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Thread: A promotion video shot at my place

  1. #16
    Josh's Avatar
    Josh is offline Third-graft Pearl Senior Pearl-Guide.com Pearl Expert
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    Hi John and Julianne,
    Haha! That article does make me sound funny but yeah, we see lot's of sharks. The water is ridiculously clear and there are simply lot's of sharks so I guess you just see them whereas in other places they might be there but you wouldn't know it. About a month ago my friends on the farm saw a 4meter Tiger Shark at the pass. That was the biggest ever seen there I think. It was very mellow I was told.
    Josh Humbert
    Pearl farmer and Tahitian pearl farming consultant.
    www.kamokapearls.com
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  2. #17
    julianner Guest

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    Quote Originally Posted by Josh View Post
    ...my friends on the farm saw a 4meter Tiger Shark at the pass. ...It was very mellow I was told.
    Oh right, a mellow shark. Yeah...



    Please send some of them to Australia to teach our sharks some manners.

  3. #18
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    Hey Josh - the link to the video no longer works. Is it still viewable online? Thanks.
    Jacques

  4. #19
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    wow, enjoyed that article!! Sharks....brrrrrr.....fascinated by them, and scared silly at the same time!

  5. #20
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    Default pearls worn in salt water

    Quote Originally Posted by Karl View Post
    I have to agree with everyone who said it was a really cool video. I'm no expert but I wouldn't think that the saltwater would harm the pearls since they were cultured in it. The silk would be another story. Maybe they were strung with something else? I read somewhere that women in Cuba used to go in the water with their pearls on..can't quite remember where I saw that though.
    I've been thinking about this a lot...call me slow. Still, it's the shell-mother that's bathed in saltwater, not the pearl. The pearl forms in a protected bath of whatever's inside the mother. When I watched the video of a pearl being harvested, I saw it lifted out of a shell with all sorts of gooey, shiny stuff around it.
    The shell is a filter-feeder, right? so it does have salt water constantly circulating through it, but still the pearl is inside nacre-secreting places.
    Anybody?

  6. #21
    Josh's Avatar
    Josh is offline Third-graft Pearl Senior Pearl-Guide.com Pearl Expert
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    Yes! Very right Lisa. The pearl grows inside of the pearl sack (which is created by the introduction of a bit of mantle from a donor oyster) which is located in or very close to the gonad (yeah, I know, oww right?) of the oyster that will produce the pearl.
    You are right in saying that salt water, with enough time, will damage mother of pearl and hence pearls too. I wear pearls, or at least a pearl anyway, and I can tell you though, that you can spend an awful lot of time in the ocean before needing to worry about damaging your pearl(s).
    Josh Humbert
    Pearl farmer and Tahitian pearl farming consultant.
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    @KamokaJosh

  7. #22
    lisa c's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Josh View Post
    Yes! Very right Lisa. The pearl grows inside of the pearl sack (which is created by the introduction of a bit of mantle from a donor oyster) which is located in or very close to the gonad (yeah, I know, oww right?) of the oyster that will produce the pearl.
    You are right in saying that salt water, with enough time, will damage mother of pearl and hence pearls too. I wear pearls, or at least a pearl anyway, and I can tell you though, that you can spend an awful lot of time in the ocean before needing to worry about damaging your pearl(s).
    Oh, I was sure you knew what you were talking about, since you're in salt water all the time. I just had to clarify in my own mind that salt/fresh water wasn't constantly washing over a pearl directly during formation.

    I haven't completed reading all the past forums, but there was mention of using 'bad' pearls to nucleate new, hopefully better pearls. The result would be all nacre, and someone asked what would be the downside of that. The only thing I can think of is if the good layer is so thin it wears off fast (whatever 'fast' is) and you're left with the 'bad' pearl showing through. Sound right? Anything else you can think of that would be a downside?

  8. #23
    Josh's Avatar
    Josh is offline Third-graft Pearl Senior Pearl-Guide.com Pearl Expert
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    If you were culturing your pearls in French Polynesia and you planned to export legally (which we recommend) you would aim for a minimum nacre thickness on your pearls of .8mm and probably a maximum of 1.5mm. Just to reiterate it for those who are new here, Tahiti has a .8mm minimum nacre thickness per pearl so if you were using crumby pearls for nuclei, you wouldn't likely have to worry about the "good" layer being too thin. The problem with using a lousy pearl to seed an oyster is that if it was lousy it probably would have pits. Pits are no good because they make good homes for bacteria and other nasties that could cause trouble later on in the development of the pearl. Nuclei are relatively cheap too so unless they get really, really expensive overnight, the cost of readying bogus pearls for the operation will most likely stay the second option of the two.
    Josh Humbert
    Pearl farmer and Tahitian pearl farming consultant.
    www.kamokapearls.com
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    @KamokaJosh

  9. #24
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    Thanks, Josh! New info is so cool, and I appreciate the time you took to explain.

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