26th January 2009, 06:53 PM | #1 |
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Laos Powder Flask
First, I apologise for the crappy pictures. I have what was listed as a powder flask from Laos. Seller stated that it was made of leather. It does appear to be leather, but there is no seam, or stitching. Size of the flask itself is very small, 2 1/4" tall, 1 3/4" wide. Shows a great deal of age. As there is no seam, and it does appear to be leather, what is it made from. The only thing I can come up with is a monkey scrotum, or simiular body part? The plug is wood, and there is a wood or bamboo insert, in the neck. Also on the bottom is what appears to be veins visible in the surface. I'm stumped. Any ideas? M.P.
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26th January 2009, 08:14 PM | #2 |
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LOL, I just NEVER thought we'd end up discussing the veins on a Monkeys scrotum here!
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26th January 2009, 09:18 PM | #3 |
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Ain't life full of surprises!?
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26th January 2009, 09:47 PM | #4 |
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Indded! Certainly if you're a monkey apparently!!
On a serious note, I would think the leather is too thick to be a Monkeys boy-bag. I would think (and please understand I am no expert on scrotums) that its probobly from a slightly larger aninmal and 'shrunk' down to that size. Probobly a goat or ram. |
26th January 2009, 09:57 PM | #5 | |
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ROTFLMAO, too much!!! |
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26th January 2009, 11:57 PM | #6 | |
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27th January 2009, 01:19 AM | #7 |
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Hmmm, I tyhought it looked a bit voodoo for a second!
I can only think of one internal organ without an exit and its the appendix, so it not one of them. Bladder would be the obvious choice but theres nop exit. There is a long tradition of making stuff out of scrotums. So I think it could well be. Unless it is a formed piece of hide and has been stretched and shaved to minimise creaing. But that seems like a lot of trouble to go to. Hopefully other forumites will come and enlighten us? Kino? You must have some thoughts? |
27th January 2009, 01:47 AM | #8 | |
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OT: I work in a hospital where our birthing unit have a friendly competition with other area hospital birthing unit's as to who can collect the most umbilical cord blood. The monthly winnner wins an ice cream social. |
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27th January 2009, 04:16 AM | #9 | |
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27th January 2009, 05:18 AM | #10 |
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Scrotum, boys, scrotum....
Trenchwarfare, hope you have nightmares for a week! I certainly will... Male solidarity, you see.... I dread to think what these Laotians of yours used for leather covering of their scabbards!! |
27th January 2009, 08:09 AM | #11 | |
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27th January 2009, 02:10 PM | #12 | |
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27th January 2009, 07:39 PM | #13 |
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Whose .. nuts?
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27th January 2009, 09:08 PM | #14 |
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Oh it is a slippery slope .............
Seriously though ; Trench, can I have that back please ........ |
28th January 2009, 04:20 AM | #15 | |
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28th January 2009, 04:22 AM | #16 | |
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28th January 2009, 05:40 PM | #17 |
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lol. |
28th January 2009, 05:52 PM | #18 |
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Just get here ??
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28th January 2009, 06:45 PM | #19 |
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The "Igorots" (Northern Luzon, Philippines) in the past, made lime containers (to hold lime powder for betel chew mix) made of human scrotum (most likely taken from victims of head hunting ambushes).
I guess anything is possible |
28th January 2009, 07:22 PM | #20 | |
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28th January 2009, 09:49 PM | #21 | |
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29th January 2009, 12:34 AM | #22 |
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Bollocks!
Well a long time ago...... Spiral |
29th January 2009, 02:44 AM | #23 | |
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Eeewwww! I wouldn't want to be dipping into someone's nutsack. I wonder who decides which warrior gets what part. The bravest/strongest gets the head, the weaker gets the .......... |
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29th January 2009, 03:00 AM | #24 |
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This is starting to remind me of the scene in Apocalypto where they were dividing up the pig!!!
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29th January 2009, 03:01 AM | #25 |
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So THAT's what happened to Curious George!
The small size of the flask (if it is indeed a powder flask) may be explainable by the fact that for the very fine-grained poweder used in priming the flash-pan, you don't need a great quantity of it at any one time, especially on a gun made for hunting. I've examined a number of those crude smallbore carbines with pistolgrip stocks and locally made flintlock mechanisms, what passes for the priming pan holds very little powder. You see these guns occasionally, they came here as souvenirs of the Vietnam War. The weapons were used by hill tribes in Vietnam, Laos, and parts of Cambodia and variations can be found in Burma and China's southernmost border provinces.
Have you showed the thing to a professor of vertebrate zoology, specializing in primates? Maybe there is such an expert on the staff of, or consulting to, one of our major zoos. This is venturing a bit OT, but you'd like to know that monkey is a delicacy in Laos as it is in Thailand. I have some Lao friends here in southern Calif., and a couple of these guys say that monkey meat is the best there is. One of them loves it so much that put enough beers in him, he starts concocting all these elaborate plans to infiltrate the San Diego Zoo after hours with a large gunnysack and a small-caliber pistol. Just the thing to send the PETA guys and gals on the warpath, I'm sure, haha! |
29th January 2009, 03:21 AM | #26 |
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Duh, there I go not thinking again. Didn't even think about it being for the finer grained priming powder. Always a smaller flask. I have two of the guns you mention. (that's why I bought the flask) Very small pan on each. Both were obtained form Spook types, returning from covert ops, in countries we were "never" involved in during the Vietnam War. My wife's Grandfather gave me one of them. He traded for it from a guy he "never" picked up, in a country he "never" landed in his Goonie Bird in. As far as monkey, I have heard, it is quite tasty. I read "Head Hunters of The Amazon" a while back. Fascinating book. Author said when he returned to New York, after 7 years in the Amazon jungles, he longed for monkey, haveing aquired a taste for it. But alas, not mater how expensive the restaurant. it was never on the menu! Haven't shown it to anyone knowledgeable, as yet. The one person I knew that might have an idea, was our local Zoo director. Unfortunately, he died a few months ago.
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29th January 2009, 03:34 AM | #27 |
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finding George on a menu
A friend (who shares my love of offbeat gourmet adventures) just got back from Cambodia, the primary reason for the trip was that he and the wife wanted to see the Khmer temple complexes, but secondary was his desire to see what Curious George tastes like. We traveled to Vietnam a couple years ago, north to south, and George eluded us but Fido, Felix, et al weren't so fortunate, haha. He got skunked in Cambodia as well, at least in the Seam Riep area where he was. Government banned George from restaurant menus, they figured if this culinary treat caught on with the hordes of tourists he'd really be endangered. The locals bag their monkies on the QT and eat 'em at home, the theory being "what The Man don't know ain't gonna hurt nobody".
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29th January 2009, 04:19 AM | #28 | |
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29th January 2009, 04:28 AM | #29 |
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N. T. Have you ever seen one of those containers? If yes, are they similar to the container in question. Seller may have been wrong about it being a powder flask. It is awfully small, for that purpose. M.P. The Filipino-speaking members of the forum can probably tell us what "Bayag" means |
15th July 2014, 05:53 AM | #30 | |
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monkey guns
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