Hi everyone, I am in Chigcago, on my way home after a travel day from hell with 
stops in the UK and the chaos at the airports there. My advice, AVOID THE UK at 
all costs right now. Pretty much strip searches, plastic baggie with passport 
and money was all I could carry on, overflowing bins of goodies taken from 
people, thousands of bags on the ground sitting in the rain, endless lines and 
no-one seemed to have a clue what to do. 
My bags made is somehow, and I now have the Moss meteorites safely in my hands 
again, it was hard to sleep wondering if some airport lackey had deemed them as 
dangerous and tossed them in the incinerator!

Now on to this Norwegian article condemning myself and my fellow meteorite 
hunters. I am dissapointed in reading it, since I had a meeting with the people 
from the National museum regarding the laws and was told that I was welcome to 
take anything I found or bought, since Norway had no law against it. Now it 
seems, that while true, they did not want to cooperate hunting with me as they 
suggested, but rather were just gathering information to use in harrasing me. I 
searched for 8 days in Moss, and never once ran into a scientists, museum 
curator, or any other official out hunting meteorites in the forest, 
mosquito-infested bogs, or streets of Moss. I met the museum people at my hotel 
for two hours, then they promtly took a bus back to Oslo. I guess hunting 
meteorites is not their forte, just complaining about those of us who save them 
from destruction and preserve them. 
The piece that Morten Bilet and I found was in a parking area at a large 
factory. Many pieces had been run over and crushed into grey piles of dust by 
the time we discovered it and saved over 800 grams of extremely rare material 
from further destruction. Now I am called a thief for legally removing it from 
Norway. I have already submitted pieces for classification, and the thin 
sections are being made and we will have perhaps preliminary classification by 
the end of the month. I have museums around the world already slated for 
pieces, and collectors as well. There is enough material for both the museums 
in Norway, the scientific world, and the private collection community to share. 
I am proud of what I do, the risks I take, and the time and energy I spend 
chasing these falls. Until I see legions of scientists out there doing it 
beside me, I know who is the one who provides them with their study material, 
and who saves the meteorites from destruction or loss. If Morten and I had not 
found our specimen when we did, it would be 800 grams of grey mud right now, 
not a pristine meteorite already in the lab!
Michael Farmer
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