The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Hidden treasures may await you so check that ‘box of tat’

Get rummaging... You never know what you’ll find

- with Richard Burdge

A Perthshire family’s discovery of the find of a lifetime in “a box of tat” will no doubt have many readers rummaging through their possession­s in search of hidden treasures.

Some of us might be lucky and follow their lead in unearthing valuable finds – with the help of auctioneer Nick Burns they discovered Cartier and other jewellery worth £20,000 – but for most of us, the chances of that elusive windfall are slim.

Neverthele­ss, tales of success feed optimism and life changing discoverie­s, while rare, are not unknown.

Charity shops have proved fertile hunting grounds in the past. Take the grimy, damaged bamboo pot handed into a Bristol hospice charity shop, which eventually sold for £360,000 at auction.

More remarkable still, a bargainhun­ter unearthed one of the original copies of the US Declaratio­n of Independen­ce in a charity shop in North Carolina, turning his $2 purchase into £330,000 in the process.

The Antiques Roadshow’s entire popularity is based around the gasps from a delighted – some might say envious – crowd when the expert pronounces the astronomic value of some previously unloved object.

This is usually followed by “but I would never part with it because it belonged to my mother/uncle/friend – a sentiment which presumably lasts until they realise the holidays they could enjoy.

The really optimistic should even invest in a metal detector to seek their fortune and may be fortunate enough to discover some lost items of value among the discarded washers and ring pulls.

The nearest I got to finding anything of unexpected value was in a bag of broken golf tees and ancient golf balls, which belonged to my late father and was destined for the bin.

On closer inspection, tucked at the bottom were half a dozen Open Golf programmes dating from the 1940s to the ’70s which I sold for £800.

Hardly Cartier I know, but better than nothing. Unfortunat­ely I never did find where my father had hidden those gold Kruggerand­s that I know he had.

Perhaps I had better have another look through my own “boxes of tat”.

Get in touch with your local office at Perth or send a letter to The Courier at letters@thecourier.co.uk

 ?? Picture: Angus Findlay. ?? Auctioneer Nick Burns with the tin box and Cartier items found in Perthshire.
Picture: Angus Findlay. Auctioneer Nick Burns with the tin box and Cartier items found in Perthshire.
 ??  ?? Perth office chief rePorter twitter: @c-rBUrDGe
Perth office chief rePorter twitter: @c-rBUrDGe

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