Sunday, February 23, 2014

The World Oyster Society

Irish Breeding Ponds
Photo from The World Oyster Society Web Site

Could oysters be the catalyst for world unity? Members of The World Oyster Society (WOS) think so. It may sound audacious, but the vision of (WOS) is to "bring together the oyster people of the World for the benefit of Mankind." A global society devoted to oysters? Well, that makes me as happy as a puppy with two tails. 

At its core, WOS is open to anyone who loves, protects and celebrates oysters. The president and founder of WOS, Dr. Katsuyoshi Mori, stresses the vital connection between humans and the Earth. His office directed me to one of the steering committee members of the North American Chapter of The World Oyster SocietyDr. Aswani Voletyto find out more. What I found was a scientist, deeply involved in his research. Stay with me as we diverge from the WOS a bit. I always like to pick the brains of oyster nerds. Dr. Volety is a professor of marine science at Florida Gulf Coast University and has been studying the ecological importance of oysters for the past 25 years. Here's an excerpt of my interview. (I edited the professor a bit to accommodate our online attention spans.)


Dr. Aswani Volety
Director, North and South American Chapter
The World Oyster Society
Where do you see the oyster population in 10 years?
I am an optimist. Although recent reports and studies have shown that oyster populations have declined worldwide in the past several decades, there is a greater understanding of the role oysters play … I am hopeful that we will have at least a 10% increase in oyster coverage / production in the coming decade.

Why are you interested in oysters? 
Oysters, while economically important, their ecological importance is far greater. They improve water quality … provide mitigation against boat wakes, waves from storms/ hurricanes, remove nitrogen from water column and provide food, shelter and habitat for over 30 species.

From your perspective, what is the most exciting thing happening in the field of oyster conservation research?
It is very hard to be succinct about the accomplishments of numerous colleagues … We have a better understanding about the genetic aspects that regulate oyster health and disease resistance. We also have a better understanding of the role of environmental stressors on oysters. This enables us to identify locations that are conducive for growth of oyster reefs as well as identifying better areas for oyster aquaculture.

Are there unique challenges oysters face in North America that they do not face in other parts of the world?
I am not sure if I would categorize issues and challenges in the USA as unique, but certainly a bit nuanced. In many countries, shellfish aquaculture is accepted and encouraged in coastal areas. In the United States there is competition for recreational use of water and aquaculture, including objections against visual nature of oyster bags / rafts etc. 

Do you eat oysters?  If so, what's your favorite way to eat them?  Do you have a favorite oyster?
Errr..can I take the fifth J? Kidding aside, I don’t eat oysters regularly – not because of anything that is in them, but knowing so much about their anatomy, when eating oysters I was focusing on what part I was eating rather than enjoying oysters per se. 




Back to the World Oyster Society … and its website. Tucked away on the site are the coolest pictures from oyster farms from around the world depicting various methods of growing oysters. For me, this is the biggest benefit of the WOS - sharing our collective oyster culture. I picked out a few of my favorites: 
(The pictures and captions are taken directly from the WOS website.)

AUSTRALIA

Intertidal longline in Coffin Bay, South Australia (Photograph by Southern Cross Marine Culture)

Racks at Little Swanport on Tasmania's east coast (Photograph by Oyster Tasmania).

IRELAND
Aerial view of 21 Ostrea edulis breeding ponds, each containing 1m litres.

FRANCE

In the lagoons of the Mediterranean sea where there is no tide, oysters and mussels are cultivated in suspension on "tables" built up from the sea bed. The photo shows one of this table in a small lagoon near Montpellier. (Photograph by IFREMER)

CHINA






TAIWAN
Oyster culture at Changhua (photo by Changhua Fiehery Association, Taiwan)



JAPAN
Hardening rack in shallow tidal areas. (Photograph by Ishinomaki-bay Fisheries Cooperation)


Oysters hung from long-line. (Photograph by Miyagi Prefecture Fisheries Research and Development Center)

TUNISIA
Juveniles fixed with cement. (Photograph by Dr. Chalghaf Mohamed)

Oyster spat collectors(Dr. Chalghaf Mohamed).

