graniteguy52
Elite Cafe Member
A retired college professor ask me to engrave a spore on his 1874 C. Sharps. He discovered this spore in Venezuela in the 90's on top of one of the many tepuis (flat top mountains such as the one Angel Falls is on) while searching for new biological species. He named it Seimatoantlerium tepuiense for the antler looking "head" that attaches itself to birds for dissemination, and the type of place it was found. It shows potential as a cancer treating substance.
The reference material he loaned me was marked 5000x on the back - taken with an electron microscope.
He shoots his 45-70 nearly every week and his apparently good enough to ring the 400 yard gong off-hand quite frequently.
Oh yeah - he'll be 80 this year!
The reference material he loaned me was marked 5000x on the back - taken with an electron microscope.
He shoots his 45-70 nearly every week and his apparently good enough to ring the 400 yard gong off-hand quite frequently.
Oh yeah - he'll be 80 this year!