INTRODUCTION:
It is quite a long text that you
are about to read. But gemology
is such a fancy domain that a simple
"countryside Frenchman"
like me could not have reach the
point where I stay now without some
long story behind.
The purpose of this text is to show
to visitors interested in the gemological
field that nothing is impossible
if you really want something to
happen. Doing something in gemology
is not that easy, as it is a world
of secrets, trust and traditions.
There are nevertheless many ways
to get in such domain; this following
story is retracing my experience
so far.
I've written this story as many
times, after meeting students or
traveling companions, I was asked
the same question: How did you get
to (such fancy
thing as) gemology (or gemmology)
and became a gemologist (or gemmologist)?
Difficult question...
In fact this is simply the result
of 2 things:
First, my permanent attempts to
make my dreams become true.
Then because I was lucky to meet
many wonderful people who helped
me all along these years. I would
like here to take this occasion
to thanks them all. Without them
I would be probably doing something
completly different. They opened
to me a door to the wonderful world
of gemstones.
Thanks to them my vague dreams could
take a precise shape. They gave
me a passion for both gems and traveling.
They have influenced my choices
and finally they are still changing
my life.
"Gem business
is not about gemology or sciences,
it's about people",
Thanks to all of
you guys!
Vincent Pardieu,
April 2005, Bangkok
1)
FROM A FRENCH COUNTRYSIDE YOUTH
TO A GLOBETROTTER: If I got a direct
interest for gemstones on the late,
my passion for nature came early:
As soon as I was able to walk I
was following my father and my mother
in their walking spring and summer
holidays in visiting French countryside
and mountain areas. Both my parents
were from farmer families even if
they were not working directly in
farming, they were respectively
engineer and teacher; they transmitted
me a deep love for countryside things.
Then weekend after weekend, each
autumn and winter, I also followed
my uncle while hunting in woods
and vineyards in the French countryside
near Dordogne river. I soon developed
a strong attraction for both walking
and the wild. My uncle was not only
hunting in France but frequently
he was traveling to fancy places
in Africa, Europe or America, bringing
back home some wonderful exotic
stories... To satisfy my infinite
curiosity about the world surrounding
me, my parents provided me as soon
as I could read correctly a 20 volumes
illustrated encyclopedia. This encyclopedia
was the best gift a curious kid
like me ever gets as it became along
with books from Jules Verne, Joseph
Kessel, Jack London and JRR Tolkien,
my best friend. I got my very first
interest about rocks and stones
during summer holidays 1980 with
my cousin Xavier
Chone (now an expert in wine)
while searching for fossiles and
pyrite crystals near his family
house in Lorraine. He introduced
me to minerals while I gave him
some fishing tricks. That summer
I started a mineral collection and
the next year I was easily passionate
by geology at school. Wonderful
summer!
My
passions for history, geography,
the wild, traveling and hunting
gave me a short interest about military
things. At the age of 18, I decided
to join a French military academy
as infantry cadet. But after completing
the formation, I decided to spend
my life doing something else than
traveling carrying a gun. I decided
to study sciences at Bordeaux University,
France. Interested but not passionate
by the subject, I was not a brilliant
student: I've spend a lot of time
practicing bow hunting and with
a band of crazy friends: building
an association organizing "Live
Role Playing Games", which
are a sort of interactive "historical
or fantasy like medieval like"
events, very popular in south west
France, where medieval castles,
cities and forest are plentiful.:
Archery, riding , sword fighting
and acting were globally more exciting
to me than atoms and equations.
At least they were filling my needs
for action and contacts that my
science studies were not able to
fulfill. If these years were wonderful
as I was sharing passions with friends,
practicing sports, traveling...
I was on the other hand still searching
to give my life some sense without
real success. To finance my hobbies
I soon find a better job than teaching
mathematics and physics: I became
tour guide for a local tour operator:
"Voyages
De Maillard" based in Angouleme
a lovely small French city. In five
years I led more than 50 tours to
Spain, Portugal, Italy, Austria,
Germany, etc...
This great opportunity gave
me the possibility to go to visit
the world! While studying
for my science master with physical
chemistry as major, I decided to
try to make my interests for sciences
and traveling join and went to study
few months at the University of
Wales (UK) to finish my studies.
Experimenting there real laboratory
work, I got definitively convinced
that devoting my life to the only
practice of sciences was not a way
to follow: It was nice and intellectually
interesting to work in a chemistry
laboratory but well my taste for
communication and contact with different
people was seriously unsatisfied.
I decided finally to stop for a
while sciences in order to explore
more the traveling poss ibilities.
I decided to join a business school
in Toulouse, France to get a general
formation about business and especially
tourism business. After graduation,
I found a tour leader job for one
of the main French Tour operators:
FRAM
based in Toulouse: I was lucky to
be proposed to replace a missing
guide to go to lead a trip... to
Vietnam!
It was again a wonderful chance.
The trip was a success and it was the beginning
of 5 great years traveling as a
FRAM
tour leader. Vietnam and the rest
of Asia became soon my specialty
and each year I was taking regularly
2 or 3 months to explore by myself
these countries in order to be more
professional and knowledgeable while
guiding tours.
But
what about gems in all that could
you ask me?
