Ever heard the term mudlarking? If you’ve talked very much with me,
you know that mudlarking, or beach-walking-looking-for-treasures is one of my
favorite activities. I’ve been a beachcomber all my life and just recently
learned about mudlarking. Nicola White has a YouTube channel showing her
walking along the Thames foreshore in London at low tide and finding wonderful
and interesting things, some even dating back to Roman times. I’m hooked on her
posts.
So of course on my cruise I looked
for opportunities to walk along the Mississippi and see what I might find. The
river is at a 40-year low which means lots of beach exposed that hasn’t been in
40 years. Here is our ship moored just below the St. Louis Arch showing the LOW
river line. I did pick up some interesting glass and other stuff and did create a window-art piece with it.... here are my finds in the raw (laid out on a daily bulletin on the ship):
It was here that I found my biggest find! The bottom of a ceramic or clay
beer bottle dating to the 1850s from a brewery in Wisconsin! I didn’t keep it
but gave it to Aaron, our history presenter on the ship, and he documented it
for me. But it was such fun to find something that old and hold it in my hand.
What else do beachcombers and mudlarkers
find? Anything that’s been tossed into the river or ocean or lost into the
same. One can find coins, toys, jewelry, nails, tools, broken glass, pieces of
dishes, etc. The best thing about Nicola’s presentations (on YouTube, remember) is that if there is an
inscription on her find, she does the history of that piece and perhaps how it came to
be in the Thames mud.
Have you time in
your life for a new hobby? Come mudlark with me!
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