Posted on 12/23/2005 11:04:34 AM PST by Rio
R.I. Couple Finds Rare Pear in Clam
Fri Dec 23, 9:06 AM ET
A clam that a Portsmouth couple thought was rotten turned out to hold a rare gem: a purple pearl that could be worth lots of money.
It happened earlier this month when Barbara Krensavage brought home about four dozen quahogs from a Newport seafood restaurant. Her husband, Thaddeus or "Ted," was shucking them when he came across one he thought was diseased. Upon closer inspection, the couple found the pearl.
"We're finding out there's only a handful on earth," Barbara Krensavage said. "We were excited, biting it and everything."
Some experts estimate that only 1 in 100,000 quahog clams contains a pearl, and 1 in 20 of those pearls is of gem quality. That puts the odds on the Krensavages' find at 1 in 2 million, according to The Providence Journal.
Antoinette Matlins, author of "The Pearl Book: the Definitive Buying Guide," said the Krensavages' pearl, perfectly round and about the size of a large pea, might be valued in the thousands of dollars, though she hasn't seen it. But that estimate could rise depending on the value of two purple quahog pearls featured in a $14 brooch bought five years ago by the partner of Newport antique dealer Alan Golash.
The brooch is included in the American Museum of Natural History's international pearl exhibit, now in Japan. The exhibition will move to Australia for much of 2006, and then to the Persian Gulf and London in 2007.
"You might sell something now for $20,000 or $25,000, which seems like a huge amount for a single pearl," Matlins said, "but then somebody might turn around and bid $1 million for the Alan Golash pearl. Then, the person who sold it for $20,000 or $25,000 would be kicking themselves."
The couple have set the gem in a gold ring at least for now.
"If it's worth $10,000, we'll probably keep it, it'll be a family treasure," Ted Krensavage said. "But if it's worth more than a quarter million, we might put it up for auction."
(In case they get around to editing their page, I promise that it says "pear" as I am writing this.)
Heck of a clam!
How would a pear fit in a clam?
A pear? A pear-shaped pearl? Or a pearl-shaped pear? Or a pear of clams?
I found a banana in a clam once. And a head of lettuce.
I've heard of a partridge in a pear tree, but never a pear in a clam.
I've found small pearls in mussels from time to time. They're the size of that ball on a pin
It was purple, silly.
Someone needs to "pear" the deadwood from this story.
A pear in a clam? Stuning!
Yeah, and I can't believe that you fell for it!
I was in the Navy with Joe Catudal from North Attleboro, Mass. Joe mentioned going quahog hunting once, and I got the image of some fury critter. After all these years, it's hard to accept something with that name as a clam. Live and learn.
I thought this was about different...type of clam...and...the...pearl...nevermind...
Amazing.
So hard to distinguish the tree raised pears from the clam raised ones.
Here I am looking for avocados, apples, oranges, grapes, tomatoes, and cabbage.
Now you've done it! More FReeper lore in the making....
That's the real title on Yahoo. Click on the link to see for yourself.
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