Well,
if for a while my interest for natural
things had to hibernate, on the
other side my tour leader experiences
gave me the chance to visit many
museums and to get more interest
in art and beauty. I had there my
first real experiences with gemstones
and jewelry visiting the treasures
of the powerful in European capitals.
But well: Gems were not really easy
to access and I have to say that
my real lack of knowledge about
them did not make them looks that
interesting or attractive to me
at that time... I was not
yet ready to taste their interest:
To appreciate gems and especially
colored gemstones my own experience
made me think that there is a need
for gemological education, even
if to appreciate their beauty only
a pair of eyes is necessary... So
gems had to wait. But I
had the occasion and the chance
to meet on each trip many people
with completely different backgrounds,
from many different cultures and
I had the chance and the possibility
to communicate with them and learn
a lot from their dreams, success,
failures, regrets and interests.
My love and interest for
gems began by a deep curiosity for
humanity, human passions and the
diversity of human cultures.
2)
BURMA: DISCOVERING GEM PEOPLE AND
GEM CULTURE: My interest
from gems really came out when my
tour operator decided to open a
new destination for 1998: Myanmar
that was more known to me with this
magic evocative name: "Burma"
... As I was specialized on Asia,
I decided in Dec 1997 to go there
first on myself in order to get
some knowledge about the country
to be send later there with a group.
In order to prepare myself for this
trip I decided to read again one
of the books I had loved when I
was around 12 years old: "La
vallee des rubis" from Frenchman
Joseph Kessel. It was about a valley
named: Mogok... End January 1998,
I went to Burma with two friends
and there I had the chance to meet
an incredible Burmese man. It was
one of these magic encounter you
read about in books: I was quietly
writing on my diary, feeling the
activity of the buffaloes taking
out the wood from the water on the
Irrawaddy river banks near Mandalay:
He came to me aimed both by his
curiosity and some personal interest.
Poet and naturalist, he was in love
for its country, its natural wonders
that are its forests, its mountains
and its gems. Simple and open we
became immediate friends. But his
immediate interest was to make me
leave this place so he could with
his friends give himself to his
dark side: gambling and drinking...
without a foreigner to witness this
bad habit. He had the incredible
life of many artistic people from
such an "out of the common
world" country that after the
Second World War had experienced
anarchy, civil war and military
power. His name was U Phone Kyi:
We spend the day together visiting
islands and speaking about his country
and our dreams on the Irrawaddy
River. It was his way to take me
out from his gambling den... The
day after I decided to join him
on a few days trip near Mogok, visiting
sapphire mines and walking into
the Burmese wild. This encounter
and this trip changed my life as
he shared with me his passion for
Burmese gemstones and especially
for star rubies and sapphires...
This first experience in
the gemological field, full of Burmese
ways, gave me an immediate taste
at the opposite of the typically
western way to approach gemology
as a pure instrumental science.
On
the way back to Yangon, while slowly
passing the days on a merchant boat
descending the Irrawaddy River after
regrouping with my two friends,
I had the time to think about my
life and these incredible days with
U Phone Kyi. It became obvious to
me that gems could be the connecting
point of all my passions: Science,
history, geography, art, exotic
cultures, colorful people, traveling,
languages, adventure... I
had the feeling that I had finally
found my way traveling the misty
mountains around Mogok with an old
Burmese guy!
In
order to learn more about these
gems that could change my life,
I began to search for some books
on the subject: Something more than
just a basic book. I was happy to
find on my way back to Europe one
of the best book I've read in my
whole life: "Ruby
and sapphire", written
by gemologist Richard W. Hughes.
This book became my bible for several
years. It was perfectly in my vision
of a gemology as a complex secret
domain mixed between human and pure
sciences. It was about gems, alchemist
like treatments, exotic countries,
science, people, art... All that
I had interest in was present. This
book was a true revelation for me!
It took me two more years to plan
and finance my move from tourism
to gems: A decisive trip was my
return in Mandalay in December 1999
while studying Thai language in
Chiang Mai: I decided to spend the
turning of the century with U Phone
Kyi, my Burmese friend! I went back
to Burma and there spend 2 wonderful
weeks with U Phone Kyi: We had great
time together in Mandalay buying
and speaking about gems, dreaming
about futur e
expeditions... He wanted me to go
with him to the village he was once
married in the northern Kachin jungle
in order to capture an elephant
and start a trip together through
the Mountains of Kachin state and
Nagaland to finally reach India...
There we could sell the elephant
and come back with enough money
to begin some jade mining business.
Or may be, more simply we could
buy some gems near Mogok or some
jade around Hpakant and then transport
them through the misty mountains
to Chinese Yunnan... I was captured
by this simple old man for whom
all these completely crazy projects
were sounding like very natural
things! This trip gave me the occasion
to meet several dealers from Mogok
and finally hear about a book about
Mogok written by Ted
Themelis. On my way back to
Europe, while stopping in Bangkok,
I went to visit Ted to try to buy
one of his books. The deception
for me was great as the book was
not yet completed. Nevertheless
I spend a complete day with Ted
speaking a bout Burma, Mogok and
Burmese gems! I then began to meet
regularly Ted while passing in Bangkok
on my tours to Asia. We became friends
and I became one of his messengers
between Bangkok and Burma, trying
to help him on his fascinating project
to write his book
about Mogok. I was really
happy to help him as much as I could
on this project.
