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Subject:
From:
Rick Harbo <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Conchologists List <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Wed, 10 Jan 2007 22:06:24 -0800
Content-Type:
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text/plain (69 lines)
I have collected some old canned clam labels from British Columbia, NE
Pacific, circa 1914. Although the clams were west coast butter clams, the
drawings on the labels were east coast soft-shell clams... likely the only
drawings available at the time.

Rick Harbo
Nanaimo,B.C.
Canada

----- Original Message -----
From: "Charles Wilder" <[log in to unmask]>
To: <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Wednesday, January 10, 2007 5:59 PM
Subject: Shells From....


> Most recently, Paul Monfils contributed this amusing anecdote:
>
>
> This reminds me of a set of postcards a club member once brought to a =
> meeting. There were four cards, each showing the exact same colorful =
> array of shells. The four pictures were labeled, respectively, "COLORFUL =
> SEASHELLS OF FLORIDA"; "COLORFUL SEASHELLS OF CAPE COD"; "COLORFUL =
> SEASHELLS OF CALIFORNIA"; and "COLORFUL SEASHELLS OF HAWAII".  Every =
> shell in the picture was of course from the Philippines, the typical =
> shells sold in tourist shell baskets in all four of the named locations =
> and many others.
>
> Paul M.
>
> Amusing, but not all that surprising.  At many of the popular ocean-side
> tourist attractions in the Republic of Korea, one may purchase beautiful
> seashells - mostly Chicoreus ramosus and perhaps some Cassis cornuta or
> Cypraecassis rufa.  I have never seen any indigenous shells offered at
> these sites.  On the other hand, I have never seen or heard any clear
> misrepresentation that those were Korean shells.
>
> When I first converted from collecting (450+) orchid plants to collecting
> shells, I quickly asked many Koreans with whom I lived and worked where I
> could get nice Korean shells, other than in my soup.  The universal
> response was that there aren't any nice, collectible shells in Korean
> waters, except at Jeju Island "perhaps."  Eventually I searched on-line
> and began to find out the quite contrary truth.  My point is merely that
> most Koreans still do not know what beautiful shells are available to them
> in their own waters, although many of them have bought, at grossly marked-
> up prices, some of the spectacular shells from the Philippines.  Even now,
> when I show Korean co-workers some cleaned Ceratostoma burnetti,
> Pteropurpura falcata, etc., they often accuse me of misrepresenting that
> they are from Korea!
>
> Chuck
>
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