Oh, there is a much more TRAGIC story about the cat than a scratch. In late 
Feb. 2007 there was a break-in and burglary at my house in Seattle and about 
$20K of stuff was stolen, including the cat HG. I alerted this group and prayed 
(or whatever a non-believer like me does instead of praying) that the burglar 
would try to sell it because I knew that the HG community would recognize it 
and maybe it would lead to its recovery and hopefully some legal process that 
would send the %^&@*^$ burglar to prison (though I would prefer the depths of 
hell). The burglar also stole virtually all of my jewelry, which ended up not 
being covered by my insurance. The HG WAS "covered by insurance" but anyone who 
knows how much I loved that instrument (along with the Colson that Cali and 
Alden so expertly restored) and how deeply involved I was in specifying 
customization (e.g., it had 2 chanterelles for more keys, other cool stuff, and 
I sculpted the cat head myself and then it was copied onto the neck) will know 
that insurance was only money and my eyes still fill with tears when I think 
about that HG. It is featured on the website of Chris Allen who built it, and 
whom I've had the good fortune of visiting (and wife Sabina and daughters Ana 
and Katja) in Wales several times. One side note, I have named my HGs (the one 
restored by C and A is Anneliese) and I named the cat gurdy before it was even 
finished, just like many couples nowadays name a baby still in utero. I named 
that one Katja before knowing that that was the name of Chris and Sabina's 
younger daughter. 

If I could ever have that HG back (though I have despaired of that), I would 
happily have it back in my arms with a thousand scratches. I am still 
brokenhearted over its loss.

Thank you for remembering it.









On Apr 2, 2010, at 5:25 PM, Martin Lodahl wrote:

> Patricia Lipscomb wrote:
>> I was hoping someone might advise me. The other day my hand slipped in 
>> typical klutz mode while I was handling my hurdy gurdy and my fingernail 
>> gouged the wood on the side - not deeply but definitely noticeably. What is 
>> the best way to disguise this? I know there are things similar to crayons to 
>> disguise scratches on furniture but wanted to check with the group before 
>> doing that.
>>  
> 
> Trish!  Not the cat vielle!?  Say it isn't so!!
> 
>   - Marty
> 
> -- 
> Martin Lodahl of Auburn, California
> UNIX Pro, Musician, Motorcyclist
> 
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