VIETNAM

Oyster Culture cages at Can Gio, Vietnam. Steel framed cages with fishing net are used to grow oysters in;
the cages are suspended on floating rafts. (Photograph by Howard Feilding)


Oyster culture in Central Vietnam is typically like in this photograph, suspended cages grown subtidally.
(Photograph by Mr.Howard Feildin
g)




Want to join me and be a card carrying member of the World Oyster Society? Simply complete the membership form. As of now, "no qualification or requirement exists for becoming a member of this society" (which is how I got in), but they do have the right to accept or reject your application. There's no cost to join. 


BIG NEWS: For the first time, the International Oyster Symposium is coming to the United States in 2015, a decade after the World Oyster Society began in Tokyo. In previous years, the Symposium was an oyster geek fest primarily composed of scientists, researchers and aquaculture operators. The US event hopes to be more broad based, says Kahren Dowcett, the event producer and a WOS steering committee member with Dr. Volety. Stay tuned to Oyster Stew for more info about the 2015 event in the coming weeks. In the meantime, feel free to reach out to Kahren at kahren@livingartsinstitue.org. She can answer questions you have about the Society as well as the Symposium. 


Sunday, February 16, 2014

Oyster Boy Meets Oyster Girl

It's Valentine's weekend and there's no better time to have THE TALK: how do boy oysters and girl oysters make baby oysters?

First, you have to embrace the transgender nature of oysters. Scientists disagree on the specifics, but they do agree that some oysters change gender during their life. Some researchers say that oysters change several times in their lifespans, some say they switch just once. Some say that they change only in response to an overabundance of oysters of the same sex; others say it's just the ladies who change; and some say that all oysters are born male, and as they get older, change to females (the ultimate cougar). Regardless, there are boy oysters and girl oysters. And you can't tell them apart just by looking at them, says Dr. Ami Wilbur, director of the UNCW Shellfish Hatchery in Wilmington, NC.

Dr. Ami Wilbur, director of the UNCW Shellfish Hatchery,
shows off the oysters she's mating.
Dr. Wilbur should know. She is leading the effort to cross breed Virginia and North Carolina oysters to develop several varieties of fast-growing, certified disease tolerant, restaurant-quality oysters to grow off the North Carolina coast.

So how do you make an oyster mate? (With restraint. They're all so "shellfish.") It starts with a rousing game of shell monty and ends with oyster IVF. Without being able to tell if an oyster is male or female from the outside, the researchers have to open an oyster's shell and examine them under a microscope to look for eggs or sperm. (Privacy, please.) In some seasons, one gender may significantly outnumber another, leaving the researchers in a haste to find a mate, says Wilbur.

Once the team - because it takes a team - finally finds a male and a female, it begins a process called "strip spawning." The ladies have up to 100 million eggs (really, who's counting?) because in the wild she releases her eggs in the open waters. It's a crapshoot whether the eggs find a sperm. In the lab, the eggs and sperm are mixed and watched as they develop into larvae then veliger then to oyster spat. Spat finally become oysters when they reach 25mm, or when Dr. Wilbur says they are ready.

From egg/sperm to larvae to veliger to spat … all in a few weeks.
Designed by Melissa Mitchell, a former volunteer with the
Oyster Spat Monitoring Project at UNCW.


At the UNCW research facility, the spat are carefully marked, fed homegrown algae, and measured often. Some spat are sent to three oyster farms along the North Carolina coast to see how they grow in different waters. Based on the results from the lab and the farms, the best oysters are cross bred again and again in an effort to ultimately develop six to eight varieties of North Carolina oysters.

Each oyster is carefully numbered in the lab's growing tanks.
Only the best move on to breed.

Dr. Wilbur and her team of researchers and farmers are well on their way to breeding great oysters that will thrive in North Carolina. I am a huge fan of North Carolina oysters and I'm throwing down the gauntlet: I would put them up against any East Coast oyster, even Moonstones and Glidden Points. Yep. They just need a little hair and makeup. After Dr. Wilbur gets done with them, they'll be as pretty as their cousins. What's not to love about that?


