realrockhound
Cave Dweller
Chucking leaverite at tweekers
Member since June 2020
Posts: 4,483
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Post by realrockhound on Mar 6, 2023 0:15:25 GMT -5
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Post by jasoninsd on Mar 6, 2023 1:55:16 GMT -5
Kingsley North has them for $5 a pound...but I don't know anything about "grading" on these...
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Post by 1dave on Mar 6, 2023 2:08:53 GMT -5
I wrote about them in my book - payhip.com/b/wD7Fl 260 8.5" X 11" pages, $5.00 They ARE Thundereggs! but very odd! The magma chamber they formed in had excess calcium. Thundereggs typically break at an interior sphere boundary, creating the "Dimple and pimple." This image is wrong. I was in too big of a hurry when I made it. The Top plate is usually smaller than the bottom plate that still has the "button" attached to it. Because of the calcium Coconuts usually break to the very center. Some Dugway Utah T-eggs do the same. When they first came on the scene they almost put the Geode Kid out of business. He was selling T-eggs for $30.00 / 100lb sack. The Coconuts hit the market at $5.00 / 100lb sack. 1961 Just outside of the Petrified Forest by Holbrook Arizona. Calcium plates. Smoky Quartz. Iron makes citrine quartz crystals. If uranium molecules were present, radiation converts the citrine to amethyst.
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Post by HankRocks on Mar 6, 2023 6:59:31 GMT -5
I will say that they have not been a good seller for me over the last 2 or 3 years. Reducing the number I have out on the table for upcoming Show in half to make space for better sellers. The ones with crystal lined cavities seem to do ok but still not what I would have expected. Usually I end up having to cut 6 or 7 open to find one with a cavity. May have to start slabbing the non-cavity ones as the slabs seems to sell.
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realrockhound
Cave Dweller
Chucking leaverite at tweekers
Member since June 2020
Posts: 4,483
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Post by realrockhound on Mar 6, 2023 11:14:50 GMT -5
Thank you guys.
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Post by orrum on Mar 7, 2023 7:44:47 GMT -5
Hey @dave1 what boo?? Jow do I get one?
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Post by orrum on Mar 7, 2023 7:45:19 GMT -5
1dave
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Post by orrum on Mar 7, 2023 7:45:54 GMT -5
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Post by orrum on Mar 7, 2023 7:46:07 GMT -5
Got it
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Post by 1dave on Mar 7, 2023 8:36:11 GMT -5
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wpotterw
spending too much on rocks
Member since September 2016
Posts: 446
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Post by wpotterw on Mar 7, 2023 9:30:04 GMT -5
I got one too, haven't read all of it yet, though.
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Post by 1dave on Mar 7, 2023 11:44:26 GMT -5
I got one too, haven't read all of it yet, though. I hope it fills you with worthwhile new information.
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wpotterw
spending too much on rocks
Member since September 2016
Posts: 446
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Post by wpotterw on Mar 7, 2023 14:12:48 GMT -5
I got one too, haven't read all of it yet, though. I hope it fills you with worthwhile new information. Yeah, it will replace some of the BS that I'm full of now (or DS, in deference to RWA3006).
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thegeodeguy
off to a rocking start
Member since March 2023
Posts: 6
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Post by thegeodeguy on Mar 21, 2023 22:10:08 GMT -5
The Coconut geodes (aka Choya Geodes) can be among the finest widely available unopened geodes out there. And by this I mean there is large color variation (Smoky, Blue, White, Clear, Purple) lots of a secondary crystal formations (Siderite, several unique calcite configurations, Hematite, Goethite, Todorkite, Ramsdellite, Pyrolusite, Mordenite, Gypsum, Opal, Kaolinite, Apatite, Beidellite, Birnessite, Rancieite, Cryptomelane, and Hollandite) and to top all that off many have very pretty banded agate walls. However, just like everything in the Rockhounding world, not everyone you open is going to be a knockout beauty queen (although beauty is in the eye of the beholder). But I will say the large majority of them (as you can tell from the ones you cut open) are pretty Awesome. Back 15+ years ago there used to be larger percentage of Amethyst that would come out of there, but they're still probably hitting about 10%. My one piece of advice on the Coconuts is know who you're buying them from as there's no way to tell the difference between a solid, semi-hollow, and super hollow geode by just looking at a picture of them. Be sure to look for whether they've been pre-sorted or if they're just mine run. Don't get me wrong I enjoy cutting the occasional nodule, but they are definitely more work! There's a little more info on the Coconut geodes on our site, but if you want to know the entire history, and the operation, I highly recommend the book "Geodes: Nature's Treasures" by June Culp Zeitner and Brad Cross it's an incredible wealth of knowledge (as I'm sure Dave's book is). Here's a link to both our section on Coconut geodes as well as a link to their book: Coconut Geodes: www.geodeguys.com/choyageodesPops (Leo) and myself in one of the Choya Geode mines with Memo (Son of the OG mine owners) in the background Picture of the Rhyolite overburden with the soft ash tufts below All the solids (nodules) that have been sorted out back at the Ranch
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realrockhound
Cave Dweller
Chucking leaverite at tweekers
Member since June 2020
Posts: 4,483
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Post by realrockhound on Mar 21, 2023 22:48:00 GMT -5
