Please be warned that the Condon building Parking lot is NO longer available for FREE Parking. The lot is patrolled by a company called Indigo who will not hesitate for even 60 seconds to put a $65 ticket on your car. So either pay for parking at the meter, or find street parking in the area.
Dale Speirs reports:
On April 22, the City of Calgary had a farewell ceremony for the old Zoo Bridge at 12 Street SE in Inglewood. A new bridge is under construction beside it, and once completed, the old bridge will be removed.
I attended the ceremony and discovered they were giving away a set of three colour postcards, reproducing antique postcards showing the Zoo Bridge in the early part of the 1900s.
The reproduction was excellent. To prevent the postcards from being passed off as originals, the reverse side has the text: "12 Street S.E. Bridge Farewell Celebration - April 22, 2017 - City of Calgary, image provided by Calgary Public Library"
All scanned bulletins have been posted to the website. The latest bulletins are only available to Members. Access to bulletins are 2 years prior to the current date for public viewing.
Looking for used GB Machin stamps with attached selvedge. Would prefer selvedge markings but will consider blank selvedge as well in some cases. Have wide variety of world stamps to trade including used and mint Germany, used GB (lots of Machins) and used and mint Canada. Contact Georg at [email protected]
Seeking on cover commercially used in rate period March to July 1964. Not wanting FDCs, Event Covers or Flight Covers.
Contact Steve Davis at [email protected].
Over the years, I’ve enjoyed a number of great philatelic finds.
One of my favourite discoveries happened while doing a mail out. I discovered three complete booklets of the 46-cent kite stamp printed on the “gum side.” The full BK221c booklet catalogues in Unitrade for $750.00. I have just one of these items left.
Then in early 2015, I came across the only untagged mint copies of the Famous Canadian series (Scott 738-39). After writing about this discovery in Canadian Stamp News, I sold the blank corner block of 12-cent stamps to a Toronto collector for $900 plus tax.
More recently, I unearthed a fresh, beautifully-centred mint F3 registration stamp in an auction lot where I paid only a percentage of the face value for the stamps. This 8-cent stamp issued in 1876 lists at $900.
But from a sheer dollar perspective, nothing beats what I stumbled across in the summer of 2016.
I was asked to sell a collection for someone that had accumulated quite a large number of full panes ranging from the mid-1980s to 2008. As with anything, I always check for varieties. It just turned out that with the very first pane that I examined, I managed to hit the jackpot.
Of all the rare modern varieties, only the 74-cent Wapiti on Roland paper (Scott 1177i) commands a higher price.
What I uncovered was the 1998 45-cent Christmas Angel stamp with the rare perforation variety, 1764b. And I was staring at a full pane of 50 stamps. These stamps were initially purchased from a post office in Lethbridge. The four plate blocks catalogue at $2,500 a piece and the individual stamps list for $500 each. So the total catalogue value of the entire pane is $27,000.
Of course, there’s a discrepancy between catalogue value and actual market value. But this still amounts to my single greatest monetary find ever.
The pricing on the Internet is also somewhat encouraging. I’m finding the discount off catalogue is the greatest with a full pane being offered on e-Bay for just under 40 per cent of the list price. Then the plate blocks from several different sources are being offered for upwards of about 60 per cent of catalogue. Finally, many of the single stamps are being offered for as much as 90 per cent catalogue on various sites.
Evidently, these stamps seem to be holding their value rather nicely. The only downside is that the pool of collectors willing to dish out that kind of cash for stamps is decidedly small.
President of the Calgary Philatelic Society from 2012-14, Peter Fleck lives near the CPR line in Red Deer County where he operates a small stamp business called Railside Philatelic Services. He can be reached at 403-348-9916 or by writing [email protected].