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Old 19th April 2005, 10:07 PM   #1
Spunjer
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i brought back something similar. since they were too long, me and my cousin took the spears to a local furniture shop. the face on one of the workers was priceless; prolly the same reaction one would get if i buy a brand new car and take it to an auto shop to have it spray painted using spray cans, lol. reason we took it over there? to get it cut. i asked the same worker if here recognize what it is, and he told me those two pictured below were bagobo, and were very, very old. my reason to believe him? he didn't have anything to gain, and he's a bagobo. the whole time he keep mumbling something. i asked my cousin what he's saying and he said something to the effect "what a pity!". i told my cuz to tell him that i will put it back together when i get back to manila (didn't tell anyone i'm from the states), and it's the only way to get it on the plane.

anyhow, i'm also posting a budiak that i had the place cut and is now put together with a rattan bind.

btw, for info purposes, the shaft is made out of anahaw...
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Old 19th April 2005, 10:16 PM   #2
Ian
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Thanks Spunjer.

The designs on your spear sockets look very much like traditional Bagobo designs and they appear to be quite old, as you mentioned. Good finds.

Ian.
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Old 21st April 2005, 07:14 AM   #3
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Very nice examples and the sold price of the 2nd one is enough to bring tears to the eye.
If shipped to the US intact, that brought it MUCH higher, I would suspect.
Mike
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Old 21st April 2005, 12:21 PM   #4
Bill
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in both Cebu & Negros I have seen cheap, short iron spears for sale. Don't think they are for tourist & never got a good answer for what they were for. Kind of wish I had bought one, they were very cheap. Anyone know thier purpose?
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Old 21st April 2005, 03:03 PM   #5
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bill,you're not talking about an indian pana, are you? how big is this spear?
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Old 21st April 2005, 05:39 PM   #6
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maybe 4.5', cheap iron head, saw them several times, 20 in a barrel, only 100 pesos, if I remember. can't figure them good for fighting or hunting.
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Old 21st April 2005, 05:55 PM   #7
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Similar "Igorot" spears are all over Manila too. I think they are somewhat traditional styles made of inexpensive materials in a non-functional form for decorative purposes. There, I didn't even say the "T" word!

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