RE: my early, partially-made rifle:
Thanks for all the nice comments regarding my work. That is not the rifle that secured my job at Colonial Williamsburg. It was more traditional. The moose antler piece, if I recall, I started when I was 18 or 19 as an experiment, but I never finished it. There is also a chiseled mount pistol out there somewhere that I made during my experimental teens. I was making the moose antler rifle as a tribute to one of our (Gary Brumfield and Duck DeHart) favorite hunting places called "Buck Hollow," and one section called "Hickory Flats." Hickory Flats was about sixty degrees for several hundred yards to the top of Fort Lewis Mountain. The area was about a mile and a half hike from our houses in Fort Lewis Hollow, State Rt. 777, about five miles west of Salem, VA. The woods there were a tangle of downed chestnut trees and foxgrape vines, thus the decoration on the rifle. Before starting this example, I had made three or four full stock flintrock rifles and several with hand-forged and filed flintlocks.
In the past year and a half I have made 14 or 15 hand-forged and filed pipe tomahawks and have demonstrated the processes of hand forging and decorating tomahawks in two videos produced by Jim Wright of American Pioneer Video in Bowling Green, KY (1-270-782-7506.)
I am presently working on three long rifles, since some people are asking if I am still making guns. Speaking of, need to get back to the carving bench.