Added: 2 years ago
From: sourswithhawk
Views: 4,335
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  • hello brother

    it is great to see that our ways have not been forgotten.

    running horse

  • Hey Other Brother....

    I wanted to answer directly to your inbox,but.....

    The tour biz is slow....so I`m teaching myself bow-making & trying to make glass arrowheads [it aint as easy as you make it look, LOLOLOL]...

    Getting ready for Pow-wow...

    Hope to see you there.....P

  • kool

  • ps....i love you man....

  • @PeterPeli dude peter I know you. you dont recognize me in the vid. I was kidding around with you bro.

  • Hows the touring business going brother?

  • I don`t get it?..."Sours with hawk"...does`nt matter..

    I was`nt talking to YOU on the buffalo hunt video,but since you want to defend the guy & disagree with my statement,you will have the opportunily to tell me to my face at

    Live-Oak.

  • Soars with hawk huh?.....

  • @PeterPeli No sours with hawk. and its just a name.

  • @PeterPeli and I saw your name on a random buffalo hunt vid right now. You really need to get a life.

  • love the way you just whack iot and chuck it, few decades time archaeologists will find that and that'll be a major indian site. 

  • @jaocheu That's how it's usually done haha. There have been a lot of modern flintknappers who've left debitage on different parts of that river.

  • Do you think I would find a field like that near Carpinteria or Ojai?

  • @draconis93 The last time I visited the state beach in Carp there was some chert there and I think I remember a few river beds over by there.

    You could check by the river reserve in Ojai, but I haven't been there in a while and don't remember if there was much chert in that area, but there might be some places by casitas too.

  • Hey thx so much for uploading this. I've learned more from this video about the types of stone to choose and how to start flaking than I have in the last three days.

    most of the stone I have in my area are mostly river rocks like the ones in your video. Not predictable as I've found out and super hard to flake. They just break apart. I'm gonna go to my city's museum to see (if any) what stone tools were used in my area. Not gonna be buying rocks online though cuz I want to use local stuff.

  • Hey, thanks for the video, now I understand why people abrade the edges of the pieces that they're working on. I'm just beginning to make points and tools, your videos are helpful.

  • very cool. things like this are important... we may not have the internet or hardware stores forever.

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