:Marking the 31st year in business, the popular Elephant's Trunk
Country Flea Market opened for business for the remainder for the
2006 season this past Sunday, April 2. Promoter of the weekly
event, Greg Baecker, was ready for business bright and early as
he and his staff began letting the line of 375 dealers onto the
field in the predawn hours at 4:15 am.
As dealers on the field busied themselves setting up, a long line
of shoppers anxiously waited in the dark for the start of early
buying at 5:45 ($20). As soon as the crowd hit the field,
transactions were reportedly taking place at a fast and furious
pace. Another good sized crowd awaited the regular opening at 7
am when the price of admission drops to $1. Attendance for the
day was estimated to be just under 3,000 people.
"There is this pent up excitement on opening day, it is a release
for a lot of people. I have had people come up to me and say
'Thank God you are open again, I haven't had anything to do on
Sundays all winter long,"' said Baecker.
John Perry, left, and Joe Orzolek, right, have been regular
exhibitors at the Elephant's Trunk Flea market since it opened
in 1975. They are shown here with show promoter Greg Baecker.
The market's humble beginnings took place on the front lawn
of the shop/house that now serves as the Trunk's offices in 1975
with eight dealers setting up there on Sundays. A couple years
later, the market had expanded to the point that a portion of the
rear acreage was utilized. The market continued to grow and Baecker
fondly recalls the market's progression into the popular event that
it is today. "There were times when we would fill the space we had
available and more dealers would show up. We used to raise alfalfa
in the back part of the fields, so I would tell them to wait right
there. I would go get the lawn mower and cut a spot for them on the
edge of the alfalfa field," he said.
The entire field is now used for dealer space, which can
accommodate more than 450 dealers, along with an even larger
parking area for shoppers. While some of the regular dealers have
reserved spots in the front of the market, the rest of the field
is just a jumble of stuff that can range from high quality
antiques to tube socks.
Enticing tales of discovered treasures are always surfacing at
the Elephant's Trunk Country Flea Market; some are even
substantiated. The market will remain open every Sunday until the
second week of December, including Easter Sunday.