Ted
send me one day to get some old
photos from a Mogok gem dealer that
had an office in the Burmese capital:
Yangon. The dealer was U
Kyaw Thaung. He was again a
very rapid but deep friendship that
was born: U Kyaw Thaung is a nice,
easy and friendly speaking as many
Burmese are. We had a good conversation,
a great lunch and again a good conversation.
Finally we agreed: I will come back
this winter to study gemology along
with his nephew and gem cutting
with him and in exchange I will
teach both of them about computers!
U Kyaw Thaung advised me in order
to get the best of my time while
studying gems in Burma to find a
"dark field loupe", a
strange instrument that one of his
American friends, a gem dealer named
Bill
Larson provided him. Along with
this instrument that was so useful
to study cut gemstones, I had to
come with a good reference book
about inclusions in order to get
the best of my instrument... Finally
in November 2000, I was back in
Burma with my brand new dark field
loupe, my classic bible:
"Ruby and sapphire" and
my new fantastic book about gemstones
inclusions: The "Photoatlas
of Inclusions in Gemstones"
from Prof Edward Gubelin and John
Koivula. I never regretted these
investments as even if the books
and instruments were costly, they
were containing so much useful knowledge
that in fact I can say that they
are cheap! Each morning for the
next few months I spend then to
study gemology from Burmese teachers
at the Gem Genuine Association in
Yangon, Myanmar (Burma), I was also
initiated each afternoon by U Kyaw
Thaung to Burmese traditional gem
cutting when I was not scouting
Yangon gem markets meeting people
and Burmese gems. I spend there
five fabulous months living as a
Burmese among U Kyaw Thaung wonderful
family, learning with them seriously
gemology the "Burmese way".
U Kyaw Thaung was like a brother
to me, welcoming me in his house,
I learned a lot about gems and gem
business in Burma spending time
with him and his friends. Thanks
to him and his friend Andy,
I felled in love for gem crystals
and especially about Mogok crystals
and I soon started to collect not
only gems with inclusions but also
small gem crystals of the different
gems found in Burma. He opened to
my understanding many secrets of
the gemstone trade including one
of my favorites: "Gem
dealers are not really expert in
gems, in fact very few are gemologists,
but they are expert on people!"
These months there opened my mind
and at the end of this life experience
in Burma I was sure that I wanted
to move my life to live among gems
and more: among gem people!
Of course I also went back to Mandalay
to visit U Phone Kyi but arriving
there at the beginning of my studies
I received from friends the sad
news that my old friend has died
from AIDS while I was in France:
His easy but destructive lifestyle
made of dreams, poems and travels
into his loved Burma but also his
bad night habits gambling and drinking
in the smoky slums near the Irrawaddy
banks where alcohol, sex and drugs
are cheap but deadly, finally had
reason of his fragile health and
great dreams.
3)
THAILAND: STUDIES AND EXPERIENCES:
After my return in Bangkok with
my brand new gemology diploma, Ted
advised me to study gemology also
on a western way to complete my
formation. Back in France I first
studied the possibilities to become
a gem dealer. I tried to get some
profit from the few gems I've bought
during my studies. I rapidly find
out that doing gem business between
Burma and France was not that simple
as most of my purchased in Burma
were finally not that good bargains
and my Burmese gemologist diploma
was not really useful there... Not
to stay on this deception I decided
to use the rest of my savings to
come back in Bangkok as there was
no other place I could learn modern
gemology and spend my weekends getting
experience in the gem trade exploring
the famous Thai gem markets. Thailand
was the world capital of the ruby
and sapphire trade and my friend
Ted was living in Bangkok! I had
to continue my project there...
I
decided then to take the course
at the Gemological
Institute of America (GIA) as
I was told than its G.G. diploma
was better known worldwide than
others: Studying at GIA, the "world
gemological super power" was
sounding like a good idea to complete
my Burmese experiences. If I had
great time studying at GIA in a
very international environment.
Our teachers were very friendly
and I was able to get great friends
I'm still in contact with today.The
teaching was very professional but
I was quite disappointed to see
that I was not really able to see
the stones I dreamed to see after
reading many times "Ruby and
Sapphire" from Richard W. Hughes:
The gemstones at GIA were basic
and of low quality compared to the
gems I was able to study in Yangon,
from the private collection of the
GGA school owner. At GIA: No indication
about the gem origin, either for
natural or synthetic gems. But I
understand: My Burmese teacher has
bought himself all his stones and
he knew much more about them than
just their identity. While studying
in such a large organization as
GIA, things had to be different.
I was also surprised that very few
knowledge was provided on treatments.
The course was sadly not much going
to details regarding this aspect.
But of course there were also some
very good points like instrumentation,
marketing and as a former tour guide
I was really pleased to read all
the biographies of famous people
involved in the gem trade and the
historic references that where present
in the GIA course. The fact is that
to my understanding the GIA course
I attended was in its last days,
it was written during the 1990's
when colored stones treatments was
something quite new for the gemological
community. I had the feeling that
the course focus was to give a global
formation to sales people for retails
stores in the US or to entertain
"expatriate wives" willing
to get enough knowledge about their
jewelry and not really to turn people
in 6 months into "scientific
gemstone experts".
