Fifty Cents: Part one
They come out in the early morning before dawn. They scour
the night landscape, they creep up your driveway quietly, carefully.They catch you unawares when you are still waking up – what
big eyed nocturnal animal this is – you may wonder! Is it a quenda, a bilby or a tawny frog mouth – no! None of
that. It is the garage sale fanatic otherwise known as the ‘treasuresorus rex.’
Little did we know about the sub-culture that exists in
cities like Perth of the bargain hunters. What a lovely crowd of people that
just love a good deal.When you are set to downsize into a caravan I estimate that
90% of all your gear is surplus. Julie and I had a six-month rule in our
household. If we don’t use something within six months it is gone, finished,
vamoose. A good rule in theory but you would be surprised how much
stuff gathers dust in places in your home you haven’t looked for in ages and how
much work it takes to get it all out of your home. This is all about the 90%
refuse. Selling our gear was such a rich mixture between pleasure and pain. There are those denim jackets, tennis bags full of rackets
and many a tool unused. It is strange to feel the attachment to running wild
within your veins. At times when an older lady tried to walk away from the
garage with a bag full of trinkets I felt like tackling her to the ground while
yelling out loudly
“that snorkel is mine.”
One day while we were setting up for the garage sale I found
Julie sobbing over a lacquered music box. She opened the music box and a
ballerina appeared pirouetting in front of a little mirror. Through her tears
Julie's crushed voice explained it was given to her by her Nanna when she was 11
years old. There is just no way that you can sell something like that.
The decision was made not to sell all the material excess
that we had accumulated over the years and to keep the sentimental garbage.This strategy grew to six or seven packing boxes and
most of our artwork that we are keeping with Julie’s parents. Gracefully they
accepted to look after our leftovers.
Shift from this |
And this |
Three garage sales in total saw us shift our gear to other
peoples homes, bins or their professional garage sales. We could have held
three more and still wouldn’t have ‘flogged’ it all.
I must admit that two weeks after we stored those boxes I
cannot for the life of me remember what’s in the boxes. And so, it may become a
time capsule. Who knows what we may find when we reveal the secrets that lie in
our time capsule a few years on. It will be proof of human’s obsessive,
compulsive desire to hoard.
To this. |
Tips for the semi-grey nomad
·
Set a time to indicate when
you are open. We opened at 7am and finished about 12pm.
·
Place an eyecatching item
in front of your house next to or on your garage sale sign eg:
balloons.
balloons.
·
Advertise larger items like
household furniture, white goods & special interest items on the
Internet ie: e-bay and/or Gumtree as you are likely to get a better price compared to selling
these items at a garage sale.
Internet ie: e-bay and/or Gumtree as you are likely to get a better price compared to selling
these items at a garage sale.
In Western Australia good places to advertise garage sales are
listed below:
·
Quokka
·
Saturday West Australian
newspaper (they provided us with a garage sale pack including
signage, tips for a successful garage sale and a tally sheet as a record of your sold items ).
signage, tips for a successful garage sale and a tally sheet as a record of your sold items ).
·
Local newspaper.
·
Sunday Times.
·
Many of the above
publications have an on-line classified section.
2 comments:
Enjoyed reading this Mars, lovely photos and good advice, I am still getting rid of stuff, mine goes to Good Sammys or the salves.
Thanks for your support Aunty Sandra. You are the first one to comment on my blog and their for my number one ticket holder
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