ladyapple27 (
ladyapple27) wrote2009-06-08 11:56 pm
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Found it!
This is a patch of cat mint under an oak tree in the yard. Cat mint is about the only thing that will grow there, and it doesn't spread because it has no where to go except the lawn, where it gets mowed along with the grass. The red garden implement in the pics is a type of mattock called a potato digger. This is one of a set of 2 that belonged to my maternal great-grandfather. They are over 150 years old. (The mattocks, not the handles; the handles have been replaced many times.) My mother painted them red because she likes to paint things red. At any rate, I like to park tools under the tree. Today, I went to retrieve my antique potato digger, and it was gone! I finally figured out that a child had "borrowed" it and followed a trail of holes dug in the yard until I found it. I was so relieved to find it that I didn't worry about all those holes.
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I have a skillet that came from my grandmother originally. I figure it still has another 50 years of use left in it...
:)
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I have some of my grandmother's iron skillets, and they're much better than anything you can buy today. For cornbread, an antique iron skillet is a must!
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:)
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I caught the paint on the handle. Makes 'em slippery though. Besides, I like the linseed rub oil ritual.
Thanks for the photos!
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I use linseed oil on unpainted handles and tung oil on metal. Tung oil is great on pruners. You can also use
3-in-1 machine oil on smaller tools.
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I don't want to know. The little dears were probably being helpful, they thought.
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Can you take on another LJ friend?
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