One of my hand tools to help harvest corn by hand if the world goes haywire. Corn Cob Jelly. • Corn Cob Jelly. Another old tool. 100+ Year Old Dry Bean Sorter. • 100+ Year Old Dry Bean...
This sheller is a high production machine. I have never seen one like this before. I love it. I have a couple of old black hawks from the flea market, but nothing like you have. I love vintage cast iron tools. They were built to be repaired with almost any thing laying around, if need be. Even the sheet metal on old equipment was of a higher quality.
Somebody spent a few hours smokin' the pipe and figuring things out...the frikken thing works good a mechanical genius shukin jive ...keep them kids out of trouble ...my brother and I churned butter snapped beans cranked sausage tested eggs for floaters and even cranked ice cream ...best part..we would fight to be the one haha
It's actually in pretty good condition for it's age, just cosmetics. A fantastic machine! - I suppose the corn has to be dried? or do you just put them in straight from picking/from the field?
Preparedness Veteran typically the corn would be cribbed. Years ago the would harvest the corn, and leave it on the cob. Then they would put it up in the corn cribs, small buildings with gaps in the walls. Then they would dry for shelling. I just hang mine up by the husks or put them in mesh bags.
Really ingenious tool, and very little waste our ancestors made use of everything, so much to learn from them. Thanks boss.
Just love old time farm tools.
Corn cobs make good fuel for small stoves also.
Thanks for showing.👍
Just Us Up North and pipes. Lol
thanks for the share, Modern Refugee.
This sheller is a high production machine. I have never seen one like this before. I love it. I have a couple of old black hawks from the flea market, but nothing like you have. I love vintage cast iron tools. They were built to be repaired with almost any thing laying around, if need be. Even the sheet metal on old equipment was of a higher quality.
I like all those old school tools, they will really come in handy if shtf ever happens. I hope not but you never know 🤔👍🌽
Love this kitchen tool-- thank you for sharing!
Very nice! Thanks for the demo.
Corn bread. Mmmm
Douglas March yup!
I grew up using one on the farm. Bought one again for my homestead and shtf. Great item to have
Very cool 👍🏻 Looks like it works well
Nice machine!
EXCELLENT!! What a Beauty! And, if you run out of corn to shell, you could just use it for exercise. :-D Thanks for sharing MR.
Great tool and it just goes to show how well built things used to be before the "disposable" age came along
That is amazing and hilarious at the same time! Thanks for the video, I've never seen one of these!
That's pretty awesome right there! Maybe on one of our "antique" excursions, we might find one of those! Blessings from NE Missouri!
Im beginning to think you own an antiques shop. Looks 100x easier than when I do it by hand
Pretty cool! Never seen one of those before.
Yep. Seen one of these working when I went to Sturbridge Village long ago. Lol.
Man you got some of the coolest stuff!
Awesome machine !
Is this COW corn ?
Sun Set just plain field corn.
Do you have an old fashioned grinder as well ?
Sun Set no my corn grinder is new. It’s in my masa video.
hook up the fan and get rid of a little more of the chaff, also works well for husking walnuts.
Awesome !
👍🏻🇺🇸
ok awesome thanks again
Nice! Real cool.
I am surprised that you could find such a helpful item. So many useful tools went to the scrap yards because of mechanization on the farms.
Somebody spent a few hours smokin' the pipe and figuring things out...the frikken thing works good a mechanical genius shukin jive ...keep them kids out of trouble ...my brother and I churned butter snapped beans cranked sausage tested eggs for floaters and even cranked ice cream ...best part..we would fight to be the one haha
It's actually in pretty good condition for it's age, just cosmetics. A fantastic machine! - I suppose the corn has to be dried? or do you just put them in straight from picking/from the field?
Preparedness Veteran typically the corn would be cribbed. Years ago the would harvest the corn, and leave it on the cob. Then they would put it up in the corn cribs, small buildings with gaps in the walls. Then they would dry for shelling. I just hang mine up by the husks or put them in mesh bags.