Greetings ET & Friends,
In addition to rocks from space, I also collect components from historic flying 
machines.  This includes pieces made by Orville and Wilbur up to the Space 
Shuttle and beyond!  Flown Apollo components make lovely meteorite display 
stands by the way!  ET I have a special place in my collection for the 
olive-green moldavite I purchased from you in Costa Mesa back in the early 
'90's.  I think I will perch it atop a Saturn V component later today!

RGF



 

 

 

-----Original Message-----
From: Gary Fujihara via Meteorite-list <[email protected]>
To: Edwin Thompson <[email protected]>
Cc: MeteorList <[email protected]>
Sent: Tue, Jul 5, 2016 10:07 am
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Possible meteorite trades

Aloha Edwin and all,I collect guitars and amplifiers. I didn’t start out to do 
so, but in 1972 after working three summers at a pineapple cannery as a teen, 
purchased my first guitar ‘Mabel’, a 1972 Gibson Les Paul Deluxe. Forty four 
years later, the passion is still hot and still have Mabel in my stable. The 
best part is that besides looking good, they all make a joyful noise when I 
fondle them (which cannot be said for the meteorites in my collection).g> On 
Jul 3, 2016, at 8:01 PM, Edwin Thompson via Meteorite-list 
<[email protected]> wrote:> > 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.> > ______________________________________________> > Visit our 
Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/meteoritecentral and the Archives at 
http://www.meteorite-list-archives.com> Meteorite-list mailing list> 
[email protected]> 
https://pairlist3.pair.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-listGary FujiharaBig 
Kahuna Meteorites Inc.PO Box 4175, Hilo, HI  96720(808) 
640-9161http://bigkahuna-meteorites.com/http://www.ebay.com/sch/fujmon/m.html______________________________________________Visit
 our Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/meteoritecentral and the Archives 
at http://www.meteorite-list-archives.comMeteorite-list mailing 
[email protected]https://pairlist3.pair.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list
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