Item JB31
This Item was Sold on 17 March
2013 for $41
Other collectable boomerangs for sale can be found on the
Collectable Boomerangs link.
Historical Pricing information for this item and similar collectable boomerangs can be found on the Boomerang Pricing Guide
This unusual left handed boomerang was made out of 6.25 mm (1/4 inch) Baltic Birch plywood. The tips are painted blue and with a black border. The added elbow inward projection frorms the middle leg of the letter M or E, depending on the orientation, thus the name " ME Boomerang ". This boomerang is a very good flyer with a flight range of 30+ metres. This is the only one of this shape I have ever seen and it is number 1 and dated 2001, so there are probably only a few at most of this model in circulation. It is left handed and part of Rusty's private throwing kit. Signed and dated 2001 on the reverse side of the elbow. Excellent condition.
Rusty Harding is one of America's best known boomerang manufacturers. I first met Rusty in 1979 when Rusty and I lived in Florida only 30 miles apart. Rusty was already an experienced boomerang thrower and manufacturer. I had been throwing longer than Rusty, but Rusty put a lot more effort into making premium boomerang products. The quality products that I made and sold in the 1980s and 1990s was highly influenced by my association with Rusty. Rusty was left handed and his lefty booms were exceptional. He made a large number of sporting and competition boomerang models. In the 1970s and early 1980s, Rusty made boomerangs from his home in Vero Beach, Florida. In the early 1980s, Rusty moved to Lebanon, Tennessee where he continued to make boomerangs until the late 1990s. Rusty's old classics, especially those from Vero Beach, have become valuable collectibles. The boomerangs that have the highest collectable value are the Concept models that were made out of lapped hardwood boards and with angles of 70 or 90 degrees. These were sometimes weighted. His Hurricane Hook and Contender [omega] designs are the most popular sporting models. Rusty died in November 2010 after a lengthy battle with coronary disease, so his models continue to grow in demand. |