...
Nevermind the little "drop" on the label, it's a solid hunk of goodness just a little bit thicker than your average petroleum jelly, until it's warmed by your hands.
Makes a good addition to bullet lube as well.
Might work as is with patched round balls.
Bob Roller
And if it protected seagoing metal from salt water/spray/air, it might also be quite capable of protecting steel in less harsh environments. That was a little "implied" notion that apparently never got through to this century.
I like tallow and grease and wax too, but
lanolin is food safe, non-toxic, non-petroleum, and without perfume, colors, or additives. It dates back to well, they don't have good records, but guess that selection for "woolliness" of sheep started about 6000BC according to the
Wiki.
I'm sure some was around in "our time of concern" even if it was known by another name, like:
Wool Fat, Wool Wax, Wool Grease, or similar. But even if it wasn't (wool was a hot commodity in England and subject to the Navigation Acts of 1699), I prefer it to all the other remedies for
cracked working hands I've seen mentioned in this thread, and it's multi-functional as Bob notes.
Also, something I only recently learned about lanolin, is that you can make an emulsification from it and replenish the water and dirt repellency of your wool clothing. I've yet to try this, but there are lots of gals doing it on youtube.
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