Ooo, I'm jealous too! I would SO buy a piano if I had a house big enough to put one in - and I'm a piano TEACHER.
Hint: to help it stay in what tune it IS in longer, find a reasonably large jar (like the kind you can get a gallon of dill pickles in) and fill it most of the way with water. Put it inside your piano (I'm assuming it's an upright or this won't work) and it will help keep the humidity more stable - less shrinking of the wood in the winter when the furnace is running.
Did I ever tell you about the time Big Larry couldn't remember what a grand piano was called and called it a "laying-down" piano?
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Hint: to help it stay in what tune it IS in longer, find a reasonably large jar (like the kind you can get a gallon of dill pickles in) and fill it most of the way with water. Put it inside your piano (I'm assuming it's an upright or this won't work) and it will help keep the humidity more stable - less shrinking of the wood in the winter when the furnace is running.
Did I ever tell you about the time Big Larry couldn't remember what a grand piano was called and called it a "laying-down" piano?
What kind of piano is it? Just curious.