Thanks for the kind words.
When I had a hunting and fishing store, I'd sell my ebony or cocobolo mallard calls for $140 and the whistles for $60. Now I'm in France where good calls don't really exist as alot of guys still use live decoys, so I'm thinking I'll be selling them for less.
Checkered or fancy glued up multi-wood calls are more expensive.
I made southern style box turkey calls for years in California for $125, but there were very few custom box call makers in the west. Seems like the prices are lower where there are more callmakers.
I'm starting to mess around with some copper reed Reelfoot tyle calls too.
I make my own inserts and spend alot of time tuning each one, so $60 seems cheap for the time involved.
I hope that answers the question.
Thanks,
Pete
Hunting is a big thing here througout history and still today. Part of the reason for one of the French revolutions was that they tried to take away hunting and fishing from the general population.
It is suffering the same slow death as in America due to kids not taking it up, but the percentage of people who buy hunting lisences here is higher than most of the states in the US, except for Michigan, Montana, Alaska, Pennsylvania, etc.
I can buy 20 long guns cash and carry in a single day if I want to. Handguns are heavily regulated, but possible. Trap and skeet are big too. We have red stag, roe deer, wild boar, chamois, ducks, geese, woodcock, migratory pigeons, lots of red fox and others. Unfortunately, my two favorites, wild turkeys and coyotes are not founf here.... yet. I'm working on the turkey thing.
Oh... the thing about the French being rude... that BS too.
Pete
Thought I'd post up some lathe work I've done lately. Aside from the ebony and rosewood calls, they are all from chainsaw milled wood from the farm.
Thanks for looking,
Pete
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