Sea Glass?
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ironman417
- Posts: 151
- Joined: Sat Sep 25, 2010 9:27 pm
- Location: Pleasant Valley, NY
Sea Glass?
Hello,
In February my wife(Deb) and I will be having our first vacation on STJ.
Deb loves to look for sea glass. Are there any good beaches to look for sea glass? She also likes to buy sea glass jewelry. Any good shop that sell any?
Thanks for all your help.....Al
In February my wife(Deb) and I will be having our first vacation on STJ.
Deb loves to look for sea glass. Are there any good beaches to look for sea glass? She also likes to buy sea glass jewelry. Any good shop that sell any?
Thanks for all your help.....Al
I love Drunk Bay but have never seen anything but the tiniest slivers of sea glass there. I think the place the glass is most prevalent is where there were parties at shore when glass bottles were used...just my guess.
That said, Vies seems to be very good for it.
That said, Vies seems to be very good for it.
"Sponges grow in the ocean...I wonder how much deeper it would be if that didn't happen."
Hart Bay is not in the National Park.
That does bring up an interesting point though--I know that you cannot legally remove any shells from the USVI, whether they are found in the National Park or not. Does that also extend to sea glass, rocks, etc? I truly don't know.
That does bring up an interesting point though--I know that you cannot legally remove any shells from the USVI, whether they are found in the National Park or not. Does that also extend to sea glass, rocks, etc? I truly don't know.
It's like looking in your soup and finding a whole different alphabet.
I don't think you are allowed to take anything from the park beaches, trails, etc. Anything -liamsaunt wrote:Hart Bay is not in the National Park.
That does bring up an interesting point though--I know that you cannot legally remove any shells from the USVI, whether they are found in the National Park or not. Does that also extend to sea glass, rocks, etc? I truly don't know.
I got chastised once for pulling a leave off a tree from a National Park Ranger in Philadelphia. I believe the same is true for the VI National Park.
Anthony for Virgin Islands On Line
- Greenskeeper
- Posts: 390
- Joined: Sat Mar 08, 2008 2:07 pm
- Location: Cape Cod, MA
Interesting. I would think something that is man made would not be illegal to remove. If you think about it, the person who originally left the debris violated the law by littering.
To the OP does your wife have the book Pure Sea Glass? It's a great read for anyone who loves the beach and especially sea glass.
To the OP does your wife have the book Pure Sea Glass? It's a great read for anyone who loves the beach and especially sea glass.
Me too. I would pick up a whole bottle or broken bottle so why not a small piece of a bottle? I consider it lovely trash.jofus wrote:I've always justified taking seaglass with the thought that technically seaglass is old garbage. If it wasn't tumbled enough to be smooth it's a sharp piece of trash that can cut you. I've found sharp pieces like that, that I've put in the garbage.



