Today's DW ship of the day is...
Gigi x Shelly !
Ship names; FossilCollection, ShellCollection
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Iraq

seen from United States
seen from Spain

seen from United States
seen from Russia

seen from France
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Ukraine
seen from Canada

seen from Australia
seen from Brazil
seen from China

seen from T1

seen from United Kingdom

seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States

seen from United States
Today's DW ship of the day is...
Gigi x Shelly !
Ship names; FossilCollection, ShellCollection
Couldn't update yesterday ...Since I went on a tiny family trip to the beach...Collected some seashells 🐚🌊 and did back-to-school shopping today 😶 School starts tomorrow and I’m emotionally unavailable for that info. Here’s a snap of my beach babies 🐾✨
From the research I’ve done, I think the longest, pointy shell type here is Doxander vittatus (vitate conch), and the two blunter, angular, cone-shaped ones are Conomurex luhuanus (strawberry conch). This information I’ve found is just from me comparing images and looking online and stuff. I don’t know what the other (shorter, smaller, pointed) shells are, though.
How to get pretty/ complete shells:
a guide by a floridian sand gremlin
WEAR SUNSCREEN!!!
Start in the sand before the shoreline, there’s a lot of broken shells there, they’re can be really pretty shards in there (you can do this while waiting for the sunscreen to soak up) wear shoes or sandals if they hurt your feet too much.
if you like a shell, grab it. It doesn’t matter if it’s small or broken, or covered in barnacles and worn down with holes. There is no such thing as an “ugly shell” so go crazy!
After the sunscreen has soaked in, and if the water is clear enough, wade to about knee-thigh height and squint as best you can to see what’s at the bottom. The waves are just something you have to deal with, look for half buried objects and tread carefully (sting-ray shuffle if your a floridian). If you see something grab it. You can also put on goggles and stick your head in the water to find things.
Make sure you don’t stay in the same place twice, pick a direction and wade/walk through a bit. But don’t stay there.
Stay close to the shore of the waves are especially large (California). Don’t risk our life for the sake of a shell.
(This doesn’t always work) but you can go deeper, just use goggles and stay low to the bottom like a sting-ray, dig around and pick up things you like (mostly shards, leave the crabs and fish alone)
Take breaks, if you find that your not finding anything good, go back and sit in the shade and drink water, if you live in a colder place, wrap yourself up for a bit. Make sure to reapply sunscreen and eat something too! Take stock of how many shells you have collected, and maybe even start identifying them!
Make sure to show people what you find! There’s so much validation in seeing your friends gawk at the shell you found.
Make sure to clean your shells!!! I made the mistake of just sticking them in jars when I got home WITHOUT CLEANING THEM, and they stink...so make sure you use water and bleach and clean those suckers good.
I hope this was helpful! These are some tips that just help me find good shells, and just today I found a completed (and connected) common cockle clam!
Shells!
My pockets are full of shells but my heart is still empty
Watercolor painting - Shells
Dammit, I put too much bleach in the mix and it stained some of my shells green...
I threw out the worst ones, other than that it worked pretty well to get the stench out :/