A is for Aden and Z is for Zanzabar


A is for Aden and Z is for Zanzibar... Now what is between? For the world wide classical era philatelist and stamp collector, a country specific philatelic survey is offered by the blog author, Jim Jackson, with two albums: Big Blue, aka Scott International Part 1 (checklists available), and Deep Blue, aka William Steiner's Stamp Album Web PDF pages. In addition, "Bud" offers commentary and a look at his completely filled Big Blue. Interested? So into the Blues...

Thursday, April 18, 2019

Inhambane - Bud's Big Blue

Rubbish Pickers
Bud's Big Blue
Bud's Observations
I find Inhambane’s stamps as dreary as beauty school dropouts. They’re standard Portuguese colonials that, even with date-visible cancels, fail to stir a scintilla of my curiosity; except, perhaps, the three Mozambique stamps overprinted "CENTENARIO / DE / S. ANTONIO / Inhambane / MDCCCXCV" (see supplement page).

Inhambane, known today principally by stamp collectors, is one of several Mozambique districts that for a few years in the early 1900s had their own stamps.

So, I’ll comment, not on the stamps, but on a haunting memory of my 2007 visit to Mozambique -- the rubbish pickers. There are thousands of them, and they sort through the trash of every dump in the country (in many other countries, too). The above pic, although not one I took, is close to what’s etched in my brain.

Rubbish pickers and stamp collectors have much in common. Both are adept at sorting odd bits that ordinary folk think worthless, and they’re persistent. Both have a discerning eye for what might be valuable. Both, as informal solid waste workers, engage in basic recycling. Both save space in landfills. Both are easily delighted -- a piece of plastic jewelry or a stamp that fits a blank album space. Mobile apps such as “I Got Trash” connect pickers with those who have what they want, much as ebay does for stamp collectors.

Rubbish picking is filthy and dangerous; my wife says stamp collecting is filthy and, if I scatter too many used stamp hinges, dangerous (to me). There is, undeniably, a public nuisance factor in both enterprises. Theft, too, is sometimes associated with both. And it’s hard to make a living by sorting rubbish or stamps.

On the whole, though, rubbish picking makes the more valuable contribution to society: collecting garbage from places that lack public services, reducing dependence on scarce raw materials by recycling, creating jobs for otherwise unemployable people, expanding the lifespan of dumps and, ultimately, reducing pollution and global warming. We stamp collectors need to increase our social worth.

Error alert: top row of the supplement page shows a stray Horta stamp. It has been replaced.

Census: 37 in BB spaces, four tip-ins, 23 on the supplement page, not counting the Horta. Since the scans were made, I’ve collected another seven, although I don’t know why.

Jim's Observations
If Bud's essay on the commonality between rubbish pickers and stamp collectors doesn't put a smile on your face, I don't know what would. ;-)

I find the repetitive designs used for every Portuguese colony a bit boring. But a bit of historical understanding is needed. Portugal was not a rich nation. So the colonies, which were many, got there stamps "on the cheap".

What I do find interesting are the exotic and remote places of many of the Portuguese colonies.

Fascinating.

It is curious, though, that Scott generally gives no increase in value for a used vs unused stamp. For me, a nicely postmarked Portuguese colony stamp means much more than simply an unused specimen.

Inhambane Blog Post and BB Checklist

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1a

1b

1c

1d

Supplements
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Comments appreciated!

2 comments:

  1. Your comparison should be entered in the annals of great philatelic writing, IMHO. Along with stamp collecting, there are more parallels between life in general and trash picking than is comfortable for most people. Heavy on the persistence bit. Something to remember!

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