Well nothing wrong with that as
it is probably the main market for
them in USA and also as most students
had only a limited scientific background.
It was a globally very interesting
and it was a very positive experience
as it opened my mind to many new
aspects of the gem trade and the
gemological world. I realized that
there was many ways to approach
gemology and probably one way was
only better than another if it was
fitting your personal goals and
interests.
In fact the main difficulty for
a person willing to learn gemology
is to find the school teaching what
he needs. Studying at GIA bangkok
was enabling me to understand that
and to learn many things that are
still useful to me today. But at
that time to deepen my knowledge
on gems my best friends were still
"Ruby and sapphire" and
the "Photoatlas of inclusions
in Gemstones"...
During
this time at GIA I had the chance
to spend a lot of time with Ted
after my studies as he was living
at a short distance from both my
place and GIA Bangkok building.
He soon asked me to join him as
assistant on 2 scientific expeditions
first to Namya and Hpakant in Burmese
Kachin state and finally to my gem
heaven: Mogok.
Luckily for me I was there at the
right time when, after several years,
the Burmese government was again
willing to
allow foreigners to come to visit
its famous gem mining areas. We
were at that time the first foreigners
to visit Namya in July 2001 after
the ruby rush that this swampy area
experienced earlier in January 2001.
The team was composed of Ted Themelis
and Hemi
Englisher a spinel dealer. Ted
and Hemi had to travel through the
Kachin swamps using an elephant...
while I used my former hunting experience
to make my way walking through the
mud. The small photo on the top
left of each page on this website
that I also use as signature in
forums was taken during this field
trip. After a day discovering Namya
rubies and spinels, we finally reached
the famous jadeite mines in Hpakant.
Witnessing the Jadeite mining was
something for a young gemologist...
The Mogok expedition was also full
of wonders: I had there another
fantastic and unique time following
their steps. We spend that time
4 days running the Mogok valley
from the sapphire mines in the west
to the spinel areas in the east
and from the peridot mining in the
north to the central
ruby mines. From the warmth of Mogok
people simple houses to the glacial
storm that surprised us on the top
of Zalat Thaung Mountain, passing
by the misty morning landscapes
and the exceptional beauty I found
in Mogok people and gems, this trip
was wonder after wonder.
Helping Ted in these two expeditions
was a major experience for me: Ted
taught me how to do serious gemological
field work: I was enjoying taking
photos, writing field notes and
collecting samples for him. I'm
very grateful to Ted for all these
days working from dusk to dawn without
even the time for lunch break: It
was a hard but very good time. And
I never regretted the money invested
in these field trips...
While back in Bangkok, Ted also
found some utility to my interest
for inclusions and microphotography.
He pushed me further on that way
and it was found to be helpful as
Thailand became hot at this time
with a new treatment technology
involving beryllium. After graduating
from GIA in Dec 2002, I did for
him beginning 2002 many inclusion
photographs on this subject that
I was then happy to find later in
his booklet about "Beryllium
treated rubies and sapphires"
published in February 2003.
4) AIGS: BECOMING PROFESSIONAL
GEMOLOGIST: Ted was not
just a mentor but he was also a
great friend that helped me to find
a work after my studies... During
the Bangkok Gem and Jewelry Fair
in Feb 2002, Ted introduced me to
Henry
Ho: A famous Bangkok dealer.
Immediately I had with Henry a good
feeling and it was the beginning
of a great collaboration as Henry
Ho experience within the gem trade
is immense. He first gave me the
opportunity to discover his family
gemological institute: The AIGS:
Asian Institute of Gemological Sciences
where my "gemological hero":
Richard W. Hughes was working for
around 10 years. I had then the
possibility to pass gemologically
to the next level as I got the unique
opportunity to spend some time studying
at AIGS gemologica l
laboratory among a team of very
experienced Thai and Indian gemologists.
I got also the opportunity to learn
from knowledgeable visitors from
other laboratories visiting AIGS.
Thanks to Georges Bosshart from
the Gubelin Gem Lab, I was introduced
at the AIGS Laboratory to the gemological
applications of spectroscopy using
FTIR, UV-Vis and EDXRF. Motivated
by this introduction to study again,
I was able to upgrade my technical
gemological skills to a professional
level and then reviewing my old
spectroscopy and chemistry courses
that I bring back from a trip to
France, I was able to use these
advanced gemological instruments
available in the laboratory. Finally
I was given the possibility to study
all the different rubies and sapphires
from the AIGS collection. It was
an old dream from the time I opened
Richard W. Hughes book! All the
Kashan, Douros, Ramaura, Chatham,
and many other stones I read about
in Richard book were available at
AIGS. For the gemology students
learning at the institute it is
excellent: All the gemstones are
documented there with their origin,
eventual treatments! Of course as
in GIA the stones were not very
high quality but at least I had
a better idea about what I was looking
at.
At this time I was spending also
a lot of time in Burma, visiting
markets, mining areas buying gesmtones
for Henry Ho. My collaboration with
such an experienced gem dealer as
Henry Ho helped me to touch some
of the gemological aspects that
are usually off limit to standartd
gemology students: The understanding
of the complex quality aspect of
gems and their links to pricing...
Why this given gem can worth 20
times more than this other one?
