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Sanibel Island Shelling Center
Shelling Guided Tours
Sanibel & Captiva - The Shellacious Islands

The Sanibel "Stoop"
What you need to know about Florida Seashells on Sanibel & Captiva Islands
The Sanibel "Stoop"
Sanibel Island and Captiva Island have earned their reputation as the Shell Islands honestly. They are actually made out of shells, like some magnificent work of shell art created over thousands of years. When islanders dig gardens in their backyards, they find conchs, whelks, scallops and clam shells often perfectly intact.
The best shelling is found on the beaches of Sanibel and Captiva Islands. The islands rank tops in the world for shelling because of geography. Sanibel Island does the twist as it parades along the coastline among a string of other more orderly, straight-and-narrow islands. The east-west torque of Sanibel's south end acts like a shovel scooping up all the seashells that the Gulf imports from The Caribbean and other southern seas.
The abundance and variety of shells have made Sanibel and Captiva Islands shell-obsessed. People come from all over the world, drawn by the song of the seashell. They parade along the sands doubled over in a stance that's been dubbed the Sanibel Stoop. Every March, they gather to compare and appreciate shell collections and shell art at the annual Sanibel Shell Fair & Show. Throughout the year, shell shops sell seashells by the seashore (and by the thousands). Shells are the dominant motif in island decor and boutique gifts. You'll find everything from finely crafted "shell-igrams" to lucite toilet seats with seashells lacquered in. (No home should be without one!)
Where to Shell
All of the Gulf-side shelling beaches from the Lighthouse to North Captiva. For a list of public beaches, go to Sanibel Beaches.
When to Shell
At low tide when the seashells are more exposed, especially at low spring tides (at full and new moons) and after Gulf storms have driven the shells up the Gulf onto our shelling beaches.
How to Shell
Bring bucket or net bag and scoop. Wear shoes and shuffle to expose partially hidden mollusks and to scare away fish.
What to Expect
Shells of many types and sizes are found on our shelling beaches. As a general rule the smaller seashells are found on the Lighthouse end of the island chain and the larger ones nearer Captiva and North Captiva. Conch, Junonia, Lightning Whelk, Cockle, Scallops, Murex, Tulip, Olive, Coquina, are among the species you may expect to find.
Guide to Sanibel & Captiva Shelling and Seashells
Seashell Ecology
Seashells come in two major varieties. The gastropod has a single shell and includes such species as conchs and whelks. Bivalves, such as clams, cockles and scallops, live within two hinged shells. The empty seashells you find layered on the beach once were home to soft-tissued animals called mollusks. Mollusks build their shells by secreting a liquid that eventually hardens around them. As the animals grow, their shells grow with them. Special glands create color pigments just before new layers of shell harden.
Shells and their inhabitants play an important role in Sanibel and Captiva islands ecology. They help keep our sand neatly in place and restock it with more as they're crushed by waves and other forces. They provide food for birds and fish. The scavenging and filtering performed by certain mollusks help cleanse Gulf waters.
Shelling Law & Florida Seashell Preservation
Because seashells are important to the islands' chain of life, and because Sanibel and Captiva are refuge islands where all life is considered precious, the State of Florida has outlawed the collecting of live shells on the island. "Live shell" is defined as any specimen containing an inhabitant, whether or not the mollusk seems alive. The law also protects sand dollars, starfish and sea urchins. All shelling is prohibited in J.N. "Ding" Darling National Wildlife Refuge.
Sheller’s are urged to limit even their empty-shell collection. Hauling away seashells by the bucketful diminishes supplies and the value of a single shell. For, as Anne Morrow Lindbergh in Gift From the Sea wrote while visiting these islands, "One cannot collect all the beautiful shells on the beach. One can collect only a few, and they are more beautiful if they are few."
Types of Shells on Sanibel Island & Captiva Island
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Conch Shells
Of the extensive conch family,
fighting conchs are those most commonly
found on Sanibel and Captiva shelling beaches. Ironically,
contrary to its macho name, the fighting
conch is one of the few vegetarian
univalves. While alive, the seashell
flames brilliant orange, but fades under
tropical sunshine. It is a shrunken
version of the queen conch, which once
was fished in Florida for its meat.
Conch harvesting is now illegal in the
state. |
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Junonia Shells
The islands' most coveted seashell, it
belongs to the volute family. Its milky
chamber is covered with brown spots on
the outside, and the animal that
occupies the shell is likewise marked. Shellers who find a junonia on Sanibel
or Captiva get their pictures in the
local newspaper. |
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Lightning Whelk Shells
Unlike its cousin whelks, the lightning
variety is usually "left-handed." Thus,
its name: Busycon contrarium. It
lays its miniature shell eggs in papery
egg case streamers that wash up on the
beach. Lightning whelks grow up to 16
inches long and were used by early
island natives for tools. |
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Cockle Shells
The heart cockle is one the islands'
most common shells, though a rarity in
other parts of the world. The cockle
mollusk is a footed creature that can
jump several inches in a single leap.
Islanders often use its accommodatingly
large cockleshell for soap dishes. |
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Tulip Shells
Banded tulips and their larger, rarer
cousins, true tulips, frequently wash up
on island shores to the delight of
collectors who revel in their intriguing
patterns and delicately swirling form. |
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Sand dollar Shells
Technically classified as an echinoderm,
not a mollusk, its life is nonetheless
protected on Sanibel and Captiva. While
alive, the thin, flat sand dollar is
brown and bristled with tiny tubes that
permit it to breath, move and camouflage
itself. Unoccupied seashells bleach to a
beautifully white textured pattern,
perfect for hanging on Christmas tree
boughs with red satin ribbon. |
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Olive Shells
Named for its elongated oval shape,
the olive comes in a variety of colors
and variations, and often sports a
glossy finish. By the time it reaches
island beaches, it has usually been
sun-bleached white, however. Olives
seashells rarely grow beyond three
inches long |
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Coquinas Shells
The beach's most well-attired clams,
they dress in colorful stripes, solids,
and even plaids. Opened and flattened,
they look like tiny butterflies. Old
islanders used to dig them up at the
water's edge to boil for broth. Because
they are a food shellfish, coquinas are
one of few shells that can be collected
live on Sanibel and Captiva. They burrow
into shallow sand at the water's edge.
When exposed by a wave, they wriggle
back into dampness. If you've planted
your feet where they've washed up, you
get the sensation of a foot massage as
they burrow beneath you. |
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