
Mudlarking We Will Go
When my Dad who lives in Chicago came to visit me in London, I took him "mudlarking" (beachcombing) along the River Thames.
Read moreWhen my Dad who lives in Chicago came to visit me in London, I took him "mudlarking" (beachcombing) along the River Thames.
Read moreHidden in the cliffs, bays, and harbor beaches of this island is naturally sculpted sea glass that has been smoothed by the currents, tides, rocks ...
Read moreMany collectors have admitted to making unbridled yelps or screams when they found their first piece of red.
Read moreRed glass of some sort has been produced almost since the time that glassmaking began.
Read moreIt is extremely unlikely that you will find a genuine glass fishing float along most of the world’s shorelines. But that doesn't stop us from looking.
Read moreFor sea glass hunters, there are few finds as exciting as the discovery of that perfectly round orb among the gravel, or the flash of color in the ...
Read moreThe glass we now call the “English multis” was borne of a great bottleworks business the little town of Seaham, England, population 20,000.
Read moreCape May, NJ has a je ne sais quoi that brings visitors back, year after year.
Read moreAmerica’s one-time best selling and largest producer of beer has a history possibly richer and tastier than the beer itself, and likely as interest...
Read moreLydia Kimball had no idea when she began collecting sea glass in Alaska that the most precious thing she would find on the beach was not sea glass ...
Read moreIt’s rare, and we whoop when we find it, but blue sea glass is not nearly as elusive as red or pink or orange.
Read moreThe sea glass stack is actually just another form of the ancient practice of stone stacking.
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