Item TB79
This Item was Sold for $140
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Pricing Guide
I first met Mickey Kinley in 1981 while living in West
Palm Beach, Florida. I had introduced a neighbor, Jim
MacNeil, to the sport of boomeranging a few months before I
met Mickey. Jim and I had purchased several hooks from Al
Gerhards. Jim was throwing one of his Gerhards hooks in a
big field in Boca Raton adjacent to the Florida Atlantic
campus, where he was taking Engineering classes. Suddenly, a
man who had been playing golf in the distance started
screaming and running towards Jim. Jim met an excited Mickey
Kinley who introduced himself as a new boomerang thrower.
Mickey was a woodworker by profession and had started making
strip laminated traditional boomerangs on his own. He had
never seen anything like a Gerhards hook. Mickey begged Jim
to loan him the Gerhards hook for a day so he could make a
copy. Jim agreed and told me that afternoon that he would
meet Mickey the following day in the same field. Jim and I
drove down and met Mickey on the following day, which was
hot and calm. The ground was covered with burrowing owl
holes, so you had to watch your step when you were running.
Mickey arrived with an arm load of his strip laminated
traditionals and a single copy of the Gerhards hook. This
was a PERFECT COPY, complete with weights! The only problem
was that it didn't return. I was not yet an expert at tuning
and Mickey decided to adjust the flight by filing down the
airfoils using instructions from the Lorin Hawes book. That
poor hook was filed down until there was almost nothing left
. It was so thin that it eventually broke. The following
year, I moved from West Palm Beach to Ohio, but I stayed in
touch with Mickey. In 1983, Mickey sent me examples of his
strip laminated hooks and omegas. These were absolutely
beautiful and were weighted with a flight range of 75 - 100
metres. These were good returners, but had a very slight
tendency to spiral out of a stable hover at the end of the
flight. This was easily corrected by adding some tape flaps
to slow the rotation down a bit. In 1984, Mickey moved on to
make Boomalums, the first long distance boomerangs made out
of Aluminum. Mickey is a famous and early pioneer in the
long distance event. His name doesn't show up in the record
books because he rarely went to tournaments, but his
boomalums were the boomerangs of choice in the long distance
event for many years. This strip laminated Kinley Traditional is an excellent
flyer. I threw it several times and it makes a circular
flight with a range of approximately 35 metres. These are
uncommon. Mickey made very few strip laminated boomerangs
and the ones that he made were expensive. The strips are
made of Mahogany, Ebony Ash and Oak. This boomerang is in
nearly mint condition and is very collectable.