Foreigner’s passion for pearl on Con Dao island
At Jordan’s pearl-oyster farm on the sea.
VietNamNet Bridge - The number of tourists to Con Dao island district of southern Ba Ria-Vung Tau province is increasing. Under Con Dao’s socio-economic development plan, the island district targets to welcome 200-250,000 tourists a year by 2010 and 500-700,000 tourists a year by 2020. Of the tourists who come to Con Dao, many of them are sure to come for pearl.
The determination of the ‘pearl Westerner’
From the centre of the Con Dao district, it is easy to ask for the way to the house of the ‘pearl Westerner,’ a nickname the Con Dao people call Jordan Lee, from Australia.
Jordan Lee is the first foreigner to start business in Con Dao island by opening a farm to raise oysters to cultivate pearls.
With an initial investment of over a hundred of thousand dollars, after six years, the couple of Jordan and Pham Thi Kim Cuc multiplied hundreds of millions of young oysters and released them to the sea.
The couple have been particularly successful in cultivating pearls in the oysters and have already harvested cultivated pearls.
Jordan has not only helped save oysters but has also created a trademark for Con Dao cultivated pearls.
The villa where the family of Jordan and Kim Cuc live and also the office of the Con Dao Pearl Company has been decorated in such a way that any one can realise at once the passion for sea and pearls of its owners.
Jordan displays the first cultivated pearls he has harvested in the two cases in the house, the achievements the couple has recorded after overcoming great difficulties.
Jordan first arrived in Vietnam 13 years ago as a technician to cultivate pearls in oysters for the Nha Trang Pearl Company. At that time, Nha Trang was among the first places in Vietnam to develop cultivating pearls in oysters.
Once he came to Con Dao to conduct a survey on water and sea environment there, he immediately realized that the conditions in Con Dao were favourable for raising oysters for pearls.
In 2001, Jordan Lee and his wife Kim Cuc were officially granted the status of residents of Con Dao. They lived on the island since.
With support from Japanese and Australian experts, the Vietnam Con Dao Pearl Company was established, focusing on cultivating, producing and selling pearls
At first, Jordan bought oysters from local farmers. However, the source of supply of oysters is not big enough because the locals exploited oysters in an unrestrained manner to sell their shells to traders for making handicrafts.
In order to meet the demand for oysters, Jordan decided to open an oysters-raising farm to increase the supply of the Con Dao oysters. He has been allowed to hire 100 hectares of sea surfaces to raise oysters for pearls.
Difficulties
Despite the strong northwesterly wind in Con Dao, Jordan and his workers can always be found present on the sea-farm. It take 20 minutes by a speed-boat from the island to the lighter on the Con Dao sea. There are days Jordan and his wife had to travel several times from the island to the farm and back.
About 20 workers have taken turns to work on the farm.
It often takes five years to harvest cultivated pearls from an oyster since it was born.
The cultivation of pearls into an oyster is very important as it will decide how beautiful the cultivated pearls are, said Jordan.
Jordan farm has released hundreds of millions of oysters to the sea for natural reproduction. According to him, it will be a success if only one million of them develop well till they are old enough (two years) to be able to cultivate pearls.
With great efforts, Jordan and his wife have proved that the cultivation of pearls in oysters in Con Dao island can be successful and promises great potentials for development.
Achievements
The success in multiplying raised oysters in Con Dao has not only met the demands for long-term oyster-pearl production but also helped balance the ecological environment as wild oysters had previously been unrestrainedly exploited.
Jordan’s company have bought a total of 30,000 oysters from local people for pearl cultivation. The company has helped raise the income of local people through buying oysters and giving them jobs during harvesting.
According to experts, the quality of Con Dao pearls is in no way inferior to any other pearls, including those produced in Australia, which is considered as the world leading producer of cultivated pearls.
As many as 80% of pearls produced in Con Dao have been exported to foreign markets, including Japan and Australia. The remaining 20% have been sold to domestic jewelry companies.
(Source: Nhan Dan)

Mr. Tran Doan Thien
The ex-soldier’s ‘state secret’ of black pearls
A retired army officer in southern Vietnam is harboring what he called a “state secret,” a method to produce black pearls from freshwater oysters, once thought only possible in marine oysters
Colonel Tran Doan Thien from Ho Chi Minh City’s Tan Binh district used to be stationed along the central coasts of Ha Tinh province where he made friends with many fishermen and pearl cultivators.
Ever since he stumbled upon one lustrous pearl while looking for oysters for food, Thien dreamed of producing pearls himself.
He retired in 1985 and formed a team to raise oysters and try cultivating pearls.
“Things were difficult at that time. Nothing was certain. We had to do research, raise oysters and culture the pearls, and we could only afford to eat instant noodles,” he said.
He even had to sell his only motorbike.
“Everyone thought we [the team] were weird but we were always optimistic”.
Through trial and error, Thien’s team succeeded in producing and selling beautiful white pearls.
But he never stopped there.
Black-jet hint
Thien recalled he once visited France and saw black pearls on sale four or five times more expensive than their white counterparts due, as he later found out, to their rarity.
He decided to cultivate the elusive black pearls. However, his efforts were in vain until chatting with his wife one day he came up with an idea as she smiled, revealing healthy, but jet-black teeth. Tooth blackening used to be popular in Vietnam, and can still be seen in many older women.
Since teeth are composed of calcium like pearls, Thien thought, he could change the latter’s color if he cared to alter some basic elements from the beginning, just as his wife’s teeth had changed color.
He then altered his culturing and implanting processes and managed to produce a black pearl from Sinanodonta Jourdyi, a kind of oyster taken from southern highland Lam Dong province.
His black pearls are harvested two years after nucleus implantation and culture in freshwater. One 13-17mm pearl goes for US$1,000-$2,000.
State secret
Hearing Vietnam was able to produce black pearls from freshwater oysters, experts and entrepreneurs from Japan, France, Taiwan and China flocked to his house.
They all admired and were surprised at his lustrous black pearls.
However, they were surprised even more after he rejected their million dollar business proposals.
The colonel explained his method was a “state secret” and could not be divulged to foreigners.
However, he promised to show a select number of devoted and trustworthy cultivators how to make black pearls from freshwater oysters on the condition they not sell the know-how to foreign countries.
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