“Well, for thousands of years, the whole region depended and, depended totally on pearl fishing. And within a few years, let’s say that two decades, because of the discovery of oil and the invention of pearl culture, the whole industry collapsed.”
Al-Suwaidi says that the UAE is the first Gulf nation to renew pearl cultivation, and for good reason. His stock of over 100,000 pearl-producing mollusks are kept in pans and painstakingly cleaned and tended, increasing their potential to grow and produce large high-quality pearls.
Oysters are a very delicate species of mollusk whose lives and prosperities are measures of the environmental conditions they inhabit. Al-Suwaidi’s business partner, Imura Daiji, says the link between the pearl and its environment is very important. The bigger and healthier the pearloyster, the larger the pearl it can produce.
“Oyster pearl cultivation and the environment is a very very deep relationship.”
The untouched quality of this protected ecosystem has allowed him to see a faster span of production time than he had seen in Japan, the birthplace of the industry.
In years past, pearl divers would plunge without apparatus more than 100 feet beneath the sea, making as many as 30 or more dives a day with only an estimated…