Treasure on the Beach

Discussion in 'All Discussions' started by Betty, Sep 2, 2014.

  1. Zippy

    Zippy Well-Known Member

    Nov 16, 2007
    Want shells? Go to Grand Turk. There's a place called the conch graveyard. It's where all the restaurants dump there shells after removing the conch. Literally thousands of them in heaps laying on the beach. Some are really cool and smooth after being rolled around for decades.
     
  2. bubs

    bubs Well-Known Member

    Sep 12, 2010
    post of the week
     

  3. seldom seen

    seldom seen Well-Known Member

    Aug 21, 2012
    Word, that is unacceptable. First offense = 3 days in the stocks, second offense = banishment at sea.

    Those knobby whelk shells are great, I have one that's super orange inside.
     
  4. Valhallalla

    Valhallalla Well-Known Member

    Jan 24, 2013
    As many times as we've been to Sanibel, we've never found it to be the shell collecting mecca that it is famous for. Probably just the wrong time of the year, tides, weather or whatever. Cool place nevertheless.

    I totally agree that the gathering/killing of live shells is not cool if not illegal. Along the lines of killing elephants for their ivory or finning sharks, IMO. Sadly, if you go into shell or souvenir shops in most beach towns that's how many of those shells got there. And most of those shells originate in some exotic location half way around the world anyway.
     
  5. Valhallalla

    Valhallalla Well-Known Member

    Jan 24, 2013
    Good on you Betty for educating others about our playground. I try to do the same thing when I can. Many people just don't know. In most cases it is illegal to take live shells in Florida especially for the casual tourist beachgoer type: http://myfwc.com/fishing/saltwater/recreational/sea-shells/ And even if it's not, it just messes with karma and our relationship with the ocean. She will provide as she sees fit.
     
  6. MFitz73

    MFitz73 Well-Known Member

    Aug 21, 2010
    treasure on the beach??? hmm when I was a little kid, maybe the 10 to 12 year old years I would go out at the crack of dawn on july 5th and find all the abandoned fireworks dropped/left on the beach from the night before... def seemed like a treasure find back then.
     
  7. Tlokein

    Tlokein Well-Known Member

    Oct 12, 2012
    S Core Banks (the S end is where the Cape Lookout lighthouse is). If you go north from the lighthouse its wonderfully desolate and the shells are piled 6 inches deep and 20yds wide for miles since hardly anyone ever goes there.
     
  8. chicharronne

    chicharronne Well-Known Member

    Jun 22, 2006
    I was checking waves after a big NorEaster and there were thousands of conchs. I took home a bag full only to bring them right back. They were alive. I apologized and toss them as far out as I could. I left their kin on the beach. It was god swill that those were chosen by a kind hearted sap like me.
     
  9. DosXX

    DosXX Well-Known Member

    Mar 2, 2013
    Our family first visited Sanibel in summer '68. Although there were fairly large numbers and kinds of shells then, it was less even then that it had been in the past. Years later, in the 80s, when we started going back on a more regular basis, the shell count and variety was significantly less.

    I seem to recall that back in 68, there were actually boat trips to collect living shells from the shallows in the bay. Also remember reading instructions on how to boil the living or dead animal out of the shell. There are laws now against collecting live shells, I gather. (pun intended)

    The Shell Factory (is it still there?) back on the mainland, sold thousands of shells, sand dollars, sea biskets, sea urchins, starfish, coral, etc., from all parts of the globe, collected in the manner you described. Some even dyed, etched, cut, and glued into decorations or other worthless doo-dads. There were also dried blowfish, alligator parts, and other things of that nature. I stopped visiting places like that years ago. I certainly wouldn't buy anything there.