- Refill the cats' food and water bowl - check.
- Make bed - check.
- Pet cats and toss the mouse around to Wyatt a bit - check.
- Throw in another load of laundry (I cannot complain about laundry now that I have that lovely new washer) - check.
- Do pilates video - check
- Blog about tag sale - almost check.
Today I got home at 7pm. Miraculous! I wonder what I could do with myself if I always got home this early. I'm sure I'd be a much more prolific blogger, that's for sure.
Anyway, as promised, here is the blog about the tag sale. Doug and I participated in a town-wide tag sale, held by the Unitarian Universalist church in Dedham. Doug had been for months talking about having a tag sale and while I didn't think that we had much junk to warrant one all on our own, I thought that setting up a table at the one in town would be perfect. And it was, in a way. It cost us $30 to rent a table and a space on the green from 8am to 2pm. Our goal was to break even at this event, and we did, but barely.
Friday night we went around the house searching for stuff to sell, as we only had one small box of a few pocket books, the old kitchen canisters, and our chalk board already set aside in a tag sale pile. Doug scoured the basement while I scoured the upstairs and the first floor, looking on shelves, in drawers, in closets, in boxes, in bins, for stuff that we could stand parting with. We came up with a goodly amount of stuff, though a few items Doug was a little iffy about (like the pink bunny bank and the teapot lamp).


Set-up for the tag sale began at 7:30am, and I was told by the church lady with whom I made the table reservation that to get the best spot we'd want to get there right at 7:30. So Doug and I quickly threw all of our stuff into the car and headed over to the church bright and early on that rather chilly Saturday morning and got there at about 7:40. To our surprise, there were only about 6 other tables on the green. Maybe not everyone had arrived yet, we thought. We got our table from the church guy, set up on the perimeter of the green, and got to setting up our goods. As all experienced tag-salers know, early birds are inevitable, and there were early birds at this tag sale. I mean no disrespect whatsoever to the African immigrant population who comes out early to tag sales, but from 7:30 through 9am we only had African women whose native language was not English (and they were not speaking a French dialect, either, so I don't believe they were Haitian) rummaging through our stuff. And these ladies are ruthless with their bargaining. I was selling about 8 bags - 5 pocket books and 3 tote/duffel bags. One lady wanted all 5 pocketbooks for $6, even though I posted their price at $3 each, which was a steal - I tend to use my pocket books for 6 months, throw them into my box of bags, and then never use them again. When I said no, I couldn't go that low on them, the lady put one back and then offered me $4 for the rest. Ha! I still said no. Of course, I ended up selling all of my pocket books before the tag sale even officially started and sold 3 of them for $6 to one lady and the rest of the bags to another lady for $6. Great - $12 towards our break-even goal of $30 and six hours to go...
The morning was rather chilly. Really rather unpleasant, though it was not raining. Doug and I finished setting up our stuff, making sales to the non-native English speakers and at 9:10 (the hands of time were watching our every move that day) decided that it was very cold and we needed a)something warm to drink, and b) breakfast. Here are some photos of our set-up, me demonstrating how cold it is, and us making note of how long we'd been at the tag sale thus far:



Doug and I used the down time to catch up with each other, talk about where we could go next on a vacation, what was going on at work, what we wanted to do that weekend, why we weren't Unitarian Universalists (one purchaser of goods told his aging father that he should buy something that we had offered him for free because we were Unitarian Universalists. We told him we were not, in fact, Unitarian Universalists, to which he said maybe we should be. We didn't really respond. It was a tag sale, not a forum for religious discussion), and why the lady next to us was selling two giant boxes full of brand new toothbrushes, all for $1 each (and she wasn't budging on the price). We also surveyed the rest of the tag-sale land to scope out our competition.

Moving on. Pretty much at each half-hour increment Doug and I tried to re-market our goods. We'd re-arrange the set-up of the table, and eventually Doug created a free zone. Our stuff started to move again once we had that free zone, but we still had to convince a lot of people to take away our stuff. "Take it - it's free!" isn't as enticing an opening line as I thought it would be. Nevertheless, by 1:20pm the sun had come out and we were down to just a couple of items in the free zone and a few things in the pay area.


1 comment:
where is your ever present green jacket? Glad you had the experience. Just imagine selling off Laura's stuff!!!! The kids would like it.
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