Walking Sticks A Money Making Hobby
Walking Sticks
A Money Making Hobby
A Money Making Hobby
I didn't plan on carving walking sticks as a money-making hobby. I sometimes made walking sticks when backpacking, and I had always enjoyed taking my pocket knife to a piece of wood to see what I could make. I hadn't thought of doing anything more with the hobby.
Then, when my wife and I briefly got into the flea market business, I noticed the occasional vendor who sold walking sticks. If the event was more of an arts and crafts show than a flea market, they even sold them for as much as $50 each. My wife Ana suggested that we could sell them too, so I went to work.
With a short saw I could cut 20 or young poplars in an hour, and get two sticks out of half of them. My favorite wood, though, was white cedar. In the Cedar swamps near our home, it grew straight and died young from overcrowding. Cedar wood remains solid for many years after dying, so I could quickly cut many perfectly dried sticks.
Soon there was a pile of wood shavings behind the house, as I cut the bark off and carved each stick into various forms. Many were just rounded off on top. Others I cut into a spiral, or pyramidal shape. I put padding and leather covers on some, and drilled out the tops to inset nice stones on others. This is a hobby that lets you really exercise your imagination.
All the walking sticks were wrapped with leather near the bottom, to prevent splitting, and most had leather handgrips. The leather was from old leather coats I bought at thrift stores. It was attached with both glue and small nails. Each stick had about fifty cents in materials in it at most.
A Money Making Hobby
I sold them for as little as $6 each to as much as $24. This was less than others sold walking sticks for, but then we were mostly selling them at flea markets, rather than arts and crafts shows, where they would get a higher price. I also wholesaled them to a vendor who sold them at gun-and-knife shows, and to a friend who sold them at Native American pow-wows.
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I never sold more than $250 in walking sticks in a day, but I saw vendors who paid $300 to rent a space for the weekend (we typically paid $10/day for a flea market space), and sold only walking sticks. They were undoubtedly selling much more than I. In any case, doing something you enjoy AND making a profit is a nice advantage of any money-making hobby.
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