This sounds great, work great, and breaks easily. I played it for a few day, dropped it, a d it broke as expected. But I liked it so much I fixed it so it is better now than ever. Here's what I did. Its easy.First, sand the finish off the underarm that's adjacent t to the break. Get a narrow tongue depressor in the craft section of Walmart or Michaels or split a standard depressor, some Gorilla Glue for wood, and some zip ties. Glue a tongue depressed to the inside of the spoon arm so it holds the broken arm in place and fix it in place with zip ties. Position the zip tie locks on the top of the spoon arm so they don't hurt your finger that's between the two spoons.(I learned the hard way...but after I posted the photo. After while those square locks can hurt.) Let your glue set and dry overnight and you have a stronger spoon than you had before the break occurred. I've been playing it daily for nearly two months after the repair with no problems, and I play the spoons aggressively. It has a great sound. and the narrow arm, though fragile, contributes to its tone and agility. It's now my favorite instrument .
Rating:
[5 of 5 Stars!]