Charity Shops

On interrogating t'internet about three weeks ago I learned that Blenheim has 7 charity shops (well 7 that are engaging with search engines).

It was the week that much rain was forecast and I decided that a supply of reading material would be in order, so having planned a full day in town I did chores first (called at the hardware store for hardware) and started with the ReUse Shop. It's a fancy name for what used to be the 'tip' or the 'dump', only now they make a great effort to return as much as possible of it to the community, charge very little (or nothing) and send the money made to various sports and charitable enterprises.

My new enormous soup pot, a sealing lunch box, a handful of old spanners for cupboard door handles, some wine glasses and an armload of books set me back $10. The pot alone was labelled $6 so I suspect some manager's discretion was applied to the pile of stuff I loaded onto the counter.


"Free handbasin with every purchase". I passed on that, but know where to go and get the porcelain for the ensuite in the cabin when I get to the plumbing stage.

The Hospice Shop was next, is huge and very professionally run. They know the value of their books but the books are extremely well organized and they had a huge section of non-fiction. While there I also bought a decent porridge bowl, and some knitting wool (recycled from an unpicked jumpers).



Salvation Army shop in Blenheim is smaller and more quirky than the Ashburton one (which is rather like a department store) and dominated by a slightly odd selection of furniture. More books purchased along with a flattish bowl with a pleasing grapes design. 

I'm a sucker for handmade ceramics.

After a coffee at the supermarket cafe (and a lovely chat with a complete stranger who asked to share my table rather than take up another on her own when there was a queue behind her) I called at St Vincent de Paul - Vinnies. Vinnies can be relied upon to be inexpensive. More books, a grey velvet cushion for $2 and a much needed larger fruit bowl for $4, and I was off again in search of Blue Door.


This one had me stumped. What charity is that? It turns out to be a regular second hand shop, run by volunteers, that makes grants of its profits to any applicant that meets certain criteria - sport, social, educational, community, environmental…  More books of course, a dog bowl (Scully needed a water bowl at my place), and a cone of yarn which I am currently crocheting into a summer cardigan. I picked up and put down again many other items which I coveted but have no sensible use for right now.

By that stage of the day I couldn't face St Johns Ambulance or the Animal Protection place - all shopped out. It had been quite a marathon for a woman who hates browsing in shops. Even those I did visit were surveyed at a fast walk.

And of course the day's haul of books. By the time I thought to photograph them I'd read a few and dropped them at the bookswap cabinet up the road.

My haul has included some authers I should try to read (Atwood, Hemingway, Lawrence)

I've read the top 2 in this pic but enjoyed them enough to read again. Joanne Harris is an engaging writer.


The Man Who Ate the 747 is a sweet little story. The engineering maths book is just to exercise my brain🤪.

Peter Keeble's book about WWII naval salvage in the Mediterranean and Middle East is a great read.  

Comments

  1. Hari Om
    I'll be interested to know how you get on with the Lawrence - an author I cannot get to grips with. Hemingway and Attwood, yes... and Grisham is great from the escapism angle. Like you, I hate shopping for shopping's sake - but somehow, when it's the op shops, there's a little more interest. It's like a treasure hunt. Vinnies your way must be kinder. Even fifteen years back in our local store in OZ (which was one of the large supermarket type stores), the prices were very much on the rise. Volunteers who were amateur 'antiquers' and thought they knew the 'real value'...needless to say they had frequent 'sales'! YAM xx

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    1. Here Vinnies appears to focus on selling basic stuff to people who really need it - work clothing, bedding and towels, basic pots and pans - fewer gee-gaws (or things of antique value).

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    2. Yes, Vinnie's in Whanganui is the same. A common sense place

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  2. What a haul. Our small town has three charity shops, plus two children's second hand shops. The selection varies quite considerably. I have found some real bargains amongst the tat at times.
    Hope those books are enough to keep you going!

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    1. I can finish a book in a couple of evenings and a lunch time. Our silly plan here had been to put an old red phone box at our gate and use it as the community book exchange. The issue might be the finding og a phone box.

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  3. Ah, the op shops of Blenheim...our first port of call every time we stayed there!
    I got a very good 1940s made lino cutting tool at Re-use...and the Blue Door is the best!
    Has the porridge bowl got a maker's stamp? I might be able to find out who made it...

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    1. I guess I should spend more time turning things over. I tend to go in with a shopping list and leave with little else (or nothing at all).

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    2. No maker marks on either bowl but both clearly not produced by a factory.

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  4. You managed a good haul in your speed-through. Your engineering book gave me hope. We have similar which I thought would probably never find a good home when I can eventually prise them off the shelves.

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    1. Probably only stymied engineers like me would ever read them. Engineering wasn't within my horizon at school (sheep farming background) and no one suggested it despite my maths abilities. Had I known anything at all about the possibilities I reckon I would have gone on the study mechanical engineering.

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  5. A bunch of old spanners for door handles. Can't wait to see what youre going to do there. You found a lot of real treasures. I love the wine glasses with coloured stems. Vanilla Beans and Brodo sounds familiar. I think I read it a few years ago when I could still order books online. I was on a 'living abroad' kick. Fun light reading.

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    1. I have just finished Sea of Poppies so I'll read that next.

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  6. I share the same browsing hobby visiting charity shops and car boot sales. Last week I bought two pairs of jeans for working and going on my rock festival trip later this summer. They cost me four Euros each. I helped the charity and they helped me save some money.

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    1. I agree. Why pay fashion prices for new jeans when they eat so much of the planets tesources to make and then turn up in a second hand shop for (in my case) $1. So many pairs of jeans get turfed still in good nick that the Age UK shop I supported in Havant no longer put them out to sell. They showed me boxes and shelves of them once taking up so much of their back room storage spece that they simply sent them for ragging in the end. What a waste! I bought $1 jeans (8 pairs) to reupholster and cover the door cards in my van.

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  7. You scored some prizes. I like the dishes. I've read the Hemingway, Lawrence, Atwood and Costain but most of your books are unfamiliar to me (except for Grisham, of course). I had a real passion for Lawrence when I was young but haven't read him in ages.

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  8. 7? wow! Greymouth has only 4 I think from memory, I could be wrong there but they aren't much great, however when I do visit them with my daughter usually the one thing I look for is wool to crochet with, sometimes I find some good quality stuff but not regularly

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