Greetings all,
I have acquired some interesting and exciting equipment. My uncle came to visit last weekend and brought with him a collection of items that belonged to my grandfather. He started shooting recurves in the 1930's and even co-founded the North American Bowhunters Association (no longer extant). When he died, all of his gear went into storage, until I started into making bows and archery equipment. Amazingly, I had no idea that my grandfather ever did this, as his died before I was born. Maybe it's in my blood.
The items I received are all great, but two in particular I wanted to share.
One is a tubular steel take-down bow, I believe made by a company called Seefab. According to my uncle, this bow was issued to Marines in WWII for silently dispatching sentries in the Pacific. After the war, my grandfather got it from another Navy man. It doesn't come apart anymore, but it shoots great. I have enough strings sitting around that I found one that fits.
The other item is a mystery, but I think I figured it out. At first I thought it was a tool for holding arrow shafts still while working on them. Then last night, I was attempting to straighten one of my bent aluminum arrows and got an amazing flash of insight (which is rare for me). The tool is for straightening aluminum arrows! I used it and it worked great for that purpose. It makes sense, as I also got about 30 aluminum arrows from the late 30's or early 40's along with the other gear.
Is my guess right about this one?
Another cool set of items was these four quivers. The odd one belonged to my grandfather, the two matching to my uncle and dad, and the fancier one must have belonged to my aunt, who also died a long time ago. It's an amazing heirloom.
Jamie