Tiki Central / General Tiki
Hello fellow Tikiphiles
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TR
Trader Rick
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Fri, Jul 4, 2003 5:41 AM
I am in the processof revamping my screened back porch into a Tiki Temple! I am currently looking for stuff to hang from the celing. Things like beachcomber lamps, blowfish, glass balls in nets. That sort of thing. Any suggestions and links would be appreciated. I have always been obsessed with this stuff. When I was a kid we always stayed at Tiki motels on our vacations to Florida. I read Kon-Tiki until the pages fell out of the book. Lately I have been going on "pilgrimages" Lately I visited the Kyoto in Williamsburg, Va. Good Tiki drinks and you can buy some of the mugs for very reasonable prices (I purchased a bamboo mug for $4.90) The chef we had at the hibachi wasn't very good though, he kept dropping the food on the floor. Anyway, hello. |
SB
suffering bastard
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Fri, Jul 4, 2003 6:05 AM
I see this is your first post----Welcome aboard! I think you'll find it's a pretty friendly bunch here. :) My wife and I had dinner at Kyoto a few weeks ago----we like the hibachi style cooking you find in the Japanese steakhouses, although the chef's tricks get a little old after awhile (another smoking onion volcano?) Still, I thought Kyoto compared pretty favorably with some other places we've tried. They sold some of their drinks in complementary "Japanese" tikis--ie. the samurai, geisha, Buddha, etc. |
T
Traderpup
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Fri, Jul 4, 2003 6:58 AM
Welcome aboard! :tiki: |
TR
Trader Rick
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Sat, Jul 5, 2003 6:03 PM
Thanks for the answer. Both my wife and I buy and sell on EBay, so , no it is not a dirty word at our house. Since Tiki is "hot" right now, I am not expecting any great deals or anything. I see no problem with this kind of capitalism. If the market says a San Francisco Tiki Bob mug is worth $50, then great! If a Kahiki volcano bowl goes for $90 then that is what the market says it is worth today. I read the "whine" in the Book of Tiki about auction sites taking the fun of the hunt and cheap deals out of Tiki artifacts. I guess it is disapointing to those early Tiki acheologists who some years ago could pick up most of this stuff for a few bucks at yard sales and thrift stores, but once a fad takes hold, the price goes up. There probably still are some good deals to be had at the random yard sale but those days may be coming to an end. The good side of this is as the word gets around that vintage Tiki is valuable then what little remains of 50's and 60's Polynesian Pop has a better chance of surviving and not ending up thrown away or destroyed. |
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seamus
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Sat, Jul 5, 2003 6:32 PM
Hi Trader Rick, |
PJ
purple jade
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Sat, Jul 5, 2003 6:42 PM
Aloha, Trader Rick! Don't know if you realize this but there's already a Trader_Rick on TC, from Santa Barbara. Not that you can't have the same name if you choose, but it gets awfully confusing for bears of very little brain like myself when there's two (or more) folks with the same name. |
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Shipwreckjoey
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Sun, Jul 6, 2003 9:53 PM
Hi Trader Rick |
Pages: 1 6 replies