Thanks to Henry and I've to say
some hard work, I was soon able
to pass from student to teacher,
from field trip assistant to expedition
leader with the same idea that whatever
and whoever we are, we are still
everyday learning from other when
we are sharing with others.
Henry also gave me the unique chance
to meet regularly some of the gemology
giants I knew as names on my favorite
books or magazines. I was not even
really dreaming to share one day
some time with them! One of my best
human and gemological experience
was our visit to Prof Edward Gubelin,
in Lucern, Switzerland... 
He was the author with John Koivula
of the "Photoatlas
of Inclusions in Gemstones",
one of my favorite reference book
with "Ruby
and Sapphire" I
used each day while looking at inclusions
during my studies in Burma or then
at the AIGS.
I had there the incredible chance
to study for 3 days a part of Prof
E.Gubelin
personal gemstone collection,
to discuss with him about this or
that aspect of a given gemstone.
He was impressive of calm, knowledge
and attention. If each of his words
were for my like coming from heaven,
he most impressed three times during
our stay while telling me with wonderful
curious eyes and a great humility:
"I don't know"...
I was shocked!
Several times since then I used
this story while teaching at AIGS
in order to advise students not
to be overconfident with their skills:
"If Prof
E.Gubelin told me 3 times
in 3 days "I don't know",
well you can then also tell me that
from time to time or I will feel
somewhere suspicious about your
real gemological level". This
experience with Prof. E. Gubelin
was bringing to my mind one expression
from one of my favorite chemistry
teachers: "In science the good
way to advance is not by finding
the good answers but by asking the
good questions..." I like to
summarize this like telling this:
"A good gemologist is not afraid
to say "I don't know",
while a bad one is afraid to admit
his ignorance"...
My
collaboration with Henry Ho was
facilitated because we were sharing
the same interest for Burma (Myanmar),
Burmese gems, Internet and also
the AIGS
where with his help I soon became
a gemstone buyer, a gemology teacher,
then a lab gemologist and finally
in October 2004, I had the honor
to become "AIGS Gemstone Identification,
Grading and Research Laboratory"
Executive Director. As a result,
I had also the privilege to become
an ICA
member.
I was pleased to follow somewhere
Richard Hughes steps...
Working at AIGS lab was a pleasure
as the lab has a very good team
of skilled gemologists: Suree, Siem,
Suyot and A were combining great
professional and personal qualities.
I learned a lot working with them
mainly on ruby, sapphire and jade
and it was a real pleasure. From
2001 to 2006, Bangkok was an incredible
place with gemstones from all over
the world coming there to be cut,
heated, traded or set into jewelry.
I was able to focus on ruby and
sapphire treatments and especially
the lead
glass and the beryllium issues
but also on "origin determination".
After two years as Laboratory Director
at AIGS lab. I decided finaly to
resign in October 2006 and in Feb
2007 I joined the Gubelin gem lab
in Luzern Switzerland as gemologist.
It was not an easy choice as I was
really enjoying working with my
fellow gemologist at the AIGS lab
and with Henry Ho.
5)
MEETING INTERNET AND GOING AROUND:
This story would not be completed
without to speak about Internet.
As this website: fieldgemology is
the result of my interest for both
gemology, traveling and the Internet:
As I said just before, after some
interesting experiences as gemstone
buyer in Burma (mainly buying spinels
and crystals), I became for a time
more and more involved as advisor
to my Thai friend Koranan Nawarat
(a former AIGS student) in www.gemwow.com
adventure regarding to Burmese crystals
and gemstones. This project gave
me an interest for Internet and
this website is somewhere a direct
result of this influence on me.
Thanks to it I learned a lot about
website and Internet and even if
I'm not really a programmer and
a web designer I've learned enough
to think about building websites.
After building two new websites
for both AIGS School
and Laboratory,
this knowledge became very useful
when I started to think about doing
something more personal in order
to experience some of my ideas in
the net:
As a "shameless travel addicted
gemologist" (copyright: Richard
W. Hughes), I was for very long
time interested by origin determination
for rubies and sapphires. Each time
I was looking at a nice stone I
was wandering where it could have
been mined from. As this field is
nowadays more than a real challenge,
especially for a gemological laboratory
located in bangkok were gems from
all around the world are coming
just few days after their discovery
in some remote place of Asia and
Africa, I have begun a personal
field trip program to visit gem
mining areas of interest around
Bangkok, first.
It turned to be possible as in June
2004, I decided to stop totaly my
collaboration with gemwow.com. More
sadly it was also meaning to stop
my gem buying activities in Burma.
I was then focussing on my work
as a consultant gemologist for the
AIGS gemological laboratory and
as a gemology teacher for the AIGS
school in charge mainly of the synthetic
and treatment course. Great time...
but what a challenge as I had to
face my students questions. As one
of chemistry teacher used to tell
us at the Bordeaux university in
France:
"To
advance in science the most important
is not to find the good answers
but to find the good questions."
Thanks
to the AIGS students I had many
good questions and soon I had to
find a way to find better answers.
Pailin sapphires and Thai rubies
gemology was among these challenges
as their "heated" or "unheated"
status was sometimes confusing me.
I decided to try to find out about
these stones and their treatment.
