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Toxic Masculinity with Hot Sauce......

Thanks for that. My wife is from southern LA, so we have done the Avery Island/Tabasco tour. Really neat place.
The Garlic Pepper Sauce is my favorite.
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Not to detract from General McIlhenny's service, but for a truly superior hot sauce, try 'Amy's Red Savina'. Plenty of heat but a flavor that keeps you tipping the bottle.
 
My good friend and bird dog trainer had his dogs he ran in the field trial bird dog circuit. Beleive he had a national champion. My friend is d Hoyle Eaton .he and the generals dog are in the hall of fame !
 
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Me Eaton used to tell me of the good times they had together when the general would come to the Canadian prairies with him in the summer for training. Oh yea, mr Eaton had cases of Tabasco!
 
While the McIlhenny family has every right to that sword, I wonder if one of them has ever thought about returning it to its former owner's family if they could be found.

I think it would be an honorable thing to do.

Meh, I understand and respect some families desire or acting to return an item captured in combat but that is up to the individual family and there is no honor or dishonor which ever way they decide to go.

Mr. McIlhenny was on Guadalcanal, as well as Bouganville and Peleliu. He has seen the horrors.

Im sure he was familiar with the "Goettge Patrol". Perhaps he was even privy to the details of what happened to those men when the Japanese slaughtered them.

I respect his wishes to do as he pleases with that sword.

Keeping it is honorable as well if it warms the cockles of his heart returning it would be honorable.

Right now it's in the National Museum of WWII and I think educating Americans about WWII is the best place it can be.

It's a fine example of the seriousness of war and the balls of the American fighting man.
 
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Meh, I understand and respect some families desire or acting to return an item captured in combat but that is up to the individual family and there is no honor or dishonor which ever way they decide to go.

Mr. McIlhenny was on Guadalcanal, as well as Bouganville and Peleliu. He has seen the horrors.

Im sure he was familiar with the "Goettge Patrol". Perhaps he was even privy to the details of what happened to those men when the Japanese slaughtered them.

I respect his wishes to do as he pleases with that sword.

Keeping it is honorable as well if it warms the cockles of his heart returning it would be honorable.

The guy tried to split his skull. Keep it.
 
The guy tried to split his skull. Keep it.


Fuck yeah. Had the scabbard not stayed with the sword when he drew Mr Hot Sauce wouldn't have been doing so well. Guessing that glancing off the helmet the blade would have caught flesh.

It took a pretty good pounding to dent an M1 helmet like that.

I've shot one with a 22lr and it didn't make that big a dent.
 
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Fuck yeah. Had the scabbard not stayed with the sword when he drew Mr Hot Sauce wouldn't have been doing so well. Guessing that glancing off the helmet the blade would have caught flesh.

It took a pretty good pounding to dent an M1 helmet like that.

I've shot one with a 22lr and it didn't make that big a dent.

I've shot one with a .22 and it went clean through the helmet and liner. Was NOT impressed.
 
With regards to the "Japanese swords" during the war, it might be hard-pressed to find the family to which it belonged. I say this, because whilst the sword itself is marked by the maker and to whom it is being made for, on the tang.... So many of the families simply donated (were forced to donate?) the swords to the Imperial Army and then all swords, no matter the length, were arbitrarily cut off to a uniform length. Then issued to whichever officer. Said officer never had his family name on the tang.

At least, this is all as I understand things, and by no-means am I a "swordologist" to be quoted. Just a comment in a conversation, so run with it. And be careful when running with swords.

To which I'll add, and we've spoken of this a number of times over the years.... the making of one's own hot-sauce is a "personal taste" thing. I've been working on my recipe for a number of years, and have it pretty-much perfected to the way I like things. And yeah, I am definitely a liker of HOT sauce. It needs to have heat, and it needs to have flavor.

Last batch I made just over a gallon. This time, I've got over 5 gallons on the go. Looking forward to it's completion.
 
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I believe there are more Japanese swords in the US than indeed Japan.
Sean’s right in a sense,that blades aren’t marked as property per se.There are however many identifying features such the point (kissaki),ridge line (shinogi),grooves (hi),carvings (horimono) & tempering-typical patterns in the steel & I am not going to dredge them all up from memory either.
The sword pictured could even be a gunto sword,no way to know unless the furniture is removed.
It’s the owners choice of course as to wether to repatriate a sword but the very last thing I would do would be to donate it to a museum.