The Coconut geodes (aka Choya Geodes) can be among the finest widely available unopened geodes out there. And by this I mean there is large color variation (Smoky, Blue, White, Clear, Purple) lots of a secondary crystal formations (Siderite, several unique calcite configurations, Hematite, Goethite, Todorkite, Ramsdellite, Pyrolusite, Mordenite, Gypsum, Opal, Kaolinite, Apatite, Beidellite, Birnessite, Rancieite, Cryptomelane, and Hollandite) and to top all that off many have very pretty banded agate walls. However, just like everything in the Rockhounding world, not everyone you open is going to be a knockout beauty queen (although beauty is in the eye of the beholder). But I will say the large majority of them (as you can tell from the ones you cut open) are pretty Awesome. Back 15+ years ago there used to be larger percentage of Amethyst that would come out of there, but they're still probably hitting about 10%. My one piece of advice on the Coconuts is know who you're buying them from as there's no way to tell the difference between a solid, semi-hollow, and super hollow geode by just looking at a picture of them. Be sure to look for whether they've been pre-sorted or if they're just mine run. Don't get me wrong I enjoy cutting the occasional nodule, but they are definitely more work! There's a little more info on the Coconut geodes on our site, but if you want to know the entire history, and the operation, I highly recommend the book "Geodes: Nature's Treasures" by June Culp Zeitner and Brad Cross it's an incredible wealth of knowledge (as I'm sure Dave's book is). Here's a link to both our section on Coconut geodes as well as a link to their book: Coconut Geodes: www.geodeguys.com/choyageodesPops (Leo) and myself in one of the Choya Geode mines with Memo (Son of the OG mine owners) in the background Picture of the Rhyolite overburden with the soft ash tufts below All the solids (nodules) that have been sorted out back at the Ranch Amazing. Thank you so much
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wargrafix
Cave Dweller
Member since June 2023
Posts: 1,085
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Post by wargrafix on Aug 24, 2024 21:05:01 GMT -5
The Coconut geodes (aka Choya Geodes) can be among the finest widely available unopened geodes out there. And by this I mean there is large color variation (Smoky, Blue, White, Clear, Purple) lots of a secondary crystal formations (Siderite, several unique calcite configurations, Hematite, Goethite, Todorkite, Ramsdellite, Pyrolusite, Mordenite, Gypsum, Opal, Kaolinite, Apatite, Beidellite, Birnessite, Rancieite, Cryptomelane, and Hollandite) and to top all that off many have very pretty banded agate walls. However, just like everything in the Rockhounding world, not everyone you open is going to be a knockout beauty queen (although beauty is in the eye of the beholder). But I will say the large majority of them (as you can tell from the ones you cut open) are pretty Awesome. Back 15+ years ago there used to be larger percentage of Amethyst that would come out of there, but they're still probably hitting about 10%. My one piece of advice on the Coconuts is know who you're buying them from as there's no way to tell the difference between a solid, semi-hollow, and super hollow geode by just looking at a picture of them. Be sure to look for whether they've been pre-sorted or if they're just mine run. Don't get me wrong I enjoy cutting the occasional nodule, but they are definitely more work! There's a little more info on the Coconut geodes on our site, but if you want to know the entire history, and the operation, I highly recommend the book "Geodes: Nature's Treasures" by June Culp Zeitner and Brad Cross it's an incredible wealth of knowledge (as I'm sure Dave's book is). Here's a link to both our section on Coconut geodes as well as a link to their book: Coconut Geodes: www.geodeguys.com/choyageodesPops (Leo) and myself in one of the Choya Geode mines with Memo (Son of the OG mine owners) in the background Picture of the Rhyolite overburden with the soft ash tufts below All the solids (nodules) that have been sorted out back at the Ranch Apologies for res-posting thins. That $12 per 2 inch geode?
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thegeodeguy
off to a rocking start
Member since March 2023
Posts: 6
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Post by thegeodeguy on Aug 24, 2024 22:32:23 GMT -5
If you're referring to our website then yes that's correct $12 for a 2" Mexican geode (plus shipping). I know it may seem high, but these are the high grades (guaranteed hollow) plus the time it takes to put in the custom bags with cracking instructions and pack it up safely, weigh it, enter in the details to print shipping label, take to the post office. In the end it's a lot more time when shipping online orders. And we also sell bags of 10 Mexican geodes at a much more discounted rate. And any orders over $100 ship free. Here's a link to the bags of 10: www.geodeguys.com/product/mexicangeodebag/106?cp=true&sa=false&sbp=false&q=false&category_id=2
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realrockhound
Cave Dweller
Chucking leaverite at tweekers
Member since June 2020
Posts: 4,483
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Post by realrockhound on Aug 25, 2024 0:10:34 GMT -5
Damn.. guess mine are worth a decent chunk of change based on those prices. A lot of mine still to cut are 6”+
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Post by HankRocks on Aug 25, 2024 8:21:12 GMT -5
Damn.. guess mine are worth a decent chunk of change based on those prices. A lot of mine still to cut are 6”+ Only if you guarantee them to be hollow. One of my projects is to test the ones I have, 6 buckets, to see if they are hollow. It should be a simple volume to weight ratio. I can take some solid ones I have cut and establish a benchmark ratio for solid ones and them start testing some uncut ones. There will be a few that have a real small cavity that will be border line. As I said, it's on the list!!! Henry
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Post by cabby on Aug 25, 2024 10:37:31 GMT -5
Thanks for posting your process! I think I have around 20 but mine are pretty small. I have so many cut geodes and thunder eggs that I will probably end up selling the whole nodules and polishing what’s already cut. I would have tried guessing by comparing the weight of uncut ones but that process seems more consistent!
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