IMAUDIGGER
Silver Member
- Joined
- Mar 16, 2016
- Messages
- 3,398
- Reaction score
- 5,195
- Golden Thread
- 0
- Primary Interest:
- All Treasure Hunting
Amazon Forum Fav 👍
Upvote
0
Some people don't get poison oak,but that dosen't mean they cannot get it.eating it for immunity is a crazy thing to do and an old wives tale which can result in serious illness.A sprig off a branch was found in a 100 year old botany book and the active agent urushiol was still potent.When I was hard rock quartz vein gold sampling I had pretty good luck wherever the poison oak was growing..strange but true.
I've read that repeated exposure makes it worse not better.
All I know is I watched Dude eat it. His son is a tree guy and totally imune too. The natives used to eat them. There is a tincture. It also seems like people who grew up in the foothills and have had several decent exposure react less to it later.
The worse I have ever got it was from wet root mud water... and digging in the roots detecting.
I do the same thing now and more often. However I get minimal reaction now.
There was a pill with minimal side. It has been studied. By the coast gaurd even. https://www.jacionline.org/article/0021-8707(59)90082-6/pdf
I'm not eatin poison oak leaves though
Some people don't get poison oak,but that dosen't mean they cannot get it.eating it for immunity is a crazy thing to do and an old wives tale which can result in serious illness.A sprig off a branch was found in a 100 year old botany book and the active agent urushiol was still potent.When I was hard rock quartz vein gold sampling I had pretty good luck wherever the poison oak was growing..strange but true.
She makes for a pretty good Lumber Jill though and can handle a chainsaw! (LOL)
View attachment 1693966
There was a saw?Is that one of those fuel injected Husky saws?
Is that one of those fuel injected Husky saws?
There was a saw?![]()
Hiked AROUND the patch and found what I think is a digging tool.
Pointed on one end and chisel tipped on the other.
View attachment 1695675
I like finding these types of tools.
Figure 1900-1910
I read a article written by a guy who claim that some Indian Tribe he was living with in the spring and summer for a research project ate poison ivy leaves early in the spring when the leaves first came out to build up an immunity.
I do not believe that is a digging tool.
We have them here in Maine, and they still can be bought, but what we have, are Log Dogs.
We use them to hold down a round log, typically used when logs are being squared up when using an adze. Two logs are laid down sideways on the dirt, then the log to be squared is put on top of the two logs to get it out of the dirt. The Log Dogs are hammered into the two logs to keep the log secured.
These would have been used a lot in mining for preparing any timbers.
I could be wrong, but I am 99% sure that is what it is.
View attachment 1695701
To get the hand-hewn look in my own home, I used that axe-method to square up the beams for my timber-framing. I am not sure if you can see it in the photo, but these are hand hewn just like your picture depicts.
View attachment 1695824
I never got into poison ivy as far as I know but I am totally allergic to poison sumac. When I catch some I don't screw around with lotions. Spreading lotions can spread the oil that caused it in the first place. I'll take oral Benadryl antihistamine at twice the recommended dose of 25mg and four times the dose before I go to bed. Keep washing gentlely with detergent- not soap. It usually clears up in about a week.