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One of the reasons I was looking it up Rushey is that it never has been in common use and it is hardly ever heard used nowadays.
This is how I have heard it used in the past.... Once one of our boys went out with the axe and took a swing at a Black Maire stump outside the Ohutu Stream hut that over the years had turned as hard as stone. A chip came off of the cutting edge of the axe.
Hence it was said at the time "That boy has gapped the axe"
Sometimes a tree would grow around a sizeable stone which will "gap the Axe"
A hard knot in a piece of wood was known to "gap the axe"
Perhaps the steel of the old often treasured axes like the Kelly mays have been a bit more brittle than what are available now.
That all I know Rushey and like you I would like to know more. I am hoping "Gapped Axe" will come back and explain a bit about his chosen name.
Killed a few mices in that hut and chopped up a few animals outside.
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