Okay, I'll bite. In closing the ************ customer service thread Paul Calloway mentioned a new thread for the "what's wrong with the hobby" discussion.
Nothing is wrong with the hobby, first of all. The problem is the participants and the lack of enough critical mass in economic terms to support the number of vendors. There is always some expansion followed by contraction. These issues are nothing new and used to be dropped in our lap (The Watchdog) before there was a Forum where they could be raised, or an approved vendor program. The hobby is fine, actually I have finally understood out there are two hobbies, but this hobby is small but active. The last EBUFU was a big success by most accounts and the 2008 season looks promising. Anybody having any problems filling up your schedule with events? What is the issue? Field merchants experiencing delays in filling orders is not indicative of the hobby in a slump. We have more talented craftsmen at work now than ever before, and while some familiar have recently departed the hobby, go back and read some of the old Watchdogs from the 1990s and you can count on one hand the number of vendors that are still in business from ten or so years ago. They appear to come and go in cycles, much like the participants themselves.
Discuss among yourselves...
Nothing is wrong with the hobby, first of all. The problem is the participants and the lack of enough critical mass in economic terms to support the number of vendors. There is always some expansion followed by contraction. These issues are nothing new and used to be dropped in our lap (The Watchdog) before there was a Forum where they could be raised, or an approved vendor program. The hobby is fine, actually I have finally understood out there are two hobbies, but this hobby is small but active. The last EBUFU was a big success by most accounts and the 2008 season looks promising. Anybody having any problems filling up your schedule with events? What is the issue? Field merchants experiencing delays in filling orders is not indicative of the hobby in a slump. We have more talented craftsmen at work now than ever before, and while some familiar have recently departed the hobby, go back and read some of the old Watchdogs from the 1990s and you can count on one hand the number of vendors that are still in business from ten or so years ago. They appear to come and go in cycles, much like the participants themselves.
Discuss among yourselves...
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