[AT] Some ads from the 12/31 Lancaster Farming
Bill Bear Hood
mmman at netscape.com
Mon Jan 2 19:30:21 PST 2006
Herb
Glad to know that I am not the only one who knew them as turtle shells. The other one that gets my kids and grandkids is when I say that I have to get out and check my casings (the air in my tires.) That is what my old dad always called his tires and I guess it stuck. Dad was a trucker and it we had ever ruined a dual or one single of a tandem axle, he would have whopped us good. "Good casings cost good money" and I quote.
Bear
Live every day of your life like a three year old. Get down in the dirt with it, roll in it and smile a lot. Bear
--- "Herbert Metz" <metz-h.b at mindspring.com> wrote:
From: "Herbert Metz" <metz-h.b at mindspring.com>
Date: Mon, 2 Jan 2006 15:58:03 -0500
To: "Antique tractor email discussion group" <at at lists.antique-tractor.com>
Subject: Re: [AT] Some ads from the 12/31 Lancaster Farming
Bear
Turtle shells were used decades ago in KS; flatten out most of the arc, turn
it over, and hook behind the team of mules and move very modest amounts of
dirt or rocks. I remember hooking a log chain into the hinge hooks of the
turtle shell.
Recently, a close friend had a body shop there; that was first time I heard
of clips.
Herb
----- Original Message -----
From: "Bill Bear Hood" <mmman at netscape.com>
To: "Antique tractor email discussion group" <at at lists.antique-tractor.com>
Sent: Monday, January 02, 2006 1:07 PM
Subject: Re: [AT] Some ads from the 12/31 Lancaster Farming
> I am sure it may be another local thing. When I was growing up all my
> folks and friends called the truck or English boot a "turtle" and the lid
> was the turtle shell. To fit the dog box, just unbolt or torch the hinges
> on the turtle shell and instant coon hunting truck. I remember that my
> Dad's youngest brother (the coon huntin-est fellow I ever knew) had
> several friends with sedans with the dog box permantly in the turtle.
> Bear
> --- "Indiana Robinson" <robinson at svs.net> wrote:
> Here we used the highly technical term for that part of
> the car. We called it the "ass end"... :-) That was
> also BTW where the coon hunters took the "rear deck" off
> and built in the "dog box". :-)
> "farmer"
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