+ All Categories
Home > Documents > Golden Pearls - Reportage by Getty Images · 2013-01-05 · affect the oysters. Anything that the...

Golden Pearls - Reportage by Getty Images · 2013-01-05 · affect the oysters. Anything that the...

Date post: 07-Aug-2020
Category:
Upload: others
View: 2 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
11
www.reportage-bygettyimages.com Amongst the turquoise waters of the Palawan archipelago, in the south- western Philippines, a man from Brittany in northern France is the only person in the world to have discovered the secret to producing a very rare jewel: the golden pearl. It’s a natural and fragile gem which is cared for like royalty. It takes 5 years for an oyster to produce one of these pearls, and the slightest shock during that time could ruin it. The feature documents the harvesting of these pearls, in the midst of this tropical paradise. The motorboat advances slowly amongst the rows of ropes in this 5000 hectare park used for pearl production. Five divers wearing t-shirts put on their scuba tanks and masks, and descend into the turquoise waters. It’s harvest season. In this wilderness in the northern part of the Palawan archipelago in the Philippines, is a hidden area encompassing about twenty or so small islands, which protect the 20cm wide pearl producing oysters from the currents. The oysters spend two years in an incubator, followed by around three years slowly growing at a depth of 15m in these calm, warm waters of the South China Sea. Golden Pearls Photographs by Patrick Aventurier Text by Sebastien Farcis PALAWAN, PHILIPPINES - DECEMBER 2009: Jacques Branellec has arrived to inspect the new harvest of golden pearls on the Taytay oyster farm, having piloted a helicopter to Palawan, 500km from Manila, where he lives. Thousands of pearls have been harvested in one week. A good quality pearl is work around €500 Euros, but prices can be a lot higher for 'perfect' pearls. Jacques Branellec is a director and co-founder of pearl production company Jewelmer International, set up in 1979, which has six pearl oyster farms in the Philippines. They specialize in production of golden pearls, and are the only company in the world able to produce them. Each pearl takes 5 years to grow, under very carefully controlled conditions, and can fetch huge sums of money when developed to perfection.
Transcript
Page 1: Golden Pearls - Reportage by Getty Images · 2013-01-05 · affect the oysters. Anything that the oyster feels or experiences is directly reflected in the pearl, which can therefore

www.reportage-bygettyimages.com

Amongst the turquoise waters of the Palawan archipelago, in the south-western Philippines, a man from Brittany in northern France is the only person in the world to have discovered the secret to producing a very rare jewel: the golden pearl. It’s a natural and fragile gem which is cared for like royalty. It takes 5 years for an oyster to produce one of these pearls, and the slightest shock during that time could ruin it. The feature documents the harvesting of these pearls, in the midst of this tropical paradise.

The motorboat advances slowly amongst the rows of ropes in this 5000 hectare park used for pearl production. Five divers wearing t-shirts put on their scuba tanks and masks, and descend into the turquoise waters. It’s harvest season. In this wilderness in the northern part of the Palawan archipelago in the Philippines, is a hidden area encompassing about twenty or so small islands, which protect the 20cm wide pearl producing oysters from the currents. The oysters spend two years in an incubator, followed by around three years slowly growing at a depth of 15m in these calm, warm waters of the South China Sea.

GoldenPearlsPhotographs by Patrick AventurierText by Sebastien Farcis

PALAWAN, PHILIPPINES - DECEMBER 2009: Jacques Branellec has arrived to inspect the new harvest of golden pearls on the Taytay oyster farm, having piloted a helicopter to Palawan, 500km from Manila, where he lives. Thousands of pearls have been harvested in one week. A good quality pearl is work around €500 Euros, but prices can be a lot higher for 'perfect' pearls. Jacques Branellec is a director and co-founder of pearl production company Jewelmer International, set up in 1979, which has six pearl oyster farms in the Philippines. They specialize in production of golden pearls, and are the only company in the world able to produce them. Each pearl takes 5 years to grow, under very carefully controlled conditions, and can fetch huge sums of money when developed to perfection.

