Neil,
   I feel a bit guilty about this. My regular piping class participants
   snapped up the first dozen or so. In fact one of them got one of them
   working at Billy Pigg type tone and pitch but as we play at A = 446 Hz
   it wasn't a runner as far as lessons were concerned. I have one or two
   that I'd be happy to send if you send me your address. Perhaps other
   would be recipients could post their addresses on the list for other
   reed makers to respond to in turn?
   As aye
   Anthony

   --- On Fri, 9/7/10, [email protected] <[email protected]>
   wrote:

     From: [email protected] <[email protected]>
     Subject: [NSP] Reeds
     To: "Dartmouth NPS" <[email protected]>
     Date: Friday, 9 July, 2010, 2:59

       I posted a question about reeds a while back and got some great
      answers. Anthony Robb
      suggested that "perhaps we should start a free bank of working reeds
      that
         "aren't really there" for enthusiastic, would-be makers to mess
      around
         with?".
      Does anyone out there have any such reeds available? I'd like to try
   my
      hand at reed making in the not too distant future and would be
   grateful
      for any "wonky" reeds that anyone could send me to have a go
   scraping,
      trimming etc.
      I'm in Australia - Neil
      --- On Fri, 19/3/10, Anthony Robb <[1][email protected]> wrote:
        From: Anthony Robb <[2][email protected]>
        Subject: [NSP] Reeds
        To: "Dartmouth NPS" <[3][email protected]>
        Received: Friday, 19 March, 2010, 7:02 AM
         Francis wood wrote:
         Unwelcome squeaking can arise from many causes (including mice in
      the
         bag, though I'm not qualified to advise on a solution to that
   one)
      and
         it takes a good amount of experience to determine what is really
      wrong.
         What should an isolated beginner do in such circumstances?
         Hello Francis, I know the feeling. 6 months after getting my set
      from
         Bill Hedworth I  found myself alone in the Birmingham area
   (Sutton
         Coldfield)  and stuck for any adivice on reeds. There were no
         professional makers whatsoever in those days but I'd made contact
      with
         Bob Reid who posted me 6 chanter reeds (I think about a quid
   each)
         and I set to work wrecking them and getting to know what not to
   do!
      At
         that time Finbar Furey lived in Coventry and we got together a
   few
         times and he made me a copy of one of Bob's reeds but the Irish
   seem
      to
         go for softer cane which didn't really have the tone I wanted.
         No amount of watching or getting advice can match first-hand
         tweaking and after getting through about -L-120 worth of reeds at
         today's money I had learned a lot and was reasonably proficient
   and
         setting reeds (thank you Colin Ross!) to suit my pipes. When I
   came
      to
         make my own first reed (used in her F set by Carole on Cut & Dry
      Dolly)
         I didn't have a gouge so made the slip by patiently sanding from
   the
         flat cane on sandpaper drawing-pinned to a bit of broom-shank
   (not
         recommended but showed tenacity)!
         These days I snap lifeless reeds to stop me wasting time on them.
         Perhaps we should start a free bank of working reeds that
         "aren't really there" for enthusiastic, would-be makers to mess
      around
         with?
         As aye
         Anthony
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