I also collect Anasazi pottery and artifacts. 

Michael Farmer

> On Jul 4, 2016, at 10:52 PM, tracy latimer via Meteorite-list 
> <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> Like most of the others here, I lost my marbles long ago :)  The current 
> point of interest over here, when I'm not buying meteorites, is Native 
> American pottery from the Four Corners area, although I have been known to 
> splurge on other types.
> 
> Best!
> Tracy Latimer
> 
> 
> From: Meteorite-list <[email protected]> on behalf 
> of Edwin Thompson via Meteorite-list <[email protected]>
> Sent: Monday, July 4, 2016 6:01 AM
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: [meteorite-list] Possible meteorite trades
>     
> Hello to all list members,
>  I am reaching out to the farthest corners of the known world to appeal to 
> any and all collectors.
>  Having dealt in and collected meteorites, tektites and related books since I 
> was just a kid, collecting all kinds of rocks which included a few cherished 
> meteorites as early as the age of six, life has been blessed with lots of 
> treasured finds. By the age  of nine my parents allowed me to go off on 
> summer long geology exploring science camp trips with older kids. For three 
> years this was how I spent my summers, digging in fossil beds and agate beds 
> all across the Northwest, areas that have been closed to this  sort of 
> activity since the mid to late sixties. At age seven I joined the Oregon 
> Archaeological Society and at age fourteen I was given the privilege of being 
> a dig site foreman for a Scappoose Indian housing and burial site before it 
> was built into the now  dismantled Trojan Nuclear Energy Power Plant along 
> the banks of the mighty Columbia river near my home here in Oregon. Over 
> time, life has changed and my interests have changed with the exception of a 
> few common threads. One
>  of them being that rocks from Space are the coolest of all rocks! 
>  Many of you know that from 1987 until 2002 I displayed and sold meteorites, 
> fossils and artifacts at roughly 48 gem and mineral shows each year around 
> the western United States.
>  During those wonderful years of travel both here and abroad, I had the joy 
> and pleasure (and still do) of meeting collectors and seeing their amazing 
> collections. What I have seen and I am sure that many of you can relate to 
> this, is that most of us who collect  rocks from Space, also collect other 
> things. I have seen a collection of antique surfboards, a huge collection of 
> ancient suits of armor, cannons, guns, diamonds, polished stone spheres, 
> stamps, coins (I think coins are how Michael Casper made his fortune!  Good 
> for him!). I've seen amazing collections of fossils, minerals and gem stones 
> in private homes and on and on.
>  Long story made shorter, I stopped collecting these beloved meteorites when 
> I formally started selling them back in 87'. I have learned that this might 
> have been a huge mistake but it's the choice I felt I needed to make in order 
> to pay the bills and to remain  competitive in an ever shrinking world 
> market. But, the collecting bug never went away, it just changed shape and 
> theme.
> 
>  Here is the pitch; about 1990 I started collecting antique handmade glass 
> marbles. These gorgeous, colorful treasures were made by glass workers in the 
> Lauscha region of East Germany from approximately 1880 until 1920. They are 
> rare and hard to find. I have  amassed a large collection and yet am always 
> searching for more. I would be delighted to trade meteorites, tektites or 
> books, even art, rare wine or cashy money for any number of these marbles.
>  If you are a marble collector then I would enjoy talking with you about your 
> collection and collecting direction. Recently Patrick got infected by this 
> same obsession and he is an avid collector of the more recent machine made 
> marbles from as early as the  1920's and 30's and later. If you just want to 
> talk marbles please drop me a line. If you know someone with marbles to sell 
> or if you have some yourself, please give me a chance to make an offer.
> 
> 
>  On a less selfish thread, I think it would be a lot of fun to read about the 
> things that others collect. I recall the first time I met Mike Bandli in 
> Tucson years ago he was dealing in Space surplus and he had a huge collection 
> of super cool artifacts. I learned  at this last Tucson show that John 
> Kashuba and I have nearly matching collections of rare, old wines. Hey, there 
> is a meteorite collector in New York who collects live scorpions! And who 
> hasn't seen Bruce Wegman's  digital watch collection?
> 
>  Come on folks, share the fun!
> 
>  Best regards,  E.T.
> 
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