ROCK SOLID
Tariq Malik
Larry Richey has rocks on the brain and veterans in his heart.
For the last three years, the Huntington Beach man has volunteered at
the Long Beach Veteran’s Hospital’s vocational rehabilitation program,
teaching and training war veterans in lapidary, the art of cutting or
polishing gems and stones and turning them into jewelry.
“These are the ones who made it,” Richey said of the veterans. “I just
wanted to find a way to contribute and help them.”
Himself a Vietnam War veteran, serving in the Army from 1966 to 1967,
Richey, 56, said he teaches both inpatient and outpatient veterans who
have been referred to the program by doctors for therapy and recreation.
“It’s a definite learning experience,” said Chuck Williams, 60, of
Cerritos, who served in the Vietnam War. “A lot of people who come here
are handicapped in some way, but we can all make a project ourselves.”
Richey got into rocks and lapidary work 25 years ago while reloading
ammunition casings for the Long Beach Police Department.
“It was really a fluke,” he said. “I used a rock tumbler to clean the
casings and then learned how to use it to polish rocks.”
Though the rocks took up to eight weeks to polish, the work quickly
turned into a hobby and Richey would collect samples on camping trips and
pass the finished stones out to neighborhood children.
After some self-teaching, he learned not only to identify 150
different minerals found in California, Arizona and Nevada, but also how
to turn them into polished stones -- his favorite gem is opal -- into
jewelry with the help of silversmithing, wirework and other skills.
He has since been inducted to the National Rockhound and Lapidary Hall
of Fame in Murdo, S.D., for his prowess at jewelry-making.
“He’s the main guy here,” said Tung Do, the hospital’s lapidary
volunteer supervisor. “The people like him and the way he presents
himself as a person, which is something that is extremely important for
new participants.”
When veterans make their first trip to the lapidary center at the
hospital, it can be easy for them to get lost because of the skills and
machinery used in the craft, hospital officials said.
Richey has a way of relating the technique needed, and fostering
understanding in those new to the class, Do added.
But Richey’s focus remains on helping his fellow veterans, and even
before he started volunteering, he would donate rock slabs as supplies
for the lapidary program.
“The majority of the public gets out to recognize veterans on the
Fourth of July or Memorial Day -- a couple days a year,” Richey said.
“But here, I can help them learn a skill, they help each other, it’s a
family.”
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