SF Oyster Nerd tries a
NC steamed oyster
From one love to another … Who doesn't love Hog Island Oysters? Greg Babinecz, the SF Oyster Nerd and a manager at the soon-to-be-reopened Hog Island Oyster Bar in San Fran, stopped by Wilmington, NC, to swap oyster stories and visit the UNCW Shellfish Hatchery. Along with NC oysterman, Ronald Sheffield, we introduced Greg to his first steamed NC oyster. Steaming concentrates the brininess, and the perfect steam pops in your mouth. Thanks for the visit Greg. Looking forward to a West Coast swing in the near future. Check out his oyster blog at sfoysternerd.blogspot.com.

Sunday, February 9, 2014

2014 Oyster Festivals


2014 is going to be fun! With a record number of oyster festivals, roasts, shindigs and events, the year is chock full of events that celebrate the oyster. Our list includes events in 26 states, Canada, and the UK. Some events have not yet determined their 2014 dates, but in most cases the event is held the same weekend as the 2013 event. We make regular updates on Harbor Island Oyster Co. - so be sure to in before making plans.

ALABAMA
Oyster Cook-Off at the Hangout. Gulf Shores, AL. Oct., 2014

ALASKA

CALIFORNIA
San Francisco (Guiness) Oyster Fest. Sharon Meadow, Golden Gate Park. San Fran, CA. May 10, 2014
San Diego Oyster Fest. Marina Embarcadero North. San Diego, CA. June 14, 2014
Arcata Bay Oyster Festival. Arcata, CA. June 14, 2014
Central Coast Oyster Festival. Morro Bay Oyster Farm. Morro Bay, CA. Oct. 19, 2013

COLORADO
High West Oyster Fest. Boulder, CO. Mar. 20, 2014

CONNECTICUT
Mohegan Sun Oyster Open. Uncasville, CT. Jan. 26, 2014
Milford Oyster Festival. Milford, CT. Aug. 16, 2014
Norwalk Oyster Festival. Norwalk, CT. Sept. 5-7, 2014

FLORIDA
Apalachicola Oyster Cook-Off. Apalachicola, FL. Jan. 18, 2014
Fort Pierce Oyster Festival, Ft. Pierce, FL. Apr. 5, 2014
Halifax Oyster Festival. Daytona Beach, FL. Apr. 26, 2014
Apalachicola Oyster Roast / Florida Seafood Festival. Apalachicola, FL. Oct. 31, 2014

GEORGIA
OysterFest. Atlanta, GA. Feb. 8, 2014
Oyster Mardi Gras Fest. Atkins Park Restaurant. Smyrna, GA. Feb. 15-16, 2014
Steamhouse Lounge Oyster Fest. Atlanta, GA. Feb. 22-23, 2014
Georgia Conservancy Oyster Roast. Savannah, GA. Mar. 1, 2014

ILLINOIS
Springfield Oyster & Beer Festival. Springfield, IL. Sept. 6, 2014
Guiness Oyster Fest. Roscoe Village. Chicago, IL. Sept. 6, 2014
Royster with the Oyster. Chicago, IL. Oct. 14-18, 2013

IOWA
The Class Act Oyster Festival. Cedar Rapids, IA. Sept. 27, 2013

LOUISIANA
Freret Oyster Jam. New Orleans, LA. Jan. 19, 2014
Louisiana Oyster Jubilee. New Orleans, LA. March 8, 2014
Amite Oyster Festival. Amite, LA. Mar. 21-23, 2014
New Orleans Oyster Festival. New Orleans, LA. Mar 8, 2014
St. Cletus Oyster Festival. Gretna, LA. Oct. 17-19, 2014
Violet Oyster Festival. Violet, LA. Oct. 17-19, 2014

MAINE
Pemaquid Oyster Festival. Damariscotta, ME. Sept. 28, 2014

MARYLAND
Chesapeake Oyster & Beer Festival. National Harbor, MD. CANCELLED.
Ducks Unlimited Annual Bull & Oyster Roast. Finksburg, MD. Feb. 8, 2014
St. Mary's Oyster Festival. Leonardtown, MD. Oct. 18-19, 2014
Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum OysterFest. St. Michael's, MD. Oct. 25, 2014

MASSACHUSETTS
Wareham Business Association Oyster Festival. Wareham, MA. Apr. 27, 2014
B&G Oyster Festival. Boston, MA. May 5, 2013
Island Creek Oyster Festival. Duxbury, MA. CANCELLED
Wellfleet Oyster Festival. Wellfleet, MA. Oct. 18-19, 2014

