
The very basic core of a man’s living spirit is his passion for adventure. ~ Christopher McCandless
The Great Shark Tooth Hunt
First off, all apologies to HST for the title of this week’s post.
I have spent many of hundreds, maybe thousands of hours walking beaches in my life, it’s one of my favorite things to do. And while I’ve put in all of those hours and found a lot of amazing things, I’ve never found a shark’s tooth. So my friend Awesome, yes the same Awesome from my book Appalachian Trail Happiness, started spending time at Topsail Beach, NC. And, it turns out, his wife is the queen of shark tooth hunters. So I would see posts by her from the beach, showing off all of the shark teeth she had found and I was quite frankly incredibly jealous.
So, last week I needed to be back in New York to deal with some more items related to my mother’s passing and to make some more progress on my house. Thanks to my sister and her family for all of their help and assistance with that. But, since I haven’t had a real vacation since well before my open heart surgery, I decided to take a few days at the beach and to find my first shark tooth. So I booked a place for four days on Topsail Beach.
First off, Topsail Beach is awesome. The beach is absolutely beautiful, the little towns around it are great and in fact, one of the restaurants I went to turned out to be a Steeler Bar!


So this definitely convinced me that I was in the right place.
The first day of the great shark hunt started with absolute perfect weather, sunny skies, 74 degrees with a little breeze. The water was cold around 55 degrees so swimming wasn’t on the agenda. But I was able to get four long walks in on the beach, combing the sand for shark teeth. I find walking ocean beaches incredibly calming and it was a wonderful day, without a single shark tooth.
The second day was again a wonderful sunny day, much the same as the first day just a little cooler. I changed my tactics a little bit, walked a different section of the beach and had exactly the same lack of luck. I also sunburned my ankles and I was getting a bit frustrated. But walking for miles and hours in the sun will do that do a vampire white human.
On the upside, I was relaxing, watching some NCAA basketball, eating good food and started reading Project Hail Mary so absolutely no complaints.
On day three the weather turned cold and windy with some rain. So the beach combing changed a bit, no more sun burn and fewer people on the beach. And something fortuitous had happened the day before. I’d gone to buy some souvenirs for my little nieces and nephews and bought them some shark tooth necklaces. In doing so it made me realize something, my search image had been a bit off, I was searching for teeth at too large of a size. So I started looking smaller and on day three, freezing my ass off, I finally found my first tooth, not quite the prize I was hoping for, it’s point was broken off but there it was my first, millions of year old fossilized shark’s tooth. The photo at the head of the post is off the web, this below is my prize although it’s a bad picture.

None the less, I was excited to finally find one. The fourth day was a short and cold day as I was leaving and I didn’t find anything, but I’m excited to go back and try again now that I have a better understanding of what I’m looking for in terms of an appropriate search image.
One of the things that hit me on this trip was that throughout life we learn a lot of lessons. And while I don’t think we ever stop learning new ones, the pace of truly new lessons slows down dramatically. But what continues to happen is that we relearn those learned lessons, again and again. And that’s what happened on this week. It’s a lesson that took me a while to learn in life, one that I only truly learned on the Appalachian Trail, one we all know, but I think most of us don’t really believe. And that is, that the journey is more important than the destination. On this trip, finding a shark tooth was the quest, but the journey, the time alone, walking the beach in the sun, relaxing, reading and eating good food, no email, no responsibility was really what I needed. And happily, I’m in a much, much better place than I was before I went.
I hope that you all can remember this lesson, and use that perspective to have happier and more relaxing days my friends. ~ Rev Kane


























