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#1 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: California
Posts: 1,036
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Oh, those ellyfunts should be trumpeting for joy!
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#2 |
Member
Join Date: May 2020
Posts: 823
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shipping nowadays is always a most interesting journey..
ex the good ol' U S of A : DHL took me 4 days to NL ( yep ...I am a Cloggy ![]() ![]() value from auction was $100.. actual or real value should be $ 250-300 USPS with their local partner Post.NL again value $100 for a Bosnian dagger from 1860, actual value around 400 - 450, shipping $ 80 .... 4 monnths....with Euro 35 import duties, delivering it together wit a small yacht window ( whose owner was also waiting for 3=4 months on it from a complete different part of Holland) .... Austrian Post uses Eurodis as intermediate to the Dutch Post.NL and ships for € 18 : 9 times all OK, one time my dagger was lost and on its way back to sender due to incorrect address. The sender made no mistake but all the intermediates put their labels over the original address. Even after contacting all callcenters of 3 involved companies it took 3 months to get my package found an delivered. Terrible... although all other 9 Austrian shipments went OK. My recent experience : a book on cold weapons from Bosnia: purchase price 60, DHL ( being the only option) 30....upon arrival ( 3 days !!! Very fast indeed, the same it took me by motorbike or train to Sarajevo...) I had to pay 17 import duties and....18 handling costs....the last 2 amounts did feel like a ripp off a klewang ( purchase value $ 75, actual 150)from the US again: $ 35 by USPS: 2 weeks and no import duties.... you tell me ... what's going on? Sometimes I think they are using the donkey express or the Kon-Tiki whilst other times they are performing excellently. Nevertheless the scare me sh-beep-tless when it takes more than 1 month As for description of auction houses: they are not sure anymore, so also bone or horn are lots of times described as Citesitems, whilst they come / are made from local oxes in the Balkans...and the only endangered specie is the collector who is been taken for a ride.... sadly. Thumbs up nevertheless yeh all Last edited by gp; 13th May 2021 at 05:16 PM. |
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#3 |
Member
Join Date: Jul 2009
Posts: 607
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An interesting tidbit on the BBC ANTIQUES ROADSHOW FAQ page:
Can I bring ivory to Antiques Roadshow? At the end of 2018, the UK government’s Ivory Bill gained Royal Assent to become law. Further information on the detail and scope of the legislation can be found here: https://www.gov.uk/government/public...vory-bill-2018 Please note that Antiques Roadshow no longer values items of antique elephant ivory. However, our experts may be able to examine your items and offer guidance about the new legislation. That takes care of the broad swath of world antiques, from the Viking period chess figures, to middle ages decorative objects, to 19th century musical instruments, to the 20th century jewelry. |
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#4 |
Vikingsword Staff
Join Date: Nov 2004
Posts: 6,336
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I wonder how they feel about fossil ivorys, elephant and mammoth? Many knifemakers in the US use this and fossil walrus, Steller's Sea Cow ribs etc. for knife scales.
I hate it when they make these one-size-fits-all laws. |
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#5 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: What is still UK
Posts: 5,842
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Hippo ivory is still legal? Just as nice?
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#6 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: What is still UK
Posts: 5,842
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Seems hippo is banned too. I can understand the desire to break the market but how many countries will still be a back door market so the killing will still go on.
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#7 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: California
Posts: 1,036
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#8 |
Vikingsword Staff
Join Date: Nov 2004
Posts: 6,336
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You'd have to go back in time to BBQ one Philip; they're extinct and anyway who wants leftovers that old.
The fossilized material is is gathered by the indigenous peoples of the Bering Sea area along with fossilized Walrus and is used for carvings, knife scales etc. This bear was carved from a fossilized Walrus jaw. |
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#9 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: California
Posts: 1,036
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[QUOTE=Rick;262771]You'd have to go back in time to BBQ one Philip; they're extinct and anyway who wants leftovers that old.
The /QUOTE] I once read somewhere that Russian paleontologists once dig up a mammoth from the permafrost and there was still that ol’ellyfunt meat still clinging to some bones. They made a broth out of some of the tissue. Don’t recall seeing their reaction to the flavor, would have been interesting if they could salvage enough meat to make at least a couple sibirsky pel’menyi to cook in the soup. Leftovers that old? Compared to some of the food I had during a trip to Gorbyland in 1986 , how bad could that be? |
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