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New Member here :) Old Shell Collector
11-11-2012, 05:11 PM,
#1
New Member here :) Old Shell Collector
Hello fellow shell collectors


I'm a new member here but an old shell collector. Some background info about my collecting. When I was 14, I became fascinated with shell collecting and my collection started out as any young person's would, with the most common shells I could find in stores according to my allowance. I am from the San Fransisco Bay Area ( but now reside in Reno, Nevada), and the very first store I began buying shells from was a place near my home called The Shell Cellar at Pier 39. Eventually after I bought as many of the less expensive, very common shells, my mother became involved in collecting with me, and from that point on, the collecting became an obsession. It was no longer amateur as we began to scour stores wherever we travelled, with one named Ruth's in the Monterey Bay area and others in San Diego and Hawaii.

When I was 16,  we ventured Back East to the Du Pont Museum of Natural History. Sad thing about Mr. Du Pont who had a massive shell collection that his great wealth enabled him to have.  At the time the curator of the museum's shell collection was named Mr. Jensen and he gave me a very rare, unusual Japanese murex specimen as a gift. I believe he authored some books on shell collecting and in one of them, his photo was in it. He autographed the book I bought with me.


Most people thought it was very unusual that a young girl and her mother were shell-hunting. We aquired some beautiful specimens and some very rare ones. My favorite species to collect were cowries. I also love the murex family and the volutes. I was big on operculums and even have a collection of some very beautiful ones.  Some coral, sand dollars and other members of the echinoderm family also made their way into the collection.  My collection is small, but has some prized specimens in them.


Over the years ( I am now in my 40's) of course, with school and moving away and a career, my mother kept the collection in a cabinet that has been collecting dust. The cabinet, not the shells Smile. I recently for some reason just started to search on Ebay for those 'dream shells' I never got, including the Glory of the Sea cone. At the time I was collecting that shell was going for 1500-2000 US dollars.  My father would hear nothing of paying that much for a shell.  I noticed it was now going for MUCH less and wondered if that was because many more had been found, or there simply was no demand for it. Conversely I noticed some Cowrie and Murex species that I have are selling for much more than what my mother paid for back years ago.  I also wonder, how many  of the shells in the collection are now endangered?


I plan to move the collection from my parents house ( thankfully only one mile away) and the dark, dusty cabinet it sits in to a brand-new lighted glass curio at my home . I also collect mermaids and Pirates of the Caribbean things, so the shell collection would be right at home in my hobby room.


I look forward to getting back to collecting ( am currently looking at the Golden Cowrie and a Cat's Tongue oyster on Ebay) and to trying to  identify ( I kept some the labels from the rarer shells but now must go back through many books and use this forum to help me identify the other shells that were lost over the years) and giving the collection a brand new home.
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New Member here :) Old Shell Collector - by Meshelle - 11-11-2012, 05:11 PM

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