This year’s Habitat tag sale will be at Salisbury School

This is not a joke or an exaggeration: People are already wandering into Salisbury and asking when the Habitat for Humanity tag sale is going to be held. A few people who are really on top of it have even wandered (correctly) into the Salisbury School’s domed tennis court to get a sneak peek at some of the goods that will be on sale starting this weekend. 

Anyone who has (incorrectly) wandered over to The Hotchkiss School in Lakeville to look for the sale has no doubt been disappointed to discover that the parking lot outside the Mars Athletic Center is a giant pile of rubble. The parking lot is being repaired and expanded.

Which is why this year’s sale will be held at the private boys boarding school known as Salisbury School (not the public elementary Salisbury Central School) on Route 41, in the northern end of town en route to North Canaan. 

The dates and times are as follows. The preview sale will be held on Friday, Aug. 4, from 6 to 8 p.m. A $10 donation is required for this early-bird opportunity.  Newcomers to this popular and enormous annual sale need to know that shoppers (including many professional vintage dealers) begin to line up at around 3 p.m. Numbers are given to shoppers at the door. 

There is no fee to enter the giant, product-filled dome for the main sale, which commences on Saturday, Aug. 5, at 9 a.m. and continues until 3 p.m. 

The bag sale is held on Sunday, Aug. 6, from noon to 3 p.m. 

Every year there is a notable and large item for sale. One year it was a sailboat. Another time it was a vintage soda machine. This year’s big item is a green Old Town Penobscot 17 canoe.

The Habitat sale is famous as an opportunity for parents of young folk to help furnish dorm rooms and first apartments. There is an extensive selection of furniture, art, cookware and dishes/cups/cutlery. There are also vast arrays of entertainment options, many of them dating from the newly hip 1980s (anyone who still has a VHS player and a CD player can score big time at this year’s sale). 

As always, the sale is divided into departments, such as the Tiffany section of upscale, higher-priced items; garden decor; and of course Christmas/holiday.

Veterans of the sales held at The Hotchkiss School will have to take a moment to find their favorite sections. Furniture is near the entry (to make it easier to carry large pieces in and out). The section devoted to high-end items, known as Tiffany, is in the back, as is the garden section. 

 

Tag sale organizer Judy Moore seemed pleased with the Salisbury space as she oversaw her large crew of volunteers on Saturday, July 29. Although she anticipates that the sale will return to Hotchkiss in 2018, she is not certain yet what the future will hold.

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