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  • #16
    toyotaguy
    Senior Member
    • Jan 2011
    • 761

    Originally posted by geeknow
    I used to work for a very large veneer mill (david r webb co) in Indiana. One day, there was a commotion at the head rig (where round logs are sawed in half lengthwise...aka "flitching"). When I got there, they were digging a kentucky long rifle out. Apparently, "way back when", somebody leaned a rifle against a tree and left it there (I would love to know the "why" on that aspect, and have imagined the possibilities often), and the tree simply grew around it. Needless to say, the saw destroyed the rifle, but it was still cool.

    Bullets in trees are a huge problem. So much so, that most commercial mills have huge magnets and metal detectors on their lines.

    I've heard rumors about finding rifles and knives and other such things ingrown in trees but never seen pictures of it. We find nails occasionally, but this is our first bullet.
    sigpic
    Proud NRA member.

    Calguns Contributor

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    • #17
      The Gleam
      I need a LIFE!!
      • Feb 2011
      • 12515

      I'm going to go out on a limb here and say that bullet was just pining to be found. However, I bet it never saw you comin'.
      -----------------------------------------------
      Originally posted by Librarian
      What compelling interest has any level of government in knowing what guns are owned by civilians? (Those owned by government should be inventoried and tracked, for exactly the same reasons computers and desks and chairs are tracked: responsible care of public property.)

      If some level of government had that information, what would they do with it? How would having that info benefit public safety? How would it benefit law enforcement?

      Comment

      • #18
        latesvak
        Member
        • Mar 2011
        • 355

        Wow thats pretty cool. Just makes you wonder if it was a dad taking his son/daughter out for some target practice or someone hunting for dinner. Cool pictures

        Latesvak

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        • #19
          emtmark
          Veteran Member
          • Mar 2010
          • 2494

          Originally posted by The Gleam
          I'm going to go out on a limb here and say that bullet was just pining to be found. However, I bet it never saw you comin'.
          Groan!
          I know what this man needs.............bring me the vodka

          Comment

          • #20
            josh250
            Member
            • Oct 2011
            • 424

            Originally posted by G-Man WC
            It's to ginger. I was going to say Van Gogh
            Your right it looks a lot closer to Van Gogh

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            • #21
              The Gleam
              I need a LIFE!!
              • Feb 2011
              • 12515

              Originally posted by emtmark
              Groan!
              I figured someone wood say that.
              -----------------------------------------------
              Originally posted by Librarian
              What compelling interest has any level of government in knowing what guns are owned by civilians? (Those owned by government should be inventoried and tracked, for exactly the same reasons computers and desks and chairs are tracked: responsible care of public property.)

              If some level of government had that information, what would they do with it? How would having that info benefit public safety? How would it benefit law enforcement?

              Comment

              • #22
                emtmark
                Veteran Member
                • Mar 2010
                • 2494

                You have to be pretty, board, to waste that much time.
                I know what this man needs.............bring me the vodka

                Comment

                • #23
                  geeknow
                  Lifetime Contributor #1
                  CGN Contributor - Lifetime
                  • Aug 2007
                  • 3144

                  Toyotaguy,

                  Lots of bullets. Especially in logs from back East. We've taken old logs from areas that saw action in the Civil War and Revolutionary war that had mini balls in them too. Pretty cool stuff.

                  You'll see lots of nails (and the surrounding mineral stain) on logs that are near fence lines and roads, because that's where people hang signs.

                  I've seen barbed wire running through logs too.

                  Lots of interesting stuff gets buried in there, but my favorites are the old bullets. Makes you wonder about activities that went on there.

                  Comment

                  • #24
                    send it_hit
                    Senior Member
                    • May 2010
                    • 2454

                    Whoa, neat!

                    Comment

                    • #25
                      Fjold
                      I need a LIFE!!
                      • Oct 2005
                      • 22972

                      You're lucky. My in-laws own sawmills in Ohio and they have destroyed $5,000 radial saw blades on spikes and other metal found in trees. They all have metal detectors before their feed systems to try to detect the metal but sometimes it gets missed until the saw blade hits it.
                      Frank

                      One rifle, one planet, Holland's 375




                      Life Member NRA, CRPA and SAF

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                      • #26
                        Lester53
                        Junior Member
                        • Jul 2013
                        • 90

                        That's pretty cool.
                        Too bad there's no way to know the history.

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                        • #27
                          toyotaguy
                          Senior Member
                          • Jan 2011
                          • 761

                          Originally posted by Lester53
                          That's pretty cool.
                          Too bad there's no way to know the history.
                          It's fun to speculate though, our property was homesteaded in 1883 and there was a logging camp here in 20s, not to mention that tree boarded the original Big Oak Flat road to Yosemite, which was a stagecoach route then paved road.. so the possibilities of who and when are interesting.
                          sigpic
                          Proud NRA member.

                          Calguns Contributor

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                          • #28
                            xjrguy
                            Member
                            • Apr 2007
                            • 163

                            I have a big giant oak tree in my yard back east. When I was a kid I threw a good sized chain up on that tree as part of a tree house. Never removed it.

                            Decades later, it now appears that the chain is actually coming out of the tree after growing around it for so many years.

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