OK I'm going to tell you a story. I've had a pretty hectic day so I thought I would relax and share with you something that I find particularly interesting and you may get something out of it as well.
In my tender teenage years I managed to double my paper round money by getting a Saturday job in my local cycles, toy and model shop which happened to be Howarth's of Sale Moor. I loved that job as I could get to play with the pushbikes as they arrived and needed preparing for delivery as well as testing all the new toys at lunchtime and getting my hands on the latest models as they arrived in the shop. To get all this all day Saturday and double my income was beyond dreams and I enjoyed every minute. The other staff were also great and the shop was an absolute warren of interesting places where bikes were stored in the cellers and sold on the ground floor and toys and models were sold on the first floor. Model and toy stocks were kept in the attic.
One day I was having a browse at the series one bagged Airfix kits and I noticed a realy strange aircraft. It was like nothing I had seen before or even heard of and I had to go and ask the boss Michael Howarth. What on earth it was. I couldn't even see how it was supposed to fly! He told me it was the latest experimental vertical take off aircraft and he explained how it was supposed to operate. That was my first ever sight of the P.1127 Kestrel, which was, of course, to become the Harrier.
I thought to myself I have to make one of those and find out a bit more about it. Anyway the strange thing is that I never did, possibly as I always knew it was there so there was never a hurry to buy one. Then, of course the bagged kits were discontinued and the boxed offerrings came and went and so the newer boxed ones lost that original magic for some reason or other. Then as the years rolled on my interests varied but I always remember that time when I first saw the Kestrel.
Anyway roll on about thirty years and I was having a browse through an Airfix sellers web site and I noticed a Kestrel in a bag but it had been reserved for another buyer. I exchanged a few e-mails and eventually the other buyer purchased the kit so I felt a bit dissapointed but my interest was back as I realised that these kits still existed.
The next point of interest was when I purchased the new hardback Airfix book, which I found absolutely fascinating and amazed to realise just how many of them i had made through my younger years. I then noticed one of the appendices listed the all time rarest and most expensive kits and I was dismayed to see that the Kestrel was in the list as an expected price in 1999 was 100.00 pounds!!!
So that was quite firmly written off as a possibility and my memory of the kit would satisfy and urges in that direction from now on.
A couple of weeks ago I was having my usual browse through Ebay and, lo and behold, there is a bagged Kestrel, bright as day and sat there for 20.00 pounds. Not much chance of it staying at that thinks me but I am going to keep an eye on it anyway. So the auction progresses and approaches the end and no-one else has placed a bid. This is exactly the same time that Nigel tells us all he is bidding for his Sea Fury and to leave it alone. Nigel, you crack me up, a herd of wildebeasts couldn't have dragged it out of me that I was interested in the Kestrel.
So as the auction approaches the end the age old dilema rears its head. Do I place a bid and generate interest or do I go for the last few seconds and hope that I don't miss the end or it gets withdrawn by the seller when he thinks there is no interest.
So I do what I advocate and put on a substantial bid, about 40.00 pounds is what I decide i am preparred to pay and then I ignore Ebay until it has finished. I won it, and not onkly won it but I won it for 20.00!!!! Absolutley over the moon with it, but I still haven't declared my interest to anyone until it was safely tucked away in my pile of goodies at home.
Then the question is do I make it or not? It is probably over thirty years old and worth a lot more than I paid for it. Built it would be worthless but it is not the value that holds me back it is the fact that the kit has remained unopened for all that time it would be such a shame to open it now.
So the final chapter of the story is this. I also found on Ebay a guy selling the instructions from a number of old bagged Airfix kits, and amongst them is a Kestrel. I am going to put the bagged model in a box frame and next to it I am going to put the opened up instructions from the other one. In front of this frame I am going to put another made up boxed example of the Kestrel that I also purchased for about 2.50 a few days ago.
You have no idea how much enjoyment I am going to get out of doing that, especially as when I last drove past Howarths during only my last leave I noticed that it is now a betting shop. I still feel very sad when I think of it!
