The claw is the harvest tool for surface shellfish (cockles, clams, smooth clams) on sand foreshore. Composed of a metal comb fixed to a handle, it's passed by scraping the sand surface at low tide, bringing buried shellfish up from a few centimetres deep.
You will find short hand claws (for foot prospecting, no long handle), short-handle claws (60 to 80 cm, semi-stooped position), long-handle claws (1.20 to 1.50 m, for upright collection), claws with sized teeth (legal calibre for cockles, finer calibre for clams), and combined claw-rakes (multi-purpose).
This section is entirely composed of the Flashmer range.