MICHIGAN
St. Ambrose Oysterfest. Grosse Pointe, MI. Sept. 30, 2013

MISSISSIPPI
Pass Christian Oyster Festival. Pass Christian, MS. Jan. 25-26, 2014
Oyster Throw Down. Waveland, MS. Feb. 1, 2014

MISSOURI
Schlafly Stout and Oyster Festival. St. Louis, MO. Mar. 7-8, 2014

NEW HAMPSHIRE
Piscatagua Oysterpalooza. Piscataqua, NH. Sept. 22, 2013

NEW JERSEY
Oyster Bowl XV. Princeton, NJ. Feb. 2, 2014
Asbury Park Oysterfest. Asbury Park, NJ. Sept. 6-8, 2013
Red Bank Guinness Oyster Festival. Red Bank, NJ. Sept. 28, 2014

NEW YORK
Oyster and Wine Festival at Lieb Cellars. North Fork, Long Island, NY. Apr. 27, 2013
Stone Street Oyster Festival. Stone Street, New York, NY. Sept. 21, 2013
Oyster Week. New York City and Long Island, NY. Sept. 21-29, 2013
Aureole's Oyster Social. New York City, NY. Sept. 22, 2013
Empire Oyster. New York City, NY. Sept. 25, 2013
Oystoberfest. Long Island City, NY. Sept. 27-28, 2013
Oyster Frenzy. (Pro Oyster Shucking Contest). New York, NY. Sept. 28, 2013
Oyster Bay Oyster Festival. Oyster Bay, NY. Oct. 18-19, 2014

NORTH CAROLINA
Core Sound Waterfowl Museum & Heritage Center. Harkers Island, NC. Jan. 25, 2014
NC Fresh Catch Winter Oyster Tour. Raleigh, Jan. 19; Durham, Feb. 1; Carrboro, Feb. 15, 2014
Stumpy Point Oyster Festival. Stumpy Point, NC. Feb. 8, 2014
North Carolina Coastal Federation Oyster Shellebration. Hatteras, Swansboro, Raleigh, Wrightsville Beach, NC. March 1, 2014
Junior League of Wilmington's Roast on the Coast. Wilmington, NC. Mar. 22, 2014
Smoky Mountain Oyster & Seafood Festival. Maggie Valley, NC. Apr. 19, 2014
Dogwood Oyster Roast. Statesville, NC. April 25, 2014
First Flight Rotary Oink and Oyster Roast. Kitty Hawk, NC. Oct. 12, 2013
Airlie Gardens Oyster Roast. Wilmington, NC. Oct. 18, 2013
Burke Arts Council Oyster Outing. Morganton, NC. Oct. 18, 2014
NC Oyster Festival. Ocean Isle, NC. Oct. 18-19, 2014
Dixon Chapel Oyster Roast. Varnamtown, NC. Nov. 2, 2013
WB Chamber of Commerce Oyster Roast. Wrightsville Beach, NC. Nov. 3, 2013
Pamlico-Tar River Foundation Oyster Roast. Washington, NC. Nov. 15, 2014


OREGON
Dan and Louis Winter Oyster Festival. Portland, OR. Jan. 25, 2014
The Parish Oyster Festival. Portland, OR. May, 2014

PENNSYLVANIA

SOUTH CAROLINA
New Year's Day Oyster Roast. Folly Beach, SC. Jan. 1, 2015
Music & Oysters for Wildlife. Awendaw, SC. Jan. 11, 2014
Save the Light Oyster Roast. Charleston, SC. Jan. 12, 2014
Oyster Roast at Dill Sanctuary. Charleston, SC. Jan. 12, 2014
St. Padre Pio Catholic Church Oyster Fundraiser. Summerville, SC. Jan. 18, 2014
Lowcountry Oyster Festival. Mt. Pleasant, SC. Jan. 26, 2014
Charitable Society of Charleston Oyster Roast. Charleston, SC. Feb. 1, 2014
Shuckin on the Strand. Murrell's Inlet, SC. Feb. 8, 2014
Southeastern Wildlife Exposition. Charleston, SC. Feb. 14, 2014
South Atlantic Bank Oyster Roast and Chili Cook-Off. Goldbug Island, SC. Feb. 23, 2014.
Pet Helpers Oyster Roast (Shuck Your Paws Off). Charleston, SC. Mar. 1, 2014
Shuckin in the Park Oyster Roast. Moncks Corner, SC. Mar. 8, 2014
Beaufort Twilight Run & Oyster Roast. Beaufort, SC. Mar. 22, 2014
Hilton Head Oyster Festival. Hilton Head, SC. Nov. 14, 2014
Summerville Family YMCA Oyster Shindig. Summerville, SC. Nov. 14, 2014
South Carolina Oyster Festival. Columbia, SC. Nov. 24, 2013
Palmetto Society Oyster Roast. Charleston, SC. Dec. 22, 2013

