Red Rider, for our son for Christmas when he was 6, and also got one for each of us. We shot up many pounds of BBs at those dangerous cans we had hanging around in our backyard….an activity we all enjoyed as a family! And later when he was a Boy Scout and off at summer camp, he was noticed by the BB range control scout as being really good with their BB guns, so his second year at camp, he ran the BB gun firing range. The next year he graduated to the Shot Gun Range as a marksman, and then the following year he ran that range! It’s all about gun safety, you understand, and obeying the rules. One year my statewide motorcycle safety rider’s club had a skeet shooting contest, lasted all day. He was 16 at the time so competed in the pre-adult category, but he won the overall trophy also, because he had the highest score out of over 40 participants! He still has that trophy somewhere in his Royal Bedroom! Ha ha.
Why, if your grandson had that axe all restored, and the proper set up in the backyard, he could learn to throw it, and maybe a 3 knife set of throwing knives would be good. A very useful skill to improve his hand-eye coordination skills! Ha ha! Wouldn’t his mother pitch a fit about that!
I am thinking maybe a small detail finishing tool? Just guessing, don't have a clue. But still a great find for sure.That thing would look SWEET restored, really cool find!