Some of
Brenda Cantrell's favorite stories from working at the
Unclaimed Baggage Center,
a 40,000-square-foot warehouse in Scottsboro, Ala., that sells lost
treasures abandoned by - or never reunited with - airline passengers,
are the items that didn't make it onto the sales floor. Like a
shrunken head.
"It was in this old worn-out suitcase with a bunch
of Egyptian artifacts and a mummified falcon," she remembers. "How do
you sell a shrunken head? That's not really something you can put a
price tag on."
And then there was the time the store's handlers opened a box and discovered a live, hungry and very angry rattlesnake.
"We
don't know how the snake got in there," she says. "We'll never know if
someone meant to put it there, or if it somehow found its way in during
the transportation process. It's like the wedding dresses we find
occasionally. We can only guess at the backstory. Was the dress on its
way to a wedding or coming back from a wedding?"
They released
the snake in the cemetery behind the store. "That's not something you
put up for sale," she laughs. "Although at this place, it'd probably
have a few takers."
Sight unseen
Business
has been good at the Unclaimed Baggage Center. According to a recent
Air Transport Industry Baggage Report, 25 million pieces of luggage were
lost just last year, or approximately 70,684 bags every day. If those
bags aren't claimed by their rightful owners within 90 days, they're
either disposed of or sold to the Unclaimed Baggage Center, which buys
boxes of luggage by the pound, sight unseen.
"You never know what
you're going to get until you open it up," Cantrell says. "It's a big
gamble." Sometimes they get clothes, electronics, or books - items that
can be easily sold. Sometimes they get collector's items such as a
signed
Salvador Dali print. And sometimes, well, there's a rattlesnake.
Cantrell,
35, has worked at the Unclaimed Baggage Center for 14 years, first as a
concierge and now as the company's brand ambassador. As she grew up in
Scottsboro, shopping at the center was a regular part of her upbringing.
"I bought most of my school clothes here," she says. "I bought
knick-knacks for my bedroom. This place is part of who I am. It's my
second home."
Annual pilgrimages
That
history of treasure-hunting makes it easy for her to identify with the
store's regular shoppers. Visitors come from all 50 states and 40
different countries. Many make annual pilgrimages to the center. But the
truly devoted live just a short car ride away, Cantrell says, and they
visit weekly and sometimes daily.
"They're very passionate," she
says. "It's not just about the discounts" - although she admits these
are substantial, with many items selling for 50 to 80 percent below
retail - "it's about finding something you'll never find anywhere else."
The
center stocks anywhere from 5,000 to 7,000 new items every day, most of
them gone within a month. "That's what makes it exciting," Cantrell
says. "Every day, there could be some rare, priceless gem hidden in the
store somewhere. Maybe you'll find a digital camera for half the price
you'd get in a store. Or a $2,000 diamond ring, selling for $20."
Found money
It's
not uncommon for customers to make a profit. Long before her time,
Cantrell says, somebody bought a Barbie for her daughter, only to
discover that the doll's body was filled with $500 in rolled-up bills.
"There was a lady who purchased an oil painting for about $60," Cantrell
says. "She did some research, and I guess it was painted by a famous
artist and was actually worth around $20,000. Our loss is her gain."
Not
all the best items are available for sale - at least not immediately.
When Unclaimed Baggage handlers opened a box and discovered a replica of
a 15th century suit of armor, it immediately became the star attraction
at the center's museum, which also houses a Chinese opium scale, a
violin from the 18th century, a NASA camera, and most famous of all,
Hoggle, the dwarf-goblin gatekeeper from the 1986
David Bowie movie, Labyrinth.
"Nothing
surprises me anymore," Cantrell says. "Sometimes you go, 'Oh, well
that's different.' But it's never shocking. At this point, I feel like
I've seen it all."
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