Awwww shucks. You guys are so mushy. Now I'm feeling really guilty for leaving.
Anyway, maybe you can give me some advice on this one:
My job with our local township went from working on a summer concert series to being a sort of audio/visual/entertainment coordinator in several community centers during the fall and winter season. During this time, I did a lot of "extra" favors for senior citizens groups that come in twice a week. This included restoring all the "whole-house" music systems and putting together special playlists of 1940's tunes, showtunes, Christmas songs, etc for them. It also involved playing my uke with a senior chorus sponsored by the town.
Well, at Christmas time, the senior ladies wanted to do something special for me, so they put together a little bag of goodies. Most of it was chocolate, green tea, and other things they know I like, but one particular item was a little off the mark. Apparently, one of the women has a grandson who's a musician, so she asked him what she could buy me for my "guitar." Bottom line: I ended up with five sets of D'Addario EXL110 Electric Guitar Strings. I didn't have the heart to tell her that these would not fit my ukulele, so I gushed appropriately and took them home.
So now I'm stuck with these brand new electric guitar strings that I can't use. However, I can really use some strings for all my ukes (and the new mandolin that just fell into my lap). I don't have any kind of receipt (they seem to sell for between $5-6 a set) and, after a few years of buying most of my uke stuff online, have let all my relationships with local music store guys lapse.
Ideally, I'd like to trade these for some Aquila Nylgut uke strings, but if that isn't possible, I'd like to give them away, perhaps, to some type of guitar school for disadvantaged kids.
Any ideas?
(PS: I will be away, with no web access, until December 26. I will check back here then. Happy Holidays, all!)
Me with my first ukulele, a Junior Beatles model, in 1966. After Mom threw it down the stairs in a fit of rage, I became a drummer for life. At age 43, I bought my second uke...