Well gents I hate to brag but I think I struck gold! Found a nice chunk of my favorite wadding material! This is only one half of the piece. Next season’s squirrels are in trouble.
Well gents I hate to brag but I think I struck gold!
That’s about what I get.Meanwhile some of us just get “pickers”!
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those sell on ebay as decorations,(who knows for what) for up to 150.00Are the large paper wasp nests of any use?
and here I threw one away a few years back that was larger than a basketballthose sell on ebay as decorations,(who knows for what) for up to 150.00
I posted a thread sometime back in the percussion rifle section called “Wacky Shooting “. In this thread, I demonstrated how I use wasper nest for wadding in a .50 caliber rifle. I put in powder, a wad of nest, a bare round ball and topped off with another wad of nest. It does good out to about 50 yards, but you won’t get IdahoLewis accuracy at long range and you probably won’t win any matches with it.I have heard of using wasp nest for patching but haven’t been around anyone actually using it. Do you cut patches for rifles, or is it used wadded up for shot?
Thanks! I’ll look that up. In my area, it would take two nests per shot. Now if a mud dauber nest could be used....I posted a thread sometime back in the percussion rifle section called “Wacky Shooting “. In this thread, I demonstrated how I use wasper nest for wadding in a .50 caliber rifle. I put in powder, a wad of nest, a bare round ball and topped off with another wad of nest. It does good out to about 50 yards, but you won’t get IdahoLewis accuracy at long range and you probably won’t win any matches with it.
I like to use wasp nest or jute tow the same way in rifles and smooth bores because it’s so easy to load. It’s not the same as using patched round balls, I just like keeping everything simple.
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