In my tender teenage years I managed to double my paper round money by getting a Saturday job in my local cycles, toy and model shop which happened to be Howarth's of Sale Moor. I loved that job as I could get to play with the pushbikes as they arrived and needed preparing for delivery as well as testing all the new toys at lunchtime and getting my hands on the latest models as they arrived in the shop. To get all this all day Saturday and double my income was beyond dreams and I enjoyed every minute. The other staff were also great and the shop was an absolute warren of interesting places where bikes were stored in the cellers and sold on the ground floor and toys and models were sold on the first floor. Model and toy stocks were kept in the attic.
One day I was having a browse at the series one bagged Airfix kits and I noticed a realy strange aircraft. It was like nothing I had seen before or even heard of and I had to go and ask the boss Michael Howarth. What on earth it was. I couldn't even see how it was supposed to fly! He told me it was the latest experimental vertical take off aircraft and he explained how it was supposed to operate. That was my first ever sight of the P.1127 Kestrel, which was, of course, to become the Harrier.
I thought to myself I have to make one of those and find out a bit more about it. Anyway the strange thing is that I never did, possibly as I always knew it was there so there was never a hurry to buy one. Then, of course the bagged kits were discontinued and the boxed offerrings came and went and so the newer boxed ones lost that original magic for some reason or other. Then as the years rolled on my interests varied but I always remember that time when I first saw the Kestrel.
Anyway roll on about thirty years and I was having a browse through an Airfix sellers web site and I noticed a Kestrel in a bag but it had been reserved for another buyer. I exchanged a few e-mails and eventually the other buyer purchased the kit so I felt a bit dissapointed but my interest was back as I realised that these kits still existed.
The next point of interest was when I purchased the new hardback Airfix book, which I found absolutely fascinating and amazed to realise just how many of them i had made through my younger years. I then noticed one of the appendices listed the all time rarest and most expensive kits and I was dismayed to see that the Kestrel was in the list as an expected price in 1999 was 100.00 pounds!!!
So that was quite firmly written off as a possibility and my memory of the kit would satisfy and urges in that direction from now on.
A couple of weeks ago I was having my usual browse through Ebay and, lo and behold, there is a bagged Kestrel, bright as day and sat there for 20.00 pounds. Not much chance of it staying at that thinks me but I am going to keep an eye on it anyway. So the auction progresses and approaches the end and no-one else has placed a bid. This is exactly the same time that Nigel tells us all he is bidding for his Sea Fury and to leave it alone. Nigel, you crack me up, a herd of wildebeasts couldn't have dragged it out of me that I was interested in the Kestrel.
So as the auction approaches the end the age old dilema rears its head. Do I place a bid and generate interest or do I go for the last few seconds and hope that I don't miss the end or it gets withdrawn by the seller when he thinks there is no interest.
So I do what I advocate and put on a substantial bid, about 40.00 pounds is what I decide i am preparred to pay and then I ignore Ebay until it has finished. I won it, and not onkly won it but I won it for 20.00!!!! Absolutley over the moon with it, but I still haven't declared my interest to anyone until it was safely tucked away in my pile of goodies at home.
Then the question is do I make it or not? It is probably over thirty years old and worth a lot more than I paid for it. Built it would be worthless but it is not the value that holds me back it is the fact that the kit has remained unopened for all that time it would be such a shame to open it now.
So the final chapter of the story is this. I also found on Ebay a guy selling the instructions from a number of old bagged Airfix kits, and amongst them is a Kestrel. I am going to put the bagged model in a box frame and next to it I am going to put the opened up instructions from the other one. In front of this frame I am going to put another made up boxed example of the Kestrel that I also purchased for about 2.50 a few days ago.
You have no idea how much enjoyment I am going to get out of doing that, especially as when I last drove past Howarths during only my last leave I noticed that it is now a betting shop. I still feel very sad when I think of it!
Comment