It was now more possible as I had
stop my Burmese trips, and as I
could not stay quietly in my room
in Bangkok watching Thai TV on the
week ends, I decided to start going
around and visit the places in Thailand
and around I was also dreaming to
visit. To solve all my problems,
the best decision was obviously
to go to the mines, get some stones
and then perform some heat treatment
experiments. As in 2004 the AIGS
management was not willing to help
me to finance such research trips,
I decided to open these new "week
end field trips" to some of
the students from my classes willing
to share my private gemological
expeditions.
Many AIGS students like Anera Zivkovic,
Siggy
Ellenberger, David
Bright, Jean
Baptiste Senoble, Yannick
Mandaba, Samuel Boissinot, Tanguy Lagache, Edouard
Monges, Noah Severs, Guillaume Soubiraa and others followed me regularly
while visiting gem mines sharing
each time the cost of the trip with
me as I was clearly told by the
AIGS school management that "AIGS
was not a travel agency". Basically I applied the technique Ted Themelis did with me, whihc was very fine for me: Each participant pay for his part.
I've to say at this point for justice
to be done, that the reasons they
joined me is also dealing with the
personal project of an other Frenchman
sharing the same great passion for
gemology: Jean Marie Arlabosse.
If Jean Marie is not as traveler
as me, he has created from his "French
Riviera" a wonderful personal
website of great gemological interest:
geminterest.com.
After getting some interest for
the Internet things, I soon became
a regular visitor and blogger in
www.geminterest.com forum under
the name of "Mogok". It
gave me the wonderful opportunity,
as I was living isolated in Bangkok,
to begin to create contacts with
other people sharing the same passion
for gems in my own country. I was
soon happy to welcome in Bangkok
members or simple visitors from
the great community around the geminterest.com
forum and these people were just
dreaming about one thing: to come
with me to see the real stuff: The
mining areas and the gem markets...
I had from May 2004 to Jan 2007
twenty one field trips to sapphire
mining areas in Pailin, Cambodia.
Excited by this French forum I then
find two other great forums and
communities using English language
in which people interested in the gemological
field could visit regularly either
to ask or answer questions: pricescope.com
and yourgemologist.com.
These forums were very fine in the old days but as they got a more commercial attitude many member left (or were banned) and moved to a new independant forum: GemologyOnline.com
These English speaking forums were
great for me to improve both my
English and widen my understanding
about gemology and people interested in gemology. Thanks to the excellent
questions I found there and the
possibility to read the opinion
of so many interesting people! It
was great to read and then meet
such interesting personalities as
Richard
W. Hughes or Richard
W. Wise. One of my best moment
in these forums was to have got
the possibility to get finally in
contact with Richard Hughes, whose
book, as I've written earlier, gave
me the desire to join to the ruby
and sapphire trade after my first
trip to Mogok in 1997.
And finally, many emails later, we
became good friends and I could
realize my dream to travel
to gem mines with Richard when he
asked me to join him on his trip
to Madagascar in September 2005.
As I just had scouted the island
in June
2005 for 40 days, I was very
happy to be his private guide and
to help him to visit Ilakaka, Andilamena and Andrebabe mining
areas were very few foreigners even
went! It was just great as one of
my old dreams has finally again
become true...(Please find
and read here Richard's Madagascar
fieldtrip report, while you
might also be interested in reading
the trilogy on Madagascar: part
1, part
2 and part
3, I've written for Colored
Stone magazine with my friend Richard
Wise, after these two expeditions
to Madagascar).
During this September
trip I met a young French guy who
had decided that Madagascar was
the right place to learn Gemology.
This young French guy, Guillaume
Soubiraa finally came at AIGS in
Bangkok to study the "synthetic
and treatment" course and in
summer
2006 he became my fieldtrip
assistant to Pakistan,
Afghanistan,
Tajikistan
and China.
It was then great to meet again
Richard Hughes and Dana Schorr in
Tajikistan and have together a great
three weeks fieldtrip to the Pamir
ruby and spinel mines! ( Please
find
here and read Richard's Tajikistan
fieldtrip report)
As a result of this "Internet
Forums/Fieldtrip" dynamics,
I lead many expeditions to Mogok
in Burma, Pailin
in Cambodia, Kanchanaburi and Chanthaburi
in Thailand and Houay Xai in Laos...
The growing success of these field
trips was obvious to me as the number
of candidates to come along with
me was growing each time. I was
not really surprised to see the
deep interest that many gemologists,
simple students (or even people
that had no knowledge at all about
gemology) had for visiting gem mining
areas: It was for them somewhere
as attractive and wonderful as it
was for me while traveling in my
early days with U Phone Kyi or Ted:
A unique way to go to meet differently
the gems that passion us..
A unique opportunity to meet also
both the gem people and the real
gem culture missing in Europe where
gems are seen by most people as
expensive and secrets mysterious
wonders coming from oversea...
These expeditions were also for me a unique
way to make friendship with these
young students who were so much
in many aspect as I was when I came
in Asia searching for gemological
knowledge. These travels were
also very useful to select
some students in order to come with
me for much longer and serious expeditions
as the fieldtrips I organized during
Summer
2005 (Vietnam, Sri Lanka, Madagascar,
Kenya, Tanzania) and summer
2006 (Pakistan, Afghanistan, Tajikistan
and China).
