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Cricket bats: English Willow "nurtured in India"

by: deaninthecity( 51Feedback score is 50 to 99) Top 5000 Reviewer
18 out of 19 people found this guide helpful.
Guide viewed: 717 times Tags: Kashmir | Willow | Cricket | Bat | Nurtured


Buyers beware: as I alluded in one of my other guides (fake cricket bats guide ) on purchasing a genuine cricket bat safely on Ebay: THERE IS NO SUCH THING AS ENGLISH WILLOW NURTURED IN INDIA!!!
Any willow nurtured in India is Kashmir Willow. End of story.
Put it this way - it's like saying Big Ben is an Indian monument "nurtured in England" or the Taj Mahal is an English building "nurtured in India". That's how ridiculous this is.


Yet, so many sellers continue to flog their cheap rubbish on Ebay and con decent people into paying good money for a pathetic product.
Kashmir Willow vs English Willow is like comparing a Volkswagen to a Porsche: sure, they make look a bit similar to a very drunk man but you are just wasting your money if you pay top dollar for the former, expecting it to perform like the latter.
Kashmir Willow is very cheap, it lacks the durability of English Willow and definitely does not have the same performance. If you do buy a bat made of Kashmir Willow, at least make sure you get it VERY CHEAP. Seriously. Even a Grade 1 Kashmir Willow bat  should not cost more than £20 plus P+P, that's how cheap and tacky the wood is - there are other useful and well-written guides on Ebay about willow grade, and I would urge you to read more about this.

The main reason why English Willow is so much more expensive than Kashmir Willow should be obvious - the former is grown in English soil, English climate conditions, takes a long time to reach maturity and is a labour of love on the part of the grower. Top quality Grade 1 English Willow is a much-sought after product and is limited by availability , therefore the conmen try to pass off Kashmir Willow as the real deal. Kashmir Willow is grown relatively quickly in dubious Indian soil and the hot/humid climate is completely different, resulting in wood that is often very brittle and lacks the "ping" of English Willow. The fact that Kashmir Willow can be grown much faster is one of the main reasons why it is so weak. Think battery hens vs free range!

You may also wonder what the big deal is about when the sellers claim the willow is "air dried" - this is important as it adds to the longevity of the wood if it is dried naturally in the open air as opposed to in a drying machine. Air drying adds even more time to the bat-making process but is worth it in the long run. Of course, Kashmir Willow can also be air dried but that's another story!

And don't get deceived by claims that a particular bat is genuine because it has the "hologram sticker" on the back to prove its "authenticity"... You can buy those "hologram stickers" on Ebay! They prove nothing.

These may be my opinions but are based on 15 years of sports journalism, being around some of the finest bat manufacturers in the world (I have covered a Cricket World Cup and literally hundreds of first class matches. I have not met one professional with a bat made of Kashmir Willow. This should tell you a lot!).


Guide ID: 10000000007702072Guide created: 25/06/08 (updated 06/09/08)

 
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Related tags: Kashmir | Willow | bat | fake | india | cricket | India | Nurtured | sponsor | Bat | stickers | Cricket


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