He who dies with the most tools wins ... then what?
What happens with the shed contents when I kick the bucket has been weighing on my mind since my partner and I did some complex estate planning with a lawyer a while ago. The contents constitute my fourth most valuable asset.
None of my kids are interested in woodwork so it'll be sold off. I'd hate to see the stuff go for a pittance or be snapped up by an unscrupulous estate clearance shark. (Yes, I'm convinced I'll be watching :wink: ).
Up til a few years ago it was all turning related. So I was thinking of leaving instructions to hire an experienced turner to identify and value the gear and then commissioning one of my sons to dispose of the stuff.
Now there's a good number of flatwork tools as well but maybe the same principle could work.
Just as an aside, the estate lawyer alerted us to a range of risks in a simple will and drafted wills that should help us to avoid them. I have kids from two marriages; my partner and I own a house in common but in unequal shares; we both have significant chunks of private super. The work cost a bomb but the plan is for testamentary trusts to 'inherit' and then to allocate resources to the adult kids rather than just handing over wads of cash.