TEXAS
Oysterfest. Fulton, TX. Mar. 6-9, 2014
Fiesta Oyster Bake. San Antonio, TX. April 11-12, 2014
Austin Oyster Festival. Austin, TX. Nov. 3, 2013

VIRGINIA
Virginia Beach Volunteer Rescue Squad Oyster Roast. Virginia Beach, VA. Mar. 23, 2014
Blue Ridge Oyster Festival. Roseland, VA. CANCELLED
Lynnhaven Oyster Roast, Virginia Beach, VA. Apr. 26, 2014
Chincoteague Oyster Festival, Chincoteague Island, VA. Oct. 11, 2014
City Center Oyster Roast. Newport News, VA. Oct. 24, 2014
Urbanna Oyster Festival. Urbanna, VA. Nov. 7-8, 2014
The Mimslyn Inn Oysterfest. Luray, VA. Nov. 2, 2013
TOGA Half-Shell Oyster Tasting. Gloucester, VA. Nov. 9, 2013
Awww Shucks! VLM Oyster Roast. Newport News, VA. Nov. 16, 2013
Watermen's Museum Oyster Roast. Yorktown, VA. Dec. 7, 2013
Oysters and Oldies Christmas Oyster Roast. Heathsville, VA. Dec. 7, 2013

WASHINGTON
Hama Hama Oyster Rama. Lilliwaup, WA. Apr. 27, 2013
PCSGA Shellfish SLURP. Olympia, WA. April 27, 2014
Jazz & Oysters (Watermusic Festival). Oysterville, WA. Aug. 17, 2014
Samish Bay Bivalve Bash. Samish Bay, WA. CANCELLED
Oyster Run. Anacortes, WA. Sept. 22, 2014
Oysterfest & West Coast Shucking Championship. Shelton, WA. Oct. 5-6, 2013
Flying Fish Oyster Frenzy. Seattle, WA. Oct. 27, 2013
Elliott's Oyster New Year Bash. Seattle, WA. Nov. 2, 2013

WASHINGTON D.C.

WISCONSIN
Milwaukee Oyster Roast. Milwaukee, WI. Apr. 20, 2013

CANADA
Lund Shellfish Festival. Lund Harbor, BC. May 23-25, 2014
BC Shellfish Festival. Comox, BC. June 21-22, 2014
Ontario Oyster Festival. Toronto, Ontario. July 20, 2014
Tyne Valley Water Oyster Festival. Tyne Valley, PEI. July 30-Aug. 3, 2014
Prince Edward Island International Shellfish Festival. Charlottetown, PEI. Sept. 18-21, 2014
Clayoquot Oyster Festival. Tofino, BC. Nov. 12-15, 2014

UNITED KINGDOM
Colchester Oyster Fayre Market. Essex, UK. June 7-8, 2014
Whitstable Oyster Festival. Whitstable, Canterbury, UK. July 26 - Aug. 1, 2014
Carlingford Oyster Festival. Carlingford, Louth, Ireland. Aug. 8-13, 2013
Hillsborough Oyster Festival & World Oyster Eating Championship. Hillsborough, N Ireland. Sept. 2-7, 2014
Clarenbridge Oyster Festival. Galway, Ireland. Sept. 2014
Galway International Oyster Festival. Galway City, Ireland. Sept. 25-28, 2014
Falmouth Oyster Festival. Falmouth, UK. Oct. 9-12, 2014
Anglesey Oyster & Welsh Produce Festival. Isle of Anglesey, North Wales, UK. Oct. 12-13, 2013


Did we miss your Oyster Roast or Oyster Festival? Please email us at concierge@harborislandoyster.com with the name of your event, event website, date and city or comment at the end of this post. We'll be happy to post it for you! Have fun!