Page 2: Golden Pearls - Reportage by Getty Images · 2013-01-05 · affect the oysters. Anything that the oyster feels or experiences is directly reflected in the pearl, which can therefore

www.reportage-bygettyimages.com

The location is roughly 500km from Manila, and well protected from its pollution. Everything here is set up to protect these oysters from any outside aggression, or negative influence on their growth. At one of the Jewelmer International pearl farms, the biggest producer in the Philippines, a huge board displays even the slightest monthly water temperature variations, to the nearest tenth of a degree. A boat full of armed guards patrols on the outskirts, ensuring no one is able to approach and disturb the oysters.

This farm, located around Malutamban Island, is very well stocked. Thousands of white buoys are dotted in neat lines around the island, like grains of salt sprinkled across the ocean’s surface, showing the scale of Jewelmer International’s production. There are 140,000 oysters waiting to be harvested at this location alone, which is one of six that the company holds. But it is a delicately poised wealth, as the jewels themselves are natural.

Tatay pearl farm on one of the islands of the Palawan archipelago, in the south-western Philippines. The view is from the window of a helicopter that Jacques Branellec is piloting on his way to inspect one of his company's pearl farms in Palawan, 500km from Manila, where he lives. Jacques Branellec is a director and co-founder of pearl production company Jewelmer International, set up in 1979, which has six pearl oyster farms in the Philippines. They specialize in production of golden pearls, and are the only company in the world able to produce them. Each pearl takes 5 years to grow, under very carefully controlled conditions, and can fetch huge sums of money when developed to perfection.

Page 3: Golden Pearls - Reportage by Getty Images · 2013-01-05 · affect the oysters. Anything that the oyster feels or experiences is directly reflected in the pearl, which can therefore

www.reportage-bygettyimages.com

Jacques Branellec, director and co-founder of Jewelmer in 1979, is very much aware of this. He starts to inspect and scrutinize the oyster farm with an obsessive stare as soon as he gets out of the Dauphin helicopter that he has just piloted all the way from Manila, to reach this hidden location. Every details counts. Practically jogging around the place, wearing a fuchsia shirt and a hat, as only a company director in the tropics could, he fires his observations in English at his Filipino assistant, who tries to follow him through the warehouses and processing buildings, amongst the machines and pipes.

What worries him the most though is not to be found here. It is what lies beneath the waves. Fishing with dynamite and cyanide is still common practice in the waters of the Palawan archipelago. This has already destroyed a lot of the coral, and could do the same to the pearl-producing oysters. Jewelmer has therefore already provided new boats to the local authorities, to enable them to better control these forms of fishing, and to encourage the local population to understand the importance of preserving the natural environment that surrounds them. Some fishermen have benefitted from the subsequent improvement in water quality to enable them to develop algae farming, which they then sell to pharmaceutical companies. Jacques Branellec is an ecologist both by personal conviction, and by necessity.

Jacques Branellec inspects Tatay pearl farm, having piloted a helicopter to inspect one of his company's pearl farms in Palawan, 500km from Manila, where he lives.

Page 4: Golden Pearls - Reportage by Getty Images · 2013-01-05 · affect the oysters. Anything that the oyster feels or experiences is directly reflected in the pearl, which can therefore

www.reportage-bygettyimages.com

“Growing pearls is a real craft industry,” he explains. “Any change in water temperature, or pollution of the sea, will affect the oysters. Anything that the oyster feels or experiences is directly reflected in the pearl, which can therefore lose its quality.” This Frenchman aged 60, who was one of the first to cultivate black pearls in Tahiti, remains humble and respectful of the laws of nature. “I have been producing pearls for 38 years, and I am still learning,” he says with an amused look on his face. “Obtaining these golden pearls is extremely difficult. It is a long road to attain perfection.”

