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Those directions wouldn't cut it today.
Lep with an outboard motor?! Now that's a real blast from the past!!!My neighborhood since 1962. I believe I bought a Mercury 25HP from them in the early-80's. They were a dealer for Merc back then.
So I’m sure you remember Lon Wanser too. My grandfather has some custom rods he made.My neighborhood since 1962. I believe I bought a Mercury 25HP from them in the early-80's. They were a dealer for Merc back then.
My neighborhood since 1962. I believe I bought a Mercury 25HP from them in the early-80's. They were a dealer for Merc back then.
I too very much enjoyed feasting on the Varney's Cod and beautiful Little Necks as an appetizer.O.K., here's an Update
Had lunch with Capt. Mike and Capt. Neil this afternoon at Varney's in Bellport. (Fantastic fried Cod platter, btw), and while we were munching on some outstanding seafood Neil filled me in on the end-story of the Wanser thread wrapping loom.
I seems that after Lonny Jr. left LI and set up residence in Maine, Capt. Neil reached out to him regarding the balance of Lon's rod building materials, including the loom.
Here's where it gets interesting. First - there was not one loom, but several. According to Neil, one went to Causeway B&T, here in Wantagh ( I have to ask Bobby and Mike about that next time I'm in their shop), one went to Bob's B&T in Amityville, and one went to a tackle shop in Jamesport. Or was it St. James that Neil said? I can't remember, as I was downing my Blue Point Toasted Lager at the time, and that kind of blocked out Neil's words of the moment. You understand, I'm sure..
Anyway, Lon had two of them left and Neil decided that he would take both. So Neil talked a close buddy into a road trip, went up to Maine, took all of Lon's remaining rod building materials and the two looms. One was "almost" operational and the other was for spare parts.
Never having actually seen one, I had a picture in my mind of a desk-top contraption that was fairly compact. Not so. Neil said they were free-standing, with a ridiculously heavy cast iron base; and so Neil and his friend had a real tussle getting them both into the truck.
He brought his two back to Sayville and proceeded to "fix" the semi-operational one. Except he took it apart without fully appreciating the intricacies of its construction. Even though he had the second unit to emulate, he never could get the first one back together and operating properly. And so ended "Neil's Thread Loom Excellent Adventure."
So here's the part that really got my attention. It turns out these machines were A LOT older than anyone thought. We now know this because Neil's research told him that their original purpose was the manufacturing of woven buggy whips! Now THAT'S old!
That's the thread loom saga, as Neil remembers it. He's doing fine by the way. A little bit older than when I last saw him pre-COVID, but he still has that Irish twinkle in his eyes, and it was a truly wonderful afternoon spent talking fishing with him once again. He's one of the real genuinely good ones. And there's not that many left, to tell the truth. God Bless Him.