Road trips

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Arthur
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Road trips

Post by Arthur »

Yesterday Tyler and I completed our swap and I am now the happy new owner of a 25J and he has a new Cerveny 601 with which to amuse himself. To make the swap I drove from Boston to Buffalo and back yesterday which most of my non tuba playing friends though was insane. I suspect the attitude on this board will be "what's the big deal?" Anybody have any fun traveling to get a piece of gear stories?
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bort
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Re: Road trips

Post by bort »

Hrmm... 18 hours from (basically) Memphis -- that could be anywhere!
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bisontuba
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Re: Road trips

Post by bisontuba »

Arthur wrote:Yesterday Tyler and I completed our swap and I am now the happy new owner of a 25J and he has a new Cerveny 601 with which to amuse himself. To make the swap I drove from Boston to Buffalo and back yesterday which most of my non tuba playing friends though was insane. I suspect the attitude on this board will be "what's the big deal?" Anybody have any fun traveling to get a piece of gear stories?
I hope you two got some chicken wings while in town....road trips--if you have the time...are fun....
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bort
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Re: Road trips

Post by bort »

Back in April, I was moving from Minneapolis back to New York, and stopped in Ohio to make a trade... in a really sketchy Wal Mart parking lot. Uneventful, but a million times easier than shipping. I REALLY don't want to ship again after learning how much easier it is in person!
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bisontuba
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Re: Road trips

Post by bisontuba »

bloke wrote:I'm driving about eighteen hours (round trip) soon to get a tuba, because I just don't trust anyone to pack it properly or any shipper to handle it with enough care. (It's a particularly rare/valuable instrument.)

yep...Some things are worth driving for...or (even if not) trips are fun, if you have the time !
You finally found a used Siegfried BBb? :D
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edsel585960
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Re: Road trips

Post by edsel585960 »

Buffalo to Boston for a 25J. No brainer. I'd do it. A couple of years ago I drove 200 miles for a little Yamaha 105 a woman was selling for $450. Looked almost new and case was same. Ended up selling it for $1200. Definately worth the drive. Enjoy that monster Conn! :tuba:
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Mudman
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Re: Road trips

Post by Mudman »

bloke wrote:I'm driving about eighteen hours (round trip) soon to get a tuba, because I just don't trust anyone to pack it properly or any shipper to handle it with enough care. (It's a particularly rare/valuable instrument.)

yep...Some things are worth driving for...or (even if not) trips are fun, if you have the time !
I think I left white-knuckle marks on Bloke's dashboard from our road trip several years ago. He drives just like he plays tuba . . . pedal to the metal!
Ace
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Re: Road trips

Post by Ace »

Berkeley CA to San Diego and back, all freeway driving. To pick up a mint Conn 52 J CC tuba, not wanting to risk damage from shipping. Left home at 4 a.m. and got back at midnight, totally exhausted.

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roweenie
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Re: Road trips

Post by roweenie »

New York to Indiana, several times.
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Ken Crawford
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Re: Road trips

Post by Ken Crawford »

I once drive from great falls my Montana to las Vegas (2000 mile round trip) on a weekend to make a tuba trade.
Tom
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Re: Road trips

Post by Tom »

Compared to some of you, mine have been short trips:

Dallas, TX to Wichita, KS and back to Dallas in the same day for my Alexander and, for one of my previously owned tubas, Dallas, TX to Oklahoma City and back in the same day.
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GC
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Re: Road trips

Post by GC »

NW Georgia to Iowa to visit Lee Stofer and his shop a few times. Lee lives in some of the nicest country I've ever seen.
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bort
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Re: Road trips

Post by bort »

GC wrote:NW Georgia to Iowa to visit Lee Stofer and his shop a few times. Lee lives in some of the nicest country I've ever seen.
Is this heaven?

No... It's Iowa.
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The Big Ben
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Re: Road trips

Post by The Big Ben »

Arthur wrote:Yesterday Tyler and I completed our swap and I am now the happy new owner of a 25J and he has a new Cerveny 601 with which to amuse himself. To make the swap I drove from Boston to Buffalo and back yesterday which most of my non tuba playing friends though was insane. I suspect the attitude on this board will be "what's the big deal?" Anybody have any fun traveling to get a piece of gear stories?
I don't have any road stories but trading a 601 for a 25J certainly is exchanging one big cannon for another...
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GC
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Re: Road trips

Post by GC »

bort wrote:
GC wrote:NW Georgia to Iowa to visit Lee Stofer and his shop a few times. Lee lives in some of the nicest country I've ever seen.
Is this heaven?

No... It's Iowa.
I wouldn't call it heaven in the winter. Then again, I'm saying that to someone who lives in Maxisnowta . . .
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bort
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Re: Road trips

Post by bort »

Yeah, winter is what it is...

To clarify... I've never been to Iowa. Kevin Costner has, though.

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GC
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Re: Road trips

Post by GC »

Thanks. It's been too long since I've seen that movie. Iowa is gorgeous if you like looking at miles and miles of miles and miles. And most of it corn.

I live in a place where a half inch of snow sends people into hysterics and paralyzes everything around.
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bort
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Re: Road trips

Post by bort »

GC wrote:Thanks. It's been too long since I've seen that movie. Iowa is gorgeous if you like looking at miles and miles of miles and miles. And most of it corn.

I live in a place where a half inch of snow sends people into hysterics and paralyzes everything around.
I used to travel to Atlanta several times per year for work. I narrowly missed a small snowstorm (it happened the week before I was there). People told me nightmares of 5 hour commutes... :shock:
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GC
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Re: Road trips

Post by GC »

Yeah. My son was caught in that. His 8-mile commute took 13 1/2 hours. One poor lady who lived outside the city took 28 hours. I didn't have to set foot outside my house, fortunately, even though I have chains and could have gotten anywhere I needed to go.
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David Richoux
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Re: Road trips

Post by David Richoux »

I have two stories. The first was a trip on a Greyhound Bus to and from San Jose to Santa Barbara to pick up a Miraphone (it turned out I really didn't like it all that much, so I sold it soon afterwards.)
The better story was around 1982 when I flew to LA to visit a former neighbor after she moved to Reseda, CA. I had a rental car and a few hours to kill so I drove along Ventura Blvd a ways. I spotted a store that sold antique violins and such, thought it might be interesting - after a bit of discussion with the owner, he told me his father had a restored 1860s Ophicleide that he was thinking of selling. Since I had never seen an actual Ophicleide before, I was interested! So the father was called, the instrument was brought to the store. It was beautifully restored by one of the best Sax repair guys in LA, and I was able to get some interesting tones out of it. I asked how much he was asking for it - the answer was 15. I asked 15 "whats" - hundreds or thousands (I had no real idea of what one might be worth) and he said $1500. I put a deposit on it and made plans to pick it up the next week - I didn't want to take it back on the plane. So the next Saturday I drove to LA, picked up the horn and drove back to San Jose - all in one day!
I still have it, still don't really know how to play it well, but I can hack out a tune. Now that there are expert Ophicleide recording artists around, I know how hard they had to work to learn that instrument!
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