That rawhide comment reminded me of a "collection" a friend inherited from an uncle, that spent a lot of time in South America back in the fifties. The "collection" consisted of seven or eight cheap imported shotguns, commonly called monkey guns, that had been used by the natives for many, many years before he got them. All were about 28 gauge, all but one was single barreled, and all had numerous field repairs. Radiator clamps, Spam can material, baling wire, and rawhide, all had found its way onto these cheap little guns. The one that made my hair stand up, had blown the nipple out of the barrel. The owner had glued it back in with a wad of chicle, and wrapped it with a piece of untamed monkey hide with a hole just big enough for the top of the nipple to peak through and accept the percussion cap. They all had a cross carved into them somewhere, and I always pondered which saint was the saint of gun repairs.
Hungry Horse