Attachment 52108
Printable View
"Yeah, it's not much to look at, but it had brang new tires plus a rebuilt engine. Got it for a fast hundred dollar bill!"
Attachment 52109
No worries - the cat was already deaf when it made a bed here.
Attachment 52110
When container living just seems too common...
Attachment 52111
"Bad news, pal - you've got a bad case of ear mites!"
Attachment 52112
"Great. Looks like my stock portfolio just took another hard hit."
Attachment 52113
#1 A little hard to tell where the machinery ends and the "human" begins.
I knew a guy who searched for stuff. He had a belt of .50 that he found in Pattens tank training in AZ. It was pretty rusty. He also knew to look for a depression in the dirt around old ranches. That would be where they fillied in the outhouse. He had a collection of "punkin seed" bottles (kind of flat) that he found in one. It takes some digging. He came to every gun show with a very versified collection of bullets. He was a crabby old guy and if you mentioned you could find it on line, he told you to go on line and that was the end of the discussion.
Item #1 again. If posted for sale on Craigslist and not pictured the description might read:
"Like new, open top, cruise the Gulf Coast".
"Excellent condition but could use a little cleaning or detail"
"All it needs is freon". (what I see the most of)
"Restoration started, all the hard work done".
"Great condition, drive it anywhere".
"Sought after collector vehicle".
"Classic, rare, one of a kind".
"Make offer----will trade for real estate"
"No holds, first person with cash gets it. My loss your gain".
"Buy it now. If I have to make any repairs price will just go up".
That's the classic GB pitch. Looks good, barrel could use some cleaning.
If GB had truth in advertising: Barrel condition - pits form a spiral. SW
I mentioned in a different thread that Southerners often threw valuable stuff in their outhouse when the Union troops entered knowing they would not search or think to search them. When new outhouses had to be dug they threw trash in the old ones as filler. A lot of their old trash is now collectable stuff like old bottles, bent silverware and such.
I heard of a local guy who dug up a sterling silver platter doing this. It obviously wasn't trash but put there for safe keeping. Perhaps the owners were killed.
It's rare. What makes it rare? Actually, cash talks: Don't sell that, I'm coming back for it. Can you put something down? Ah, no I don't have any cash on me (came to GS with no money). Where's the ATM? Never see them again. Or if they show up on Sunday, "you sold it", yeah, that's what I do.