Jeff

I am not trying to cause a dispute, but the fact is that the roofers patched 
the hole by putting shingles over it, pretty lame repair considering the first 
hail storm would punture through the thin layer of shingles. Robert did speak 
to them, and they actually repaired the hole right, by cutting out the puncture 
hole and replacing the entire wood panel which is permanant. 
Had he not done that, only some crappy shingles instead of the entire meteorite 
hole would have been preserved. However once the landowners (who did not give a 
crap at the time) heard that it would be worth money, they threatened a 
lawsuit, and Robert FEDEXed the parts back. Robert planned to give the hole to 
whoever ended up with the meteorite, and he wanted to take it to the 
Smithsonian where it could be displayed with the meteorite.  A roof hole is of 
little interest without the meteorite. Sadly it is now sitting in a box in the 
closet, or in the trash where it was destined for from the start. Another fine 
piece of meteorite history lost or destroyed, otherwise worthless without the 
meteorite. 
Doing the right thing often backfires. I would have loved to see the meteorite 
on display with the roof hole intact. 
Sad situation all around.
Michael Farmer

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