Luckily my diver friends Paul Kiefer (on the left) and Jérôme Konen (on the right) helped me transport my stuff and set up my stall.
That was a lot of work to set up, but well worth it!
The computer screen is showing the presentation about shark jaws which you can load from the "Facts & Fantasy" page.
From left to right:
Upper row: lemon shark jaw, porbeagle shark jaw, juvenile great white cast, sand tiger shark jaw.
Bottom row: horn shark cast, great hammerhead shark jaw.
The centrepiece is the replica jaw of Mrs. Big, a nearly 20' (6m) female great white shark.
From left to right:
Top row: mako shark jaw, mako shark cast, bull shark jaw.
Middle row: tiger shark jaw, scalloped hammerhead cast.
Bottom row: blacktip shark cast.
The green skin under the two posters is the tanned (and tinted) skin of a tiger shark.
Shark-x-ploitation magazines, shark jaws and fossil shark and ray teeth from left to right:.
Upper row: whitetip reef shark jaw, zebra shark jaw.
Second row: medley of fossil shark teeth, kitefin (seal) shark jaw, fossil shark vertebra.
Third row: spiny and smooth dogfish jaws, two fossil megatooth (megalodon) shark teeth, two ray tooth plates, two horn shark dorsal spines and a stingray barb.
Bottom row: bamboo shark jaw, three fossil shark teeth (Otodus obliquus, Isurus hastalis, great white), three recent shark teeth (mako, great white, tiger) and a piece of sawfish rostrum.
On top of the display case: silky shark jaw.
Upper tier: shark products, shark defence weapons, fishing gear.
Middle tier: shark jaws from left to right: juvenile mako, smalltooth sandtiger, blue shark, juvenile great white, broadnose sevengill shark.
Lower tier: dried ray, shark vertebrae cane, part of vertebral column of a shark, spiny dogfish embryo, different shark tooth weapons, juvenile sawfish bill, sawshark head and rostrum, shark eggcases ("mermaid's purse", horn shark) .
More shark-x-ploitation magazines, shark and ray jaws from left to right:.
Top row: snaggletooth shark, wobbegong shark.
Middle row: eagle ray, thresher shark.
Bottom row: horn shark, guitarfish (shark ray).
Exhausted but happy, I look back on two successful days.