tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6842291092692051858.post6272363322359317012..comments2024-03-10T16:18:44.220-07:00Comments on Western Bottle News: Rick Simihttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08482738207230371864noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6842291092692051858.post-26416860599126914722013-03-05T11:59:42.718-08:002013-03-05T11:59:42.718-08:00Reminds me of a 7' deep pit I dug just a few w...Reminds me of a 7' deep pit I dug just a few wks ago..... jammed full of rocks & boulders and broken Schnapps.... save for an intact Voldner's, Udolphos and PGW soda ! The age and "squareness" was definetly a rush though,,,, as almost anything in the Western Bitters realm could've been possible at that point !!<br /><br />APAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6842291092692051858.post-87890973631837493942013-03-03T14:43:07.504-08:002013-03-03T14:43:07.504-08:00That hole was loaded...with boulders. The pic was ...That hole was loaded...with boulders. The pic was taken at 7 feet and I was alone. It got so exhausting to continually yard 100 lb round granite boulders up and out of the hole, I was starting to get chest pains and the seeing spots .The few bottles which were intact were perfect, but most were blasted. I had dug some black Hostetter's panels, and 3 more broken Schnapps. That was it. Lot's of work for an olive common square, but quite frankly I would take that any day over a jammed late pit. Maybe the next hole will have my black Rosenbaum's! DMWesternglassaddicthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13162676128646657580noreply@blogger.com