Pearly Blog / kamokapearls blog

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Exporting tahitian pearls.

The desire to farm Tahitian pearls begins with a dream, which then transforms into reality.  This reality is made up first of heavy investment, then strenuous work, then more investment, then more work and so on until the harvest of those first pearls.  This could be four or more years after setting out in the first place. 

 

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Octopus Versus Rat

We finished up our mid-day meal and like usual, I put a kettle of hot water on the stove for tea and coffee.  On the farm in the Tuamotus, it rarely gets hotter or colder than 85° year-round.  That’s the temperature of the lagoon water, which keeps things incredibly constant.  A hot beverage was more about prolonging our meal than anything else.  Like any kind of farming, our work was almost sure to be physically demanding.  As soon as lunch was over we would be back at it until the end of the day.

 

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The Pearl (part two)

The following Sunday I made my way across the 5 kilometers of lagoon that separated our farms.  He invited me to eat with him which I gladly accepted.  After I cleaned my plate of stewed chicken, peas and white rice with a piece of baguette, he asked me with a half smile if I wanted to see the pearls.  He knew I was more than a little eager to see them and he seemed to be enjoying taking his sweet time.  Of the 20 oysters second-grafted, 14 of them had produced pearls. 

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The Pearl (part one)

"Are you sure?”  This seemed crazy to me.  I searched Julien’s green eyes for any sign of him kidding around.  His sun blackened face was typically animated by a faint mischievous smile, infused with good nature but sometimes you wondered.  Julien was a Paumotu (person of the Tuamotu Archipelago) and one of the tiny handful of farmers who had started farming Tahitian pearls around the same time as our farm, circa 1990.

 

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If it aint baroque, don't fix it!

This post is a nod to one of my favorite types of Tahitian pearls: baroques.  

By definition a baroque pearl has one single trait that other pearl types (round, semi-round, semi-baroque and circled) share: no axis of symmetry.

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Leather "jewelry."

Jason Momoa, the new face of Conan the Barbarian, wearing a Tahitian pearl on leather.

 A friend of mine sent me this photo because I'm a huge Conan the Barbarian fan.  Haha, not really but the trailer sure looks like fun.

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Night photo

This is a photo I took on my last trip to the farm.  The shine on the buoy is from a full moon that came up a little before the sun went down over the land. 

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Kamoka Pearl picture.

Last weekend I joined friends in the pearl community for good times and pearl-related activities in LA.  The party was hosted by a good friend and retail pearl genius Jeremy Shepherd of Pearl Paradise.

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The silent workforce (part two).

   Two remoras hang from their suction-cup heads while Kamoka's silent work ...
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The silent workforce (part one).

   Farmers typically grow their oysters far off the lagoon floor so, much li...
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Barefoot running (nothing to do with pearls).

Photo: Jasmine HUMBERT  When we moved to America from Tahiti last summer we pa...
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Pearl pirates, yarrr! (part two)

This is part two of the story.  If you have not read part one, please scroll down ...
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Pearl pirates, yarrr! (part one)

    I could feel it in my eyelids as well as my legs and back and arms.&nb...
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A day in the life of Kamoka Pearl.

An ordinary day on the farm starts at about 6am.  Laurent climbs down from the farmhous...
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Photos

I was talking with a friend yesterday who payed me out for the lack of photos in my fir...
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Adventures with the pirate.

 I wrote the last blog post while floating on the sublime lagoon of Raiatea, the b...
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Intro

   This first blog post is intended for those of you not familiar with our s...
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