Yesterday Gale and Kay were away on another craft fair and I had access to Little Red, so I decided to trip into Harper for the farm/livestock auction.
The pickings were fairly slim because fewer people showed for it than I’ve ever seen at that auction. But things were going dirt cheap as a result.
Cheap, I should have said, by comparison with the usual fare. On a normal third Saturday someone falls in love with this sort of thing and is willing to hock the family jewels to carry it home.
But yesterday even jewels of this sort were going for a couple of bucks:
You’d think the seat and steering wheel on this would be worth someone hauling home at those prices.
A few items did draw bids a bit higher.
This compressor that might work went for around $15.
Plenty of antlers of all description but I wasn’t sure what Gale could use or I’d have stayed around to bid on some of the lots.
The poultry barn only had a few dozen birds, none I found a compelling need for. The livestock weren’t out in force. A few bighorn sheep, four starving longhorns, a few ibex, maybe a wildebeest I didn’t get a look at, and a horse headed for the dogfood factory.
I could have left after one quick swing around except for this:
I’d been nosing around for different living arrangements [also here Pack Goats for the Elderly and a Youngish Hermit and here Thursday morning meanderings]. I had a lot of reservations about this domicile. That’s particle-board it’s constructed of, the frame looked to be for something a lot lighter, the door’s so narrow I had to turn my shoulders sidewise to go inside.
It was set up for propane and water at some time, but mostly everything except the wiring and hoses were removed. That bottom-middle vent, when opened, looks directly inside through a stripped cabinet that evidently once held a sink.
This rear window would have to be removed to get anything wider than the door inside. It doesn’t open. And I couldn’t help wondering why there had been a deliberate removal of the tail lights. No evidence of a license tag ever having been on it.
Those two vents open directly into the trailer underneath the two seats at the front, which would be a problem on the road in inclement weather.
But even knowing it was going to require a lot of work, beginning with protecting that particle board, it was a possible. This winter would be a lot warmer living in there, and that’s a factor to warp judgement to a degree. And having something that would provide a mobile escape route if I need one, a lot easier than anything I’d come across thus far lent itself to a decision to bid if the competition wasn’t strong.
I figured it might go for $300, which I could cover. I decided I couldn’t go more than $500, and even that would squeeze things a bit uncomfortably. When the bidding came it went to my $475, long pause and someone bid $500. I turned to walk away, then spur of the moment raised my arm for $525. And the bidding stopped.
I’d just bought the damned thing.
I went to the office to pay for it, forked over the money and the young lady was filling out the paperwork when the older lady behind her chimed in. “He told you about not being able to get a trailer title for it didn’t he?”
“Hmmm. No.”
Her face curled into a snarl. “That SOB! He was supposed to announce that before he auctioned it. You can’t take it onto the road. You can’t get a title for the highway.”
This caused me to have to back up and try my hand at rapid thinking. Not my long suite.
After a pause, both of them staring at me, “Do you still want it?”
“Um. I guess not.”
She counted my money back to me, I handed them the keys and went back outdoors to re-organize my life.
Nothing much had changed while I went from one package of my immediate future back to the one I began the day with. The world was still waiting for Godot.
But while I went about the task of getting my mind back unshuffled I watched this dog make a statement about the whole event, laying a line of cable between me and all that potential future I’d just stuck my toe into, then pulled it back out.
Old Jules

















I think I would have been highly pissed off if after going to all the trouble of being the high bidder I then find out that I can not get a trailer title for it. Did they say how come?
Hopefully something you really like and that is within your budget will come into your future soon..
Hi MsBelinda. I just hugged myself with gratitude the lady interjected herself into the affair. The people in line behind me all had to get involved and everyone had an opinion, even as to whether what she’d said was accurate. She was already disgusted and whatever she was saying was being drowned out by what everyone else was saying. Outside among people I’d talked with earlier and who were still looking for something interesting to talk about had other opinions to offer. So I don’t have a clue. But I couldn’t afford the risk at this point.
Heck, with that window removed and the internal cabinetry taken out the thing would be worth the price to someone for a storage building, after the fiber board was protected from the weather. Nothing for me to be angry about, but there might have been if I’d walked away with the keys figuring on picking it up when Gale gets back. Thanks for the visit. Jules
Probably the best thing that happened to ya. It weren’t nuttin but a pop-up trailer with a little shack built on top. Someone had put more into it than it was worth. Just think how much money you saved.
Hi Billy Bob. I’ll keep that in mind. Thanks for stopping in. Jules
Wow, that trike with the green tractor seat took me back. I bought one of those years ago when a good friend and I had a boat repair business in Fort Lauderdale. We did a lot of painting and I used to use that thing when I was sanding hulls. Think I paid two or three bucks for it and it was one of the best buys I’d ever made.
Hi oldsalt1942: Thanks for clearing that up. I’d never seen one that I could recall, thought it might be for weeding grassburrs out of the yard or gardening. Gracias, Jules