I think that my fieldtrip companions
were excited to be able to travel
with somebody able to give them
explanations both on the culture,
the history of the visited country
and also on the gems they were able
to see. My tour guide side was very
pleased to make them happy and to
witness them having the same great
time I had discovering the "secrets
of the gem trade"... with
Ted Themelis and Hemi Englisher.
(Note: I want to explain why I've
choosen here the wording "Secrets
of the Gem Trade", it is the
occasion for me to offer you a link
to another great book about gemology
from my other "Richard"
Internet forum friend: Richard W.
Wise. This book is truly the best
book on gems and gemology I've read
since I got in my hand "Ruby
and Sapphire" and the "Photoatlas
of inclusions". It is great
to be able to learn and understand
about Richard passion regarding
gems: Quality. The book cover a
domain which is sadly most of the
time not really covered in gemological
school as no gemological school
can afford to use as student stone
any quality gems. As a result young
gemologists, especially those who
studied in countries where gemstones
are difficult to access, have most
of the time never see a "good
stone" or if they saw some
they usually were not able to really
study them, which is a little bit
ironic... and explain why I advise
people to go to study gems in a
gem trading center.)
6) THE FIELDGEMOLOGY PROJECT: After
my early fieldtrips to Pailin, Kanchanaburi
and Chanthaburi, I began to think
that there was something to do about
this subject mixing the two domains
I have some experience in: : Gemology
and Traveling...
Something that could complete or
illustrate the great books from
the "two Richards"...
But something quite different from
what they did. Something fun that
could be useful and pleasant to
people...
I tried first with www.aigsthailand.com
website that I build during summer
2004, as I was not working anymore
on the gemwow.com project. I thought
that my experience regarding websites
could help the AIGS gemological
school to motivate people to follow
my steps and come to study gemology
in Thailand. Which is I believe
still a good idea to start in gemology.
Mixing gems, and traveling to exotic
places was attractive to me. But
then I was told that somel people
complained that www.aigsthailand.com
website was, under my direction,
too much like an "Indiana Jones
Outfit" which was also written
in "Bastard English" and
furthermore "AIGS was not a
travel agency". In Jan 2005
I decided sadly to stop my work
as part time gemology teacher for
AIGS school and webmaster for www.aigsthailand.com.
In serious conflict with the school
managements I decided to focus on
the laboratory and the website I
created for it after this conflict:
www.aigslaboratory.com
. After the gemwow.com and the aigsthailand.com
adventures, I was feeling that I
was not willing to loose a third
website, on which I was working
day and night. In Jan 2005 I began
then to think that I had to get
positive about the concept of an
"Indiana Jones Outfit".
Such a website could be useful to
promote gemology in the field and
help people willing to go to learn
more about gemstones without the
reality of the gemstone trade from
the mine to the main trading centers.
In one word, thanks to the people
that were not appreciating my work
and my vision of the things: Fieldgemology
was born... In these aspect, I learned a lot and benefit in fact a lot from the different conflict I had with people from AIGS or Gemwow management as thanks to them I found the energy to do for myself what I was willing to do for them!
Now after the gemwow.com and the
aigsthailand.com experiences, I
had an independant website to have
some fun with and spend my week
ends and evening time with some constructive
projects that could not be taken
out of my hands.
The
things started greatly in January
2005 as I started to work on a project
to give more exposure to the AIGS
lab I was directing. Gemological
Laboratories are about data, communication,
ethics and independance in my opinion.
It means that we need to get as
much knowledge about the gems we
work with and at the same time do
the things for people to know that
this knowledge is present in the
lab.
As after the Asian crisis in 1997 AIGS had
some dark days as many experienced gemologists left the lab and then very few was
done regarding research and communication,
I put these aspect on my priority
list working hard on the new treatment
hitting the gem trade: The lead
glass treatment. We published
a study on the subject that was
very appreciated by the trade and
then started to find ways to collaborate
with other gemological labs and
associations.
The first success in this domain
was that I could successfully organize
and lead two 10 days field trips
for 2 groups of the AFG "Association
Francaise de Gemmologie", the
French gemological Association in
march 2005. Then visiting the Gubelin
Gem Lab people at the Basel gem
Fair in Switzerland I was able to
build a common research project
with the Gubelin
Gem Lab and the ICA,
to start an ambitious field trip
program to gem mining areas and
collect data on new ruby and sapphire
mining areas in order to update the lab collection and do some promotion for our services.
The program started in summer 2005
by a four months expedition to Vietnam,
Sri Lanka, Madagascar, Kenya and
finally Tanzania. Along with former
AIGS student Jean Baptiste Senoble
(And former AIGS student Tanguy
Lagache for the Madagascar expedition
in Jul 2005) I was able to visit
most of the ruby and sapphire deposits
in these areas and collect samples
that will be then usefull for some
research work on origin determination
regarding these deposits. This great
trip gave me also the opportunity
to be asked by Richard hughes to
guide him in Madagascar for the
expedition he was planning in Sept
2005. This private expedition financed
this time by Richard Hughes was
great as I was available to realize
an old dream (to travel with Richard...)
and to deepen my knowledge on Ilakaka
and Andilamena stones. The samples
we collected from these areas during
this expedition were found to be very important
for the gemological community and
prooved that such expedition are
useful and valuable. The fact was that we discovered that the blue sapphire samples we collected from a mine in the south of Ilakaka we containing naturaly some beryllium. As this discovery happened few months after the arrival of beryllium treated blue sapphires in Bangkok, it helped a lot to understand and handle better this difficult issue.
