When you go to visit the Dunsborough Lions Shed on a Saturday morning make sure you bring your imagination - oh - and lock your bike up or it might get sold.
The club operates a secondhand goods store which stocks everything from kitchenware, to fishing rods, books, furniture - you name it - they have it.
Last year, the club raised more than $85,000 from sales at the shed which they donated to 25 community groups, schools and charities in the region and 22 other causes Australia-wide.
On a recent visit to the shed, one customer had ridden his brand new bicycle to the store and was having a nosy-around inside.
According to Dunsborough Lions Club member Mal Robinson the bike rider parked his bicycle right next to the entrance.
"One of our guys came outside and thought nice bike, but there was no price on it, so he went in and put $80 on it and pushed it into the rack," he said.
"Another guy got out of his car and came over and said, I will buy that, went in and paid for the bike, put it on the back of his car and away he went.
"The owner of the bike came out - he was not a happy camper at all - it was only a week old.
"To soothe his ruffled feathers we took him into the Bike Shed, that day was a net loss to us, but oh boy what a talking point. Anyone that rides their bike here be careful where you leave it."
Shed coordinator Hank Deboer said they had no idea what people would buy and were often surprised at the imaginations of customers when they came to the store.
"A few weeks ago someone pulled up with an old cane chair, I thought gee that is ready to go to the tip - everything was hanging off it - and it was a potty chair," he said.
"It looked destroyed, even the seat on it, I thought who would want this, someone walked passed and said, I could put a plant in that, I told her it was hers for $5.
"When I pull up in my van people yell out, what have you got for goodies today, I tell them they can have it for $5. It is a donation, we get it for nothing, we get a sale and everybody is happy."
Mal Robinson said one person's trash was another person's treasure.
"That is how it works, we have even sold snow skis here, there is a market for everything," he said.
The club's newest member Nicky Pollard said the shed was doing really well and they were able to raise a significant amount of money to help others in the community.
While they appreciated donations a lot of people dumped unusable items at the shed which took time for them to sort through.
"We have been doing really well, we just have to sort through what we can feasibly sell and what is really, just people dumping their old stuff," she said.