AmericanLongRifles Forums
General discussion => Antique Accoutrements => Topic started by: G. Elsenbeck on June 05, 2020, 10:53:36 PM
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I came around this piece recently and recognized it as a bait/cricket/grasshopper horn,,,,,,,,,,,,I think. I was highly interested how the original maker put this together while on the surface you would think of its' simplicity for the look, but after studying this for a time I became puzzled about the purpose of the 'spout' end. The only I can think of was to provide an 'air chamber' for whatever he/she put into it. As for its' construction, the spout end was built first in order to determine where to put the slot for the sliding 'door' to open and close. It does not remove, there is some 'stop' built into the 'wooden wall'. Very interesting piece. Likewise the sliding door at the base end is tapered and not removable. It moves just enough to stuff the critter into the horn with a hole about 3/4" in diameter. Hopefully all the pictures come through well. This is only about 4 1/2" long.
(https://i.ibb.co/KWhYCBc/Cricket-Baithorn-1.jpg) (https://imgbb.com/)
(https://i.ibb.co/xjxHs8S/Cricket-Baithorn-4.jpg) (https://imgbb.com/)
(https://i.ibb.co/q0d2MPy/Cricket-Baithorn-5.jpg) (https://ibb.co/VHtkWPj)
(https://i.ibb.co/C2KnHLc/Cricket-Baithorn-8.jpg) (https://ibb.co/SrwK3Sj)
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I wouldn't think that would work too well with crickets. The hole in the spout looks pretty small. Maybe for a small supply of salt? I have no clue...
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I think its a snuff horn. Even the amber color of the horn tends to point me in that direction. The later addition of the commercially made boot lace material puzzles me though. It could have been used for a lot of different things over the years.
Hungry Horse
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That is really interesting. It does not look like bait horns I have seen, but that does not mean much because I have only seen one of two.
Cory Joe Stewart
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Hello All,
I toss another thought into the mix. Might it be a bee box for bee hunting?
I've seen photos of old bee boxes with two spaces/chambers in them. They have all been of wood but maybe someone made one utilzing a horn?
Food for thought,
Kevin
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Hello All,
I toss another thought into the mix. Might it be a bee box for bee hunting?
I've seen photos of old bee boxes with two spaces/chambers in them. They have all been of wood but maybe someone made one utilzing a horn?
Food for thought,
Kevin
That's a neat idea.
Cory Joe Stewart
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I'm intrigued by this horn and it's use......What is bee hunting and why would you hunt for bees?
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This explains bee hunting, and a section on bee boxes is about 2/3 of the way down.
https://www.uaex.edu/farm-ranch/special-programs/beekeeping/beeliner.aspx
Dale H
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I'm intrigued by this horn and it's use......What is bee hunting and why would you hunt for bees?
Bees make honey and honey is good. Also, it was done to replenish hives that were kept. Keep in mind honey bees are not indigenous to North America they were brought over just like livestock.
Cory Joe Stewart