It is indeed a long road, punctuated by the 324 times the oyster will be handled during its five years of growth. Before being placed in the sea aged 2, it will have a mineral nucleus placed in its core, around which it will form the pearl. Then for the three subsequent years, divers will try to compensate for the effects of gravity, flipping over the oyster’s cage every week so that the pearl that is formed around the mineral nucleus is as even and round as possible. Once each month the oysters are taken out of the water, cleaned of all the small crustaceans and shellfish growing on them, and checked by X-ray to make sure that the pearl inside hasn’t been expelled.

Young oysters being thoroughly cleaned before they are moved to a new cage.Young oysters being transported by helicopter to one of the other farms to continue their growth.

Biologist Dories Domingo, the Jewelmer laboratory director, examines a golden pearl under a microscope at Taytay pearl farm.

A board displays the positions of the lines of ropes holding pearls oysters at pearl farm number 3.

Page 5: Golden Pearls - Reportage by Getty Images · 2013-01-05 · affect the oysters. Anything that the oyster feels or experiences is directly reflected in the pearl, which can therefore

www.reportage-bygettyimages.com

Workers carrying out daily cleaning of the ropes and cages at the oyster farm. The oysters are ready to be harvested.

The oyster farm's security boat pulls up by one of the workers' boats. There are pirates in this area, so security is tight.

Workers carrying out daily cleaning of the ropes and cages at the oyster farm.

Page 6: Golden Pearls - Reportage by Getty Images · 2013-01-05 · affect the oysters. Anything that the oyster feels or experiences is directly reflected in the pearl, which can therefore

www.reportage-bygettyimages.com

The oysters are grown at sea for 3 years, at 15m depth, after they have spent 2 years in incubators. Each week divers check on them, and flip over the cages, to ensure more evenly shaped pearls.

Page 7: Golden Pearls - Reportage by Getty Images · 2013-01-05 · affect the oysters. Anything that the oyster feels or experiences is directly reflected in the pearl, which can therefore

www.reportage-bygettyimages.com

On this ancient deserted island of Malutamban, since converted into this pearl farming operation, the most delicate part of the process is also the most hidden part, taking place in a modern laboratory that is hidden from view by vegetation. It’s here that the real success took place, when the team of biologists finally managed to reproduce the ‘Pinctada Maxima’ gold-lipped oyster, a very rare kind which is only present in the wild in the southern Philippines, off the island of Jolo. It took over 15 years to achieve, and now Jewelmer is the only pearl company in the world to be able to produce these magnificent golden pearls.

The divers arrive back on land with baskets full of giant oysters. The pearls lie hidden within their flesh, in a still unknown form. Despite all the care and attention that goes into producing them, the end result is far from guaranteed. A few hours later, the first part of the harvest is visible in the workshop. Jacques Branellec is there to oversee things. He goes through the oysters by hand, sorting and separating them. “Many of the pearls can be spoiled, some deformed, others circular in shape as they grew around a parasite. Others are the shape of a spinning top, or baroque (irregular/bizarre).” But a large number of other pearls have a beautiful shine to them, and a shape that appeals to the eye. Not all are gold, some can be white, or champagne coloured, depending on the colour that the oyster took on.

Jacques Branellec watches as a pearl is extracted from an oyster. He has arrived to inspect the farm, having piloted a helicopter to Palawan, 500km from Manila, where he lives.

Page 8: Golden Pearls - Reportage by Getty Images · 2013-01-05 · affect the oysters. Anything that the oyster feels or experiences is directly reflected in the pearl, which can therefore

www.reportage-bygettyimages.com

The success is not absolute, but the considerable efforts involved do reap rewards. Of the 700,000 pearls that Jewelmer produces each year across their six farm, 75% are commercially viable. Around 2% of those harvested will be considered ‘perfect’. Their value depends on various criteria, most of which are subjective: their shine, their color, and their lustre, the latter being one of the most precise and key classifications, defined by the way in which the pearl’s crystal form refracts light. “A large portion of these pearls will be worth €150-300 Euros (USD $200-400) in the shops,” says Jacques Branellec, inspecting the latest harvest.

