Sunday, October 1, 2023

Welcome to arachnids on stamps

**2023 update: I finally decided to update the blog. It will take a lot of time since my last updates were in 2014!

I remember being fascinated by my father’s stamp collection. Not only was it a gateway to an incredible world of wonders, it was the biggest book of my parent’s bookshelf! I used to spend hours looking into it. One day, my dad bestowed upon me the greatest gift of all, he entrusted the collection to me. I have fond memories of continuing my father’s work.

The teenage years came and I moved on to other passions, such as keeping exotic animals. Almost four years ago, I renewed with my old hobby when I started researching stamps depicting arachnids. What first started as curiosity eventually became a project of creating an arachnid stamp catalogue. The philatelist in me had awaken.

This blog is an exhaustive listing of every arachnid related postal stamp I was able to source. One can decide how precise or how general a thematic stamps collection is to be. I decided to keep the horizons as wide as possible and included any subject that would remotely belong to arachnids. The reader will not only discover stamps with our beloved animals, but also inevitable stamps about astronomy/astrology (scorpio), Spiderman stamps, vague arachnid references (like a simple spider web for example) as well as arachnids shown on postal material but not on stamps themselves (generally on a souvenir sheet with stamps of a different theme). I would like to point out that for astronomy/astrology and Spiderman stamps, I decided not to collect them in an exhaustive manner (considering budget constraints). All the pictures in this blog are scans of my own material.

There are several well established stamp catalogues. The most known in North America is the Scott Catalogue (published in the USA). There are two main European catalogues, Yvert (published in France) and Michel (published in Germany). Logic would have dictated that I used either the Scott or the Yvert (French is my first language) but those catalogues are insanely expensive and a friend of mine had the Michel. That is the reason that all the stamps in this article are given the Michel number when known (I have them until about 2006). However, a French philatelist colleague was kind enough to send me the Yvert numbers for several stamps which I have included as well. If anyone would wish to send me the Scott numbers, I will be happy to add them in an updated version. It is in my plans to eventually purchase a complete Scott catalog when funds will permit.

For the purpose of this blog, I have created a vast number of categories to facilitate the search. I have included (as mentioned above) the Michel number (when known), the date of issue and the classification of the animal shown (if applicable). When known and applicable, I have also listed up-to-date taxonomic changes of the animals portrayed. Finally, I have also included, when possible, some personal notes and/or anecdotes that I thought worthy of sharing for certain issues.

I am hoping this blog will be interesting to anyone who has interest in arachnids. Other than sharing my passion, I hope it might be useful for anyone who would want to start a collection. When I instigated my project, I soon found that there was no complete resource on the subject on the web. Apparently, philatelists often confuse insects and arachnids, which leads to awkward listings by some.

In conclusion, I would like to thank my wife Amanda for all her patience during countless hours of research on the subject and for tolerating my spending sprees! I also wish to thank Rick West and Richard Gallon for private discussions on the subject, Eric Ythier for his help with the scorpion identification portion, Patricio Cavallo for the Spanish translations, Paolo Bassi for the Italian translations and Eddy Hijmensen for the Dutch translations as well as Paul Enrico for sharing his own finds on the subject.

Sincerely

Martin Gamache

1 comment:

  1. Hello Martin, fascinating blog! thanks for the info, to bolster my collection! I note that some of the larger categories seem to open, but in actual fact they only list about a dozen of the species (some categories have 90+ entries).

    Am i missing something, or does the site not have a way to list the big categories.

    Thanks for your help!

    Matthew

    ReplyDelete