So, I bought a wooden bowl and spoon a few weeks ago, and in order to seal them for use I bought some "Butcher Block Conditioner". Its from Howard (Butcher Block Conditioner | Howard Products), made with "food grade" mineral oil, beeswax and carnauba wax. Worked great on the bowl and spoon, and since I've got a big ol' bottle of the stuff, why not try it on the gun?
I live in New England, coastal New England, which means (comparatively) high humidity and salt air. The bore of my gun is protected by Rem Oil (which I clean out before shooting), but I was looking for something to protect the wood of the stock and exposed metal.
So far, so good, at least as far as I can tell. No rust on the metal, no dry spots on the wood. I put some of the gunk on a soft cloth, rub it over the outside of the gun, then wipe off the excess with a clean dry cloth. The gun itself is stored "horizontally" on gunhooks with the muzzle down an inch or so, so any excess will eventually run off.
I mean.....I know it "works", but could this cause any damage to the stock? I've read some horror stories online about people oiling their guns and damaging the stocks due to the oil soaking in and softening the wood, but they all seem to happen when guns are stored butt-down, muzzle-up, which is not what I am doing.
Maybe I am overthinking things
I live in New England, coastal New England, which means (comparatively) high humidity and salt air. The bore of my gun is protected by Rem Oil (which I clean out before shooting), but I was looking for something to protect the wood of the stock and exposed metal.
So far, so good, at least as far as I can tell. No rust on the metal, no dry spots on the wood. I put some of the gunk on a soft cloth, rub it over the outside of the gun, then wipe off the excess with a clean dry cloth. The gun itself is stored "horizontally" on gunhooks with the muzzle down an inch or so, so any excess will eventually run off.
I mean.....I know it "works", but could this cause any damage to the stock? I've read some horror stories online about people oiling their guns and damaging the stocks due to the oil soaking in and softening the wood, but they all seem to happen when guns are stored butt-down, muzzle-up, which is not what I am doing.
Maybe I am overthinking things