This does 
work, it is waterproof and it does keep the drinks cool if you pack it 
with ice.  Just be sure the lid stays on tightly.
  That
 worked as an ice cooler for one or two events. It saved my behind at 
the 150th Antietam and the Gettysburg 2012 where it was 110 degrees in 
the shade. 
  Now I came up with another use for it...a survival kit, tool box and carryall!  Here's all the stuff I keep in it now: 
 
 
Going from right to left, I'll give you 'pards a breakdown of what's in here at all times...
  You will notice there is a teapot. What is the teapot for? 
 This
 pretty cheap, worthless old dented teapot was a lucky find at a flea 
market.  I actually use it for boiling water to clean my rifle. See the 
narrow spout? It fits perfectly into the muzzle of a .58 Enfield, and if
 you tip it up the hot water pours straight into the barrel with no 
spillage. It really works! I don't need to take the barrel off or remove
 the lockplate to prevent water seeping in, because the water goes into 
the barrel and nowhere else. (I really should make a post about my gun 
cleaning method passed down from my family firearms expert the late 
Uncle Bill. He found a way to clean the entire gun in as little as 5 
minutes)
  Next is my shoestring budget musket cleaning kit, pictured below. 
 
  The case (upper left) was handmade out of tarred canvas with a drawstring.  Below that are the segmented cleaning rods.   
 
Here's
 a cheap way to assemble a cleaning kit. Go to Walmart and buy one of 
those universal kits for pistols, rifles and shotguns. Take the patches,
 the brushes, the wire scrapers and the rods out. You'll need to buy two
 kits to get the right length of rods to go all the way down the barrel,
 and then you also have plenty of extra pieces left over and extra rods 
in case they break. They could break. Use the swab brushes and wire 
brush meant for the 12 gauge shot gun. The real skinny swab and wire 
brush are for cleaning the touch hole the nipple screws into.  The patch
 holder jag for the shotgun will work just fine.
 
 
 Three special tools you can't buy at Walmart are the nipple wrench 
(mine is for an Enfield), the bore scraper and the cleaning picks. I 
also bought two spare nipples (*ahem "percussion cones") in case I lose 
mine.  You'll also notice a square piece of tough brown leather. I use 
that piece to plug the percussion cone hole against the hammer when I 
pour the hot water down the barrel for the initial "shake & bake" 
rinse. The flexible piece of plastic tubing next to that is meant to fit
 on the end of the cone, to divert the water away from the stock and 
lock plate when the rifle is inverted.  
 
All of the stuff pictured above fits into the black cloth bag. 
 
  Here's
 my bottles and cans of cleaning fluids. The 3 old glass bottles hold 
Neatsfoot oil (for treating leathers), olive oil (to prevent rust on the
 outside of the gun), and Linseed oil (to treat the wooden stock). I 
have two wads of triple-ought "000" steel wool to shine up brass.  The 
can of Ballistol and Stock Rejuvenator are two modern essentials. 
     These
 are my homemade cleaning patches. I cut them up out of clean 
undershirts. Don't cut them any bigger than 3 inches square.  One 
package of undershirts from any clothing store will make enough patches 
to last you a year or more.  Don't waste your money on them at the 
sutlers. 
 
  
  
And
 here's the mending kit I carry with me in the field. I have coils of 
string, twine, rope and leather shoelaces. These can be used for so many
 things. Tie your tent poles together to keep your tent up. Tie together
 a broken leather strap. Lace up somebody's shoe with it.  I have a 
folding jacknife I also carry in this black bag. The thing at top right 
is part of a cotton canteen strap, in case anybody needs it.
  Then
 I have a few more modern tools for emergencies nobody should really be 
without.  I got a nice Leatherman with plenty of tools on it, including a
 tiny saw blade and a pair of scissors.  The small keychain flash light 
cost me 99 cents from the bargain aisle of Target. It makes a perfect 
bore checking light to make sure your rifle barrel is clean and shiny. I
 got a flat bladed screwdriver for undoing the barrel band screws on an 
Enfield rifle, because I find the flat tip of the nipple wrench is too 
small and slips out, gouging the wood around it. The small thing with 
the blue screwdriver handle is an awl. For punching extra holes in 
leather belts and straps, of course.  
   
  
  
  
....And
 then I also carry a tiny plastic baggie in my ammo box with a handful 
of cartridges in it. Why in plastic? Say there's a downpour on Saturday 
night, your cartridge box gets left out in the rain and your powder gets
 wet and useless. I'll slip you this bag with some dry rounds in it and 
it's got enough to hopefully get you through Sunday's battle so you 
don't have to go to the sutlers and buy more.   
  
  
  
  
And
 last but certainly not least, I still have room to carry my folding 
pocket campaign lantern. When it's closed it makes a nice sturdy dry box
 to hold my Lucifer matches in.  
 
  
 
  
 
 
Just
 so you know guys... I will always have this box near my tent in camp, 
and anyone is welcome to borrow what's inside with my supervision if 
they need a quick repair, ammo gets wet or need to check out their gun. I
 will have a sewing kit too, and I know how to mend torn seams and sew 
buttons back on to your uniform.  Just come to me if you need anything.  
 
 
 
  
 
By
 the way, here's what I look like.  My real name's Jeff.  I am in the 
Mifflin Guard with the 42nd Pennsylvania Infantry, sometimes the 13th PA
 Reserves, and sometimes the 1st PA Rifles. (we're all the same group 
depending what the battle is). I watch out for my brothers. If you're at
 an event and you think you might need anything you see in this 
reenacting survival kit, come find me. I hardly ever sleep so my tent is 
open 24 hours. Just drop in and say hi. | 
  | 
  | 
  | 
  | 
  | 
Okay, now I really wanna know; how the heck do you clean a Black Powder-fouled rifled musket in FIVE minutes without it being a slapdash job?
ReplyDelete