Thursday, September 14, 2006

Sea Beans

I just finished a seed necklace design that I can only ever make about once every three years when I have collected enough of the seeds from beaches for one. At times like these I try not to ponder the economic logic of my practice! I collect various hard shelled bouyant seeds that have arrived on the ocean currents. They bob in on the plastic and pumice flotsam tide and are quite rare on beaches near me. The smaller bean seeds are more plentiful and actually grow in the headlands behind the beaches.
After watching The Wrecking Season about flotsam and jetsam along the Atlantic Cornish coast (recommended by Rebecca Crawford), I realised that these same tropical seeds wash up on beaches all over the world - they are longshore drifters of the bean kingdom and even have their own fan clubs with a great Sea Bean website and a symposium every year on the topic of sea beans.
Now some of the beans I am finding in QLD are probably from Far North QLD - where they are called Burney Beans, Mucuna gigantea - you can rub them on stone or together until they are very hot and burn people. A useful bean indeed. And the larger matchbox bean is also one I find alot, sometimes encrusted in coral. But others like the nickernuts Caesalpinia bonduc sometimes called sea pearls, may come from further afield and have had many past uses including as currency in South America.

There is some frightening sea bean craft out there so be warned but I discovered some exquisite sea bean jewels in the Kew Garden Economic Botany Collection.

6 comments:

Shannon Garson said...

Beautiful necklace- these are very special, three years of collecting and God knows how much drifting about amongst whales, mermaids and giant kelp.

Kelvin said...

Hello from across the ditch !!! I was surfing the blog world when your blog popped up. Very interesting reading - worth sharing, so I will mention your blog @ #462 on my blog 21 21 21 Blogs this weekend

Wayne Joseph Kington said...

Why do I feel as though there is another beach fosicking tour coming on... Time to comb the 'strandline'.

Rebecca-the-Wrecker said...

Strandline, stringline whatever. My greatest fear is finding a beach with hundreds of the beautiful seeds piled up- it would make them seem so common!

Florence Forrest said...

I called on the sea gods to bring them forth for you for when you came to Sandgate but we never made it to the pile, due to weather and hungry tummies.

I will speak to them again and hopefully they will be generous...but have we already weighed too greatly upon their kindness?

xx

goatsfoot said...

Very nice :) I haven't found any drift seeds on Darwin area beaches so far, I really want to visit far north Queensland for that, all the beautiful Pacific seeds. Maybe I'm not looking hard enough. I know that women in east Arnhem land find seeds on the beach. I've restricted myself therefore to the seeds I can find on plants (which means I have a whole heap of nickernuts from the coastal vine thickets but they are mottled greeny-grey-white because they haven't weathered the sea).