Best places to find vinyl


I am a long time vinyl enthusiast.  I used to travel a lot for work and was able, sometimes, to voyage out to thrift and antique stores during working hours and search for albums.  Found some great ones, too.  Curious as to others' routines and methods to expand their collections.  In warmer months, there are some flea markets nearby and I have found a few good ones although I am not very fond of that method.  Never used Ebay or online auctions though.  There is just something about the thrill of finding it on my own, and inspecting it before i buy it...the thrill of the hunt!
awhittington
Just once I responded to a local Craigslist ad for a small collection of rock albums which were described as very good with little play.

So I trekked. 25 miles to see them and was pretty embarrassed to have to tell the guy that I would not be buying any of them as the condition of the vinyl was very poor(scratches, dirty is a different story) and he needed to revise his ad instead of wasting people a time.

That did not go over too well and we parted on unpleasant terms and I even received a few nasty text from him over the next week's. Ignored them all and they stopped.

First and last time will look on Craigslist for vinyl!

A long time ago (starting in late 1976), when Goldmine Record Collectors Magazine was a huge, monthly print publication, I began buying from sellers of rare and collectable LP’s. And remember, the LP was at that time the main format (almost the only one), and they were plentiful. Certain LP’s were already hard to find, of course, but luckily my musical tastes were out of the mainstream, so the titles I was looking for were not too expensive.

But finding LP’s in what I considered no less than Mint Minus condition proved to be elusive. I soon learned my grading standards were far higher than that of most sellers. Little-by-little I found dealers whose grading was accurate and consistent, and bought only from them. Things are far worse now; every Tom, Dick, and Harry thinks ALL LP’s are worth a small fortune, regardless of condition.

The local record store I frequented when I lived in Portland Oregon in ’77-8 (they stocked UK 45’s and LP’s, hot at the time), and am doing so again since my move back, was playing a US copy of The Kinks Village Green LP when I was in the shop a month-or-so back, and I went over to have a look. It was in maybe VG- condition, and they were not only playing the LP on a cheap turntable/arm/cartridge, they had a price of $60 on it! I already have the LP (and CD) of course, but if I didn’t I sure wouldn’t have paid 60 bucks for theirs. That is NOT a rare LP, and in that condition is not worth anywhere close to that price.

Erik: I paid about 48 Euro, plus 6 E shipping from Germany for the mono reissue of Village Green pressed in 1980 in mint condition. FWIW. Still probably too much, but my notes say impeccable condition. And despite the shipping cost, still way cheaper than many items shipped from UK or elsewhere (Netherlands is brutal).
PS transaction was 3 years ago. 
Prices on ebay have really gone up for original pressings.
Very disheartening.
How is the 180 gram reissue of Village Green? Anybody heard it?