Talk to Mel Dorries at Hurdygurdycrafters (google for his website)

He's not on the East Coast, but at least he's half way there in Michigan.

Good luck

P.S. Used gurdies many times are MORE expensive than new ones. Good gurdies
age well and sometimes you have to pay a premium for getting a good one
without having to stand in the waiting lines luthiers have, some of them
extending over two years!

On Thu, Jan 26, 2012 at 9:44 PM, Jan <[email protected]> wrote:

> OK, so I took an intro to the Hurdy Gurdy lesson and now I'm totally
> hooked!  I need a Hurdy Gurdy!  I live in NH and so far haven't come
> across a used one. Everything I have seen on the net is on the west
> coast and I would prefer not to buy one without trying it and having
> it checked out.  I don't want to start with a beginner box, but want
> an instrument with some aesthetic quality, that is user friendly. Any
> suggestions?  Thanks, Jan
>
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