As usual there are some strange, and slightly zen, lots in our local monthly auction.
A conductor’s baton, in ebonised wood and silver, London 1920, and a silver child’s fork
Is the fork for use conducting, or the baton used as a child’s eating implement?A stuffed red squirrel clasping a nut, perched on a branch.
An old wooden bottle box containing old garden tools, trowels, chisels, hammers, an old fire extinguisher, a carton containing an enamelled measuring jug, old door plates, a first aid box incl. old spark plugs, an enamelled bread bin and lid containing a pair of green plastic picnic tables for suspension from car windows, a collection of shells, old buckets, an old water feeder by Eltex, 2 prints, etc.
Why does one keep spark plugs in a first aid kit? Or green plastic picnic tables in a bread bin?Old wooden cartons containing a large number of small terracotta garden pots, some in an old pram body, a small wall cupboard and an empty box
It was the “pram body” which finished me off!A Belgian brass trumpet signed C. Mahillon, in case, a pair of shoe trees, and a club.
A python skin, four metres long.
Every home should have one!
I’ve never actually been to this sale as, apart from the odd sword, I’ve never seen anything of interest to me. One day I must go to the viewing if only for amusement.