Going old school with a 72

The Camillus Cutlery Company was one of the oldest knife manufacturers in the United States with roots dating back to 1876. The company manufactured Camillus branded knives and was a prolific contractor for other knife brands up until its last days in 2007 when the company filed for bankruptcy.
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deltaboy
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Re: Going old school with a 72

Post by deltaboy »

My Great Uncle G.P. Young gave me my first chew at age 5. I never bought Chewing Tobacco my great uncles would give me all the Red Man or Bloodhound plug I wanted.

Those are some good times of my 1970's Childhood.
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Colonel26
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Re: Going old school with a 72

Post by Colonel26 »

gsmith7158 wrote:Y'all sound like a bunch of old Georgia rednecks. Ain't that a coincidence!
Naw, I'm a Kentucky redneck. But I bet it's essentially the same thing! ::tu::
deltaboy wrote:My Great Uncle G.P. Young gave me my first chew at age 5. I never bought Chewing Tobacco my great uncles would give me all the Red Man or Bloodhound plug I wanted.

Those are some good times of my 1970's Childhood.
Sounds like my 1980's childhood Witt my Pa and a great uncle. Good times. I learned a lot of important lessons I'm afraid are lost in much of today's young men. But I'm trying to pass them on to me sons.
jerryd6818 wrote:We had corn cob fights with 'em. Papaw fed his hogs behind the barn so there were a lot of cobs laying around. Half of the cousins would get over in the woods on the west side of the road that ran beside the barn (the road was in sort of a gully), the other half would stand on the high ground behind the barn and we would throw stuff at each other. Cobs flying west from the high ground (no cover), Walnuts, Hickory nuts, sticks and repatriated corn cobs flying east from the low ground (plenty of cover in the woods). It's a wonder we didn't put an eye out.
Corn cob fights, and tobacco stalk sword fights. One of my older cousins got his lip cut so bad with a tobacco stalk he had to get stitches.
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orvet
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Re: Going old school with a 72

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Colonel26 wrote: Naw, I'm a Kentucky redneck. But I bet it's essentially the same thing! ::tu::
I think a red neck is the same no matter where they grew up. ::nod::

I grew up on a ranch in Oregon. Made my own corncob pipes. Smoked dried Bracken ferns, Bull Durham (they even had Bull Durham tailor mades for a while), and most anything else that looked like it might burn. :lol:

First chew: some sort of twist I found in the gun cabinet of the neighbors ranch where I often lived & worked in the summer.
That was memorable, but not the most pleasant experience of my young life! :mrgreen:
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Re: Going old school with a 72

Post by carrmillus »

Colonel26 wrote:Cuz ya have to have a white one and two red ones ya know. Use the red one and then the white one to see if you need the other red one!

There's actually some benefit to inhaling the smoke of rabbit tobacco. The Cherokee used it for all manner of respiratory issues. Even today some herbalists prescribe it.

What about sassrus (sassafras) leaves. Y'all ever chewed them? I have.
.......I haven't heard that one about the 2 red ones and 1 white one in years!!!!........... ::ds:: ........................
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Re: Going old school with a 72

Post by treefarmer »

::idea:: ::hmm:: I've got a fresh pile of red cobs from shelling some corn today. Would that make some tradin' material? ::poke:: :)
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jerryd6818
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Re: Going old school with a 72

Post by jerryd6818 »

Thanks but no thanks. They don't flush so well.
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Colonel26
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Re: Going old school with a 72

Post by Colonel26 »

But they are biodegradable! The greeny leftists would be so proud of you.
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Re: Going old school with a 72

Post by wlf »

Anybody ever make whirly birds out of cobs using 2 or 3 big feathers?
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jerryd6818
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Re: Going old school with a 72

Post by jerryd6818 »

And my toilet would be stopped up worse than it is now. ::doh::
Forged on the anvil of discipline.
The Few. The Proud.
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This country has become more about sub-groups than about it's unity as a nation.

"The #72 pattern has got to be pretty close to the perfect knife."
--T.J. Murphy 2012
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