As the first summer
fiedtrip was very succesful, we
decided then to continue in summer
2006 with a new expedition to Western
Himalaya and Central Asia as new
rubies possibly from Tajikistan
appeared in the market in Jan 2006.
I lead then for this second expedition
a two months fieldtrip to Pakistan,
Afghanistan, Tajikistan and China.
This time I was joined by former
AIGS student Guillaume Soubiraa
for the complete trip and the Tajikistan
part of the expedition was planned
as a common fieldtrip with Richard
Hughes and Dana Schorr, which turned
to be as great as gemologicaly speaking
than on more personal way.
It was for me perfect occasions
to invest in some good photography
equipment and start "fieldgemology"!
Today
I'm not anymore working as Director
of the AIGS Gemological Laboratory,
in Bangkok. I'm currently living
in Switzerland as in February 2007,
I've started working as gemologist
for the Gubelin
Gem Lab in Lucerne. It was a great opportunity to work in a different environment, see and
study many exceptional gemstones
as the Gubelin Gem Lab is known
for "Exceptional Gemstones" and
their "Origin Determination": (Read
more about origin determination:
Part
1, Part
2, Part
3).
I'm fully aware of the chance I
have to have been accepted in this
lab as it is one of the most famous
gem lab in the world. An independant
lab with a rich tradition, in permanent
contact with the trade, sending
its gemologists all around the world
to check stones during OPTs,
visit new gem deposits and collect
data them. A lab with a great team
of experienced and passionate gemologists
and finaly a very complete lab with the best
level of instrumentationa gem lab gemologist
can dream about. It was my image
of Gubelin before to join it, and
I'm happy today to see that I was
right about it.
Of course I'm very busy at Gubelin
learning new techniques, sharing
knowledge with my collegues, studying
the lab data collection and the
most beautiful gems in the world:
Gems we see later on famous auctions
house catalogues. But
working at Gubelin, I still
have some evenings and week ends
to fill here in Switzerland and
I can use them to continue to travel around the
world to explore the the gem trade as the Gubelin Gem Lab management allowed me to continue my hobby: Building a website about gemology and travel.
During the last one year and half at the Gubelin Gem Lab, I was able to continue to travel around the world during my holidays: I visited again Tanzania in October 2007 with again Richard W. Hughes and Guillaume Soubiraa but also Mike Rogers, Warne and Monty Chitty and Philippe Brunot. These three intense weeks together were a great opportunity to complete the work I did in 2005 wit Jean Baptiste Senoble and complete my reference collection of Kenyan and Tanzanian gems.
In December 2007 I was also able to make an old dream become true: Thanks to my friend Kham Vannaxay from Bangkok, I was able with my colleague and friend at the Gubelin Gem Lab Christian Dunaigre to visit the Mergui cultured South Sea pearl farming area in Burma. A wonderful expedition...
Then finaly in April 2008, thanks to the work I did in Tanzania in October 2007 I was able to build and perform with gemologist Jean Baptiste Senoble a short expedition to the new ruby deposit near Dodoma at Winza. We were the first foreign gemologist to visit this mining area which had produced some amazing gems after its "discovery" in November 2007.
Now I'm preparing myself to complete my new East Africa survey by returning to Madagascar. I helped the French Gemological Association to visit this huge gem island with two groups of 25 people... With again Jean Baptiste Senoble and Guillaume Soubiraa we will spend few days with each group and in the between we will explore some new gem rich lands... Thanks to this new expedition I will be able to update the fieldgemology Madagascar pages. I hope that it will be useful.
To conclude, my
purpose with fieldgemology is
simply to help people to understand
more where the gems they love come
from. It is also a way to thanks and give some promotion to the people who help me during my expeditions allowing me to visit their mines and spending some time explaining what they are doing.
I feel that, traveling to mining areas to collect samples in order to update my understanding of Origin determination of gemstones, I've the opportunity to help people from these mining areas, giving them some exposure, and also people from consuming markets, providing them some useful information. It is a lot of work, but I'm happy to do it as I found out that the best way to help myself in this tough gemological world is to help others first.
Understanding where the gems they bought come from help people in consuming countries to love even more their
gems:
Mining and trading are indeed very difficult
work but many people I met there at the mines were wonderful people, sometimes very poor, sometimes wealthy but in all cases they have hope in their future, they were believing in what they were doing, they had face and pride.
And a man with face and pride even poor is already somewhere a rich man!
I hope that fieldgemology.org
will raise your interest in gems
and in the people working hard for
others to enjoy their beauty.
I hope that you
will appreciate this website and
have some pleasure and fun visiting
its pages.

Note:
I hope that the lecture of my "Frenchglish"
or "bastard-english" as
some fancy minds called it sometimes
in the past was not too annoying
for you. If you have some suggestions
to give me, please do not hesitate
to
contact me, I will be happy
to consider them.
All
the best,
Vincent
Pardieu, (B. Sc., G.G.A, G.G.)
"Travel addicted gemologist"
This page was updated in July 2008
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