Standing Wolf.........Welcome to the TMA!
FWIW:
On a recent trip to New Mexico I saw a couple of leather covered gourd's that could "possibly" be used for Powder Horns, or Canteens.
The most interesting part of this particular gourd was the fact the seam on the leather that surrounded the gourd was sewn with an
inside seam, and it appeared to be as stout and sturdy as any horn I have ever seen...no clue as to how they got that gourd in that leather bag. But it was hard as a rock on the outside.
I am pretty sure that leather was soaked in something and stretched prior to the sewing, but the guy that was selling them obviously didn't know much more than I did. Or at least he didn't have any desire to tell me how it was done.
He hem-hawed around a bit but he finally did say it was likely done with the ashes from Mesquite, an old Navajo secret that few knew of....and he was obviously an Navajo himself just trying to make a dollar with his wares, as this happened in Gallup, NM.... and the outside of town is packed with Navajo street vendors.
I'm not sure of the truth in the story but I liked it, and I have since wondered just how it might be done. Or better yet, how I might go about doing it.
Years ago, back when I lived in New Mexico, Bollings Running Indian, a tourist trap that littered the highways of the state used to sell painted gourds, supplied by both the Pueblo and the Mescalero Apache Nations...these were simple painted gourds that were lined inside and out with Bees-Wax and touted as water vessels.
I must have looked at several hundreds of those painted gourds over the years, they were done up nice but I could never afford one....and I would have never trusted one for anything other than an emergency source for water carry, maybe. They looked awful fragile.
But this leather covered gourd is a hoss of a totally different color...still to expensive for my blood, but I do think it just might have made a fair powder horn.
Uncle Russ...