Sunday, February 2, 2014

Oyster Tokens: A Bit[coin] of Commercial Oyster Shucking History

1866 Price Bros. Oyster Token, Baltimore, MD
Our sister website, Harbor Island Oyster Co., recently began accepting bitcoins for payment. (Nevermind that the Bitcoin CEO was just arrested.  The Facebook twins are still in, so it's totally cool?!) What are bitcions? Old-schoolers would call it funny money. They are an electronic currency with no country, no middleman, no paper or metal coins. The value can flucuate wildly and new bitcoins are hidden in the world's vast network of computers. The idea may need some refining, but the concept of an international, market driven currency is interesting and maybe inevitable.
25 cent brass token from the Pinckney Oyster Co. Ridgeland, SC

What do bitcoins have to do with oysters? Bitcoins, of sorts, have a history in the oyster industry. From the late 1800s to as recently as the mid-1900s, U.S. oyster pickers and shuckers were paid in brass or steel tokens issued by individual commercial shucking houses. Depending on where the shuckin' was taking place, the system varied a bit. Northern pickers received tokens after each quart or gallon picked. At the end of the day, they could turn the tokens in for cash. In the South, tokens were given to pickers and shuckers at the close of each business day. At the end of the week, the workers could spend their tokens at the company store, which usually overcharged for the goods sold.  
S.S. Barnes & Co. Oyster Token, Baltimore, MD
Picture Courtesy of the Smithsonian's American History Museum


As always, oysters were the great equalizer. Some shuckers were fast. Others slow. You got paid for what you shucked. "That was the purpose of the tokens ... so that workers could work as fast or as slow as they wanted," says South Carolina token collector, Tony Chibbaro.

Each token was usually worth between 10 and 25 cents. In 1900, the pay for shucking a gallon of oysters was 25 cents. In a 1970 interview, John Thomas of the vintage New Haven Thomas Oyster Co says that a good oyster opener could open 20 gallons a day - the record was 45 gallons in one day. 




How Much Are They Worth?


Like everything having to do with oysters these days, the value of oyster tokens has been ticking up. Tokens from the Civil War can run upwards of $150. Post Civil War tokens are about $50. Twentieth century tokens are about $10. There are exceptions, of course, but that should give you a good start. On Chibbaro's website, which specializes in South Carolina tokens, you can buy oyster tokens for $7.50 to over $100.  


Brown & Bennett, 1 Gallon Oyster Token,  New Deal, MD




Thomas Oyster Company payment tokens.
Pictures from Christopher Shaefer on www.citypointnewhavenconnecticut.net.
Modern quarter for size reference.




Moore & Brady Oyster Token, Baltimore, MD



Thomas Jamison Oyster Token, Aberdeen, MD



Oyster Token from Standard Fish & Oyster Co.,  Appalachicola Florida




OYSTER SHUCKERS, LIKE THE GOOD OLD DAYS


Today, oysters are stilled shucked by hand because, despite every advancement, no machine has been able to replace an oyster shucker. On the Gulf Coast, some shucking houses are using an oyster shucking machine but it still requires oversight from an experienced shucker. Other hand held machines have been tried … but none replaces a good shucker and a good knife.


J Kanzler 1933 Patent Application
for an Oyster Shucker
Webb World Industries Florida Cracker



COMMERCIAL OYSTER SHUCKING TODAY


Oyster tokens are no longer used, but workers still get paid by the gallon.  The average gallon of oysters holds about 100 East Coast oysters. Workers receive $9-$10 a gallon (in cash, not bitcoins), up from 25 cents in 1900. A good shucker still shucks 10-20 gallons a day. Check out this video about oyster shucking from Taylor Shellfish Farms:









Every good shucker needs a good shucking knife. Check out the Valentine's Day Special at Harbor Island Oyster Co. Buy any oyster knife between now and Feb. 14, 2014, and receive a free oyster shell pendant necklace.