Here's my story making your own bayberry wax:
* Pick the berries only when they have a white coating one them - it is the wax
(You need to Login or Register to view media files and links) * In NJ, the Garden State Parkway boarders the marshes in South Jersey and has plenty of bay berry bushes
* In 2009, I found a section next to a service area - parked - and with my bucket went to pick 'perfect 'berries'
* The summer day was hot and humid. I was dressed with sandals - shorts and a T shirt
* Filled the bucket, close to 3 pounds and home to boil out my own wax
* The next morning my whole body was covered with red bite marks - Chiggers!. I had bites between my toes, on my feet and ankles - up my legs - in my crotch - in my genital area - on my chest and arms! The suffering was a bitch!
* For one pound of boiled berries, the yield is supposed to be in several ounces
* My 3 lbs yielded a couple of ounces - not happy
Found on the Internet, bayberry wax from Maine for 12 bucks a lb - ordered it and made some Pope Lube
"The following is Mr. Pope's own formula for bullet lubricant, and can be used with perfect confidence for lubricating any bullets that are cast:
Six ounces mutton tallow.
Four ounces bay wax.
Two ounces beeswax.
Two ounces steam cylinder oil.
170 grains (two heaping teaspoons full) of Acheson's graphite.
Melt the ingredients in a double boiler, and agitate while cooling to avoid precipitation.
If this lubricant proves too hard for use during cold weather, omit the bay wax, which will usually aid in tightening the groups. Also, a hard bullet will usually perform better with a soft lubricant, and a soft bullet will shoot more accurately with a hard lubricant.
Found it to be a satisfactory lube but still have tin can of it