Miami Herald

He found a clam on a Florida beach to make some chowder. Then he counted the rings

- BY MADELEINE MARR mmarr@miamiheral­d.com Madeleine Marr: madeleinem­arr

A Florida man and his family stumbled across what they thought was a dinner ingredient on a beach along the Gulf of Mexico last month.

According to a recent Facebook post from the Gulf Specimen Marine Lab in Panacea, near Tallahasse­e, an employee, Blaine Parker, was walking along Alligator Point in the Panhandle on Feb. 18 looking for shellfish to make “chowder.”

During the sandy stroll, the crew came across a giant quahog, aka an edible clam, weighing in at a whopping 2.6 pounds. A picture of the monster mollusk on the research lab’s page shows a smiling Parker barely able to hold the entire thing in his palm.

“We were just going to eat it, but we thought about it a while and figured it was probably pretty special,” the seafood lover told the Tallahasse­e Democrat.

“We didn’t want to kill it.”

Parker knew enough to count the rings on its shell, similar to a tree’s rings, to determine the clam’s age.

In total, the clam had 214 layers.

Do the math: This mollusk has been in existence a very, very long time.

OK, they did the math for you: It was hatched in 1809.

Parker brought it over to his colleagues at the marine lab, which examined the big guy, officially known as an Ocean Quahog, Arctica islandica.

“Age can be calculated by the number of layers on the shell, with each layer representi­ng a year,” read the post.

Since the discovery was made during Presidents’

Day weekend, they all decided on the nickname Aber-clam Lincoln. Abrahan Lincoln, the 16th president, was also born in

1809.

The research center said that the ocean quahog can live to be over 200, so this sight isn’t that unusual. Experts would not recommend making a meal out of it, as tempting as that might be, because the species is commercial­ly eaten at the ripe age of 20 when they are young and tender like a spring chicken.

Yes, Abe was saved. Last Friday, caretakers at the lab released the “majestic” creature back into its “natural habitat where he was found so that he may live a full life without much human disruption,” it said.

Commenters loved the tale:

“He wanted to retire in Florida,” one joked.

“That you could have eaten 214-year-old clam chowder is unique in and of itself,” wrote another. “Better yet to know that you had the smarts to save it is beyond awesome.”

Amazingly, Abe isn’t the oldest clam, not by a long shot. Ming, an ocean quahog dredged off the coast of Iceland in 2006, was calculated to be approximat­ely 507 years old when found.

 ?? Gulf Specimen Marine Lab ?? Aber-clam Lincoln was born in 1809.
Gulf Specimen Marine Lab Aber-clam Lincoln was born in 1809.

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