Has anyone had any experience of selling guitars across international borders since the current CITES rules tightened up last year, (particularly on guitars containing rosewood). I know within Europe crossing borders does not count but I am in Australia and a couple of guitars I have decided to list on ebay - a Di Mauro Modèle Django and a 1969 Jacques Favino Model 5A classical, both at bargain prices too - would most likely sell to Europe or USA as there is little interest here in Australia even at half the price they would sell for in Europe.
Both guitars appear to have rosewood fingerboards and bridges only.
Obviously these can easily be proved to be vintage but do not have the relevant CITES certificates.
I read somewhere that individuals can apply for such certificates but at great expense and even then it can take a long time to process.
I know there was also discussion when these rules came into force to allow a simpler procedure for such private sales but I can so far find no record of any amendments.
So, I wondered if anyone has any more up to date knowledge of what can or can't be done?
Comments
I send many of the blackwood Irish flutes I make internationally. I have a master permit that covers this but each shipment also has to have its own single use permit. I pay $5 each and they expire after 6 months. Unfortunately the office that issues these is understaffed and overwhelmed and so it took over two months.
You might want to postpone your sales until next year. According to my local CITES inspector, the European Union is considering a proposal to exempt Musical Instruments from the CITES rules at their meeting next year. This would only be for CITES II listings - Brazilian Rosewood remains under the tighter CITES I listing I believe. Of course, the meeting could go the other way and restrictions could be expanded. But the rumor is a hopeful sign!
As for who harvests these woods - much of it is harvested illegally by nefarious groups to fund drug cartels, terrorists etc. Or so I have read. And then there are the Chinese who harvest everything like a vacuum. I'd just as soon see that curtailed, or at least monitored. They may have gone a bit too far with musical instruments which is why they are considering a proposal at next year's meeting in May to exempt musical instruments.
The used market has an impact for sure. Ivory is a well documented example of that especially since it is hard to tell if the ivory is fresh or old. It can be antiqued. Same with musical instruments. Note that the sale is allowed - one just has to record it with the required paperwork and permits. Same with buying and registering a car. You can't just buy it and drive it off the lot without the required license, registration and insurance. Nobody is infringing on your right to drive.
Thanks. I have found a link to my local (Australian) department.
They state the certificate will cost AU$68 and the application process can take up to 40 days, but they need the recipient's name and address on the application so it seems I can not even apply for a certificate until it is sold. Then there could be a 40 day delay as well as another 10 days for shipping so a potential buyer will have to be patient with a wait up to 50 days.
Crazy huh?
From what I have read elsewhere it is too risky to try to ship a guitar, even if it is obviously over 50 years old, without the correct papers.
Looks like I will probably be keeping them both!