OP
El Graduado
Contributor
- Messages
- 833
- Reaction score
- 1,666
Welcome to ScubaBoard, the world's largest scuba diving community. Registration is not required to read the forums, but we encourage you to join. Joining has its benefits and enables you to participate in the discussions.
Benefits of registering include
A ScubaBoard Staff Message...
...my "Brown Map of Cozumel," which was in it's fourth edition in '78.
Do you know Roberto... I can't remember his last name, but he had a black coral shop downstairs from the original Prima? He moved to the mainland a few years ago, but for many years my parents bought pieces from him to sell in their pharmacy/gift shop in the US.You can see from the amount of "import stores" that those were a big deal back then. Quintana Roo was a free zone (a real one) and there was a load of electronic and electrodomestico stores on the island that brought things in duty free and sold them to Mexican nationals who would then drive them back past the customs point on the Yucatan border. Diamonds were not yet the thing. Black coral jewelry was big and getting bigger. It got so big that it became harder and harder to get on the Cozumel reefs. Looking for an alternative, I found that I could get Asian black coral in Miami pretty cheap, so I started importing batches of it to the island for the "Black Coral Factories" in town. The black coral guys said they could tell the difference, but I doubt a tourist could.
My parents got to know him when his shop was on Melgar in one of the hotels - Barracuda, Plaza las Glorias, or someplace similar. We bought a lot of pieces from him over the years. He does (or did) beautiful work. He is living in Merida now, isn't he? In the last few years he lived on the island he was getting more and more unhappy with all the concessions the local powers were making to the cruise ship industry. "Cozumel is a whore" was how he put it one of the last times I spoke with him before he left the island.
...before he left the island.