If you've been looking for a hat made entirely of duct tape, a bicycle built from a recycled TV tower or a fold-up hockey stick that doesn't work, here's some news you can use.

Maybe you need a power tool converted into a hand tool or a hand tool converted into a power tool.

How about a square roll of duct tape that's guaranteed to never tumble off the work bench?

Welcome to the Great Possum Lodge Auction, where one man's junk is another man's treasured "Red Green" souvenir.

It's a one-day-only mega-event at Mr. Used on Barton Street East — starting Sunday at high noon. The sale is being advertised on both sides of the border and a huge crowd is expected. The store even got a call from the Philippines from an American wanting to take part in remote bidding (something the auctioneer is arranging).

The entire set from the "Red Green Show" will be put on the block along with hundreds of props and other castoffs from 14 years of misadventures in manhood.

Nine years ago, when the show went off the air, Steve Smith (its star and creator) looked for a place to store the show's legacy.

Len Wareing, the owner of Mr. Used, was happy to oblige. It was the perfect complement to his 70,000-square-foot warehouse of overflowing collectibles and rejectables.

And, besides, a lot of the "Red Green" stuff originally came from his store. Pickers from the show would troll the aisles of Mr. Used, trying to get inspired for the next episode.

Since 2005, the roped-off Possum Lodge display became a kind of "Red Green" museum and shrine for his fans.

But more recently, Len decided it was time to downsize. He's been liquidating his inventory — trying to get his store down to 10,000 square feet — and he no longer has the space for "Red Green" memorabilia.

So, after talking with Smith, they decided to dislodge the lodge. And the profits will "pay back Len for nine years of rent," said Smith.

"It actually makes me happy that this stuff isn't going to go into a landfill somewhere," Smith said in an interview on Tuesday. "It certainly wasn't going to come to my house.

"I see this ending up in man caves all over North America, which I think is kind of cool."

Smith said he's taken what he wanted, enough to outfit a small version of the lodge that he uses for online Possum Lodge meetings.

But he says he has no use for the bulk of it.

"It's not pristine stuff. I went in the other day to look at it. It's dirty, grungy and dusty, but in a way, it's kind of neat."

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He said there is no shortage of fans who might want a piece of the old Possum Lodge. Incredibly, the character is still popular in reruns and the "Red Green" Facebook page has more than 625,000 likes.

"People often send me pictures of their own personal Possum Lodge. For them to have something from the real Possum Lodge, I guess, would be a bit of thrill."