if you go a little longer back in time they used snails as grease
Your description of ‘snail grease’ brings up some mental images, Dan, none of them are pleasant. In fact only one word comes to mind when thinking about snail grease and that is the word that my grandson, now 4, uses when ever grandma or grandpa tries to get him to eat a new vegetable. He says, with lips curled, “That’s Disgusting!” Dan, my question for you is this: How do you herd the snails so that they form parallel lines all around the axle ends just before the wheel hubs are slammed back on?
There is only one GBO member that I can think of who could possibly be capable of herding snails. His moniker is Cat Whisperer. I know it’s dangerous to assume anything, but listen, who among us has a better chance? If you can herd cats, why not snails as well?
Tracy
P.S. The Paulson Bros. Ordnance Corp. have been offering two styles of field artillery buckets since the 70s via ads in the
Artilleryman Magazine which are 'Sponge Buckets' and 'Tar Buckets'. They are widely known for the Artillery and implements they sell which are exclusively from the Civil War era, not the Revolutionary War, War of 1812, Spanish-American War, WWI or WWII.