A worker brings him a pearl with a spectacular shine to it. Suddenly his eyes light up. He stares intently at the pearl, holding it in a precise manner in his fingers. “This one is perfect, it’s the crème de la crème. A Hanadama,” he states proudly [Hanadama: a very high grade pearl]. But Jacques Branellec won’t divulge the extravagant price of this jewel, because he prefers to keep some of his company figures private.

After 5 years of growth, the golden pearls can be collected, but only some Japanese specialists can carry out the operation, and gently open the oyster.

Page 9: Golden Pearls - Reportage by Getty Images · 2013-01-05 · affect the oysters. Anything that the oyster feels or experiences is directly reflected in the pearl, which can therefore

www.reportage-bygettyimages.com

This connoisseur always seems to display a voluntary detachment from the commercial and financial success that offers him a very comfortable life nowadays. The Jewelmer International company, that he runs alongside Manuel Cojuangco, a member of one of the wealthiest families in the Philippines, has over 1000 employees, and twelve shops in the Philippines in which the pearls are sold, once mounted on jewellery.

Some of the best jewellery on offer, made from golden pearls, seen in the offices of Jewelmer International in Manila. Jacques Branellec is a director and co-founder of pearl production company Jewelmer International, set up in 1979, which has six pearl oyster farms in the Philippines. They specialize in production of golden pearls, and are the only company in the world able to produce them.

Golden pearls being sorted and graded in the offices of Jewelmer International in Manila. Thousands of pearls have been harvested in one week. A good quality pearl is work around €500 Euros, but prices can be a lot higher for 'perfect' pearls.

Page 10: Golden Pearls - Reportage by Getty Images · 2013-01-05 · affect the oysters. Anything that the oyster feels or experiences is directly reflected in the pearl, which can therefore

www.reportage-bygettyimages.com

On top of the many hectares of islands for the oyster farms, the company owns two helicopters which Jacques Branellec and other use to travel from Manila to the islands, to re-supply them. This former airline pilot arrived in the Philippines over 30 years ago, after a sailing trip around the world. He left Polynesia having sold off his black pearl farms due to debt, but today has had his revenge on that past. He says he is not interested in wealth, and yet has managed to achieve it. He owns a house in one of the most expensive parts of Manila, and recently bought himself a paradise island of a few hectares called “Flower Island”, where he refurbished a former resort of ten bungalows, and has made it his second home. He is passionate about the Philippines, and has a Filipino wife, and would like these ‘Pearls of the Orient’ to become the symbol of this archipelago, just as black pearls became that of Tahiti.

Meanwhile, these jewels have made him his fortune. Some pearls are indeed sold at a very high price. For some exceptional pieces, their value can become as subjective as their beauty. Two years ago, a Japanese man fell so ‘in love’ with a perfect golden pearl that he bought it from Jewelmer for USD $500,000.

Jacques Branellec at his house on Taytay Island, with the manageress, who is wearing a golden pearl necklace. He has arrived to inspect the new harvest of golden pearls at the Taytay oyster farm, having piloted a helicopter to Palawan, 500km from Manila, where he lives. Thousands of pearls have been harvested in one week. A good quality pearl is work around €500 Euros, but prices can be a lot higher for 'perfect' pearls. Jacques Branellec is a director and co-founder of pearl production company Jewelmer International, set up in 1979, which has six pearl oyster farms in the Philippines. They specialize in production of golden pearls, and are the only company in the world able to produce them. Each pearl takes 5 years to grow, under very carefully controlled conditions, and can fetch huge sums of money when developed to perfection.

Page 11: Golden Pearls - Reportage by Getty Images · 2013-01-05 · affect the oysters. Anything that the oyster feels or experiences is directly reflected in the pearl, which can therefore

Reportage by Getty ImagesLondon

Ground Floor116 Bayham Street London, NW1 0BAUnited Kingdom

Patrick Di [email protected]+44 (0) 20 7428 5256

The full set of 84 images is available via your local Getty Images office.

NOTE - Text is by Sebastien Farcis for reference purposes only. If you wish to publish the text, you will need to obtain rights from the author. Contact details provided on request.

Contacts

www.reportage-bygettyimages.com


Recommended