Oyster prices plummet as hesitant diners stay home

Timothy B. Wheeler
Posted 1/24/21

Bill Huber and Jason Robbins hoist a bushel of oysters into the back of a pickup truck on Hooper’s Island in December 2020. Bay watermen are having little trouble reaching their state-imposed …

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Oyster prices plummet as hesitant diners stay home

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Bill Huber and Jason Robbins hoist a bushel of oysters into the back of a pickup truck on Hooper’s Island in December 2020. Bay watermen are having little trouble reaching their state-imposed bivalve quotas each day but are fetching lower prices than last year.

With several hours of daylight to spare, Ronnie Robbins and his son, Jason, had already docked their 36-foot deadrise workboat on Hooper’s Island and started unloading their briny cargo.

Into the bed of a waiting pickup went 20 bushels of oysters dredged from the bottom of the Honga River on Maryland’s Eastern Shore. Once again, they’d handily harvested all they were allowed by the state to take in a day.

“It’s better than it’s been in years before, that’s for sure,” the elder Robbins said.

Even so, he and others who make a living off the Chesapeake Bay’s oysters have been struggling this fall and winter.

It isn’t a supply problem. Watermen in Maryland and Virginia alike say they are having no trouble landing their daily wild oyster quotas. Oyster farmers in both states also say they’ve raised bumper crops of the bivalves in leased patches of the Bay and its tributaries.

“We got lots of oysters, and they’re excellent quality,” said Bill Sieling, executive Vice President of the Chesapeake Bay Seafood Industries Association, representing Maryland crab and oyster processors. “I’ve bought two bushels this fall, and I’ve never seen oysters this fat.”

The problem is decreased demand caused by the coronavirus pandemic.

The wild oyster harvest ended abruptly a couple of weeks before the official March 31 close of the 2019-20 season, as the first wave of Covid-19 hit and seafood wholesalers stopped buying watermen’s catches. Oyster farmers, likewise, saw their markets practically vanish overnight, with restaurants shut down and people being urged to stay home to slow the spread of the disease.

Aquaculture-raised oyster sales picked up a little in late spring and summer, as restaurants reopened in limited ways. But demand remained soft and decreased further when the 2020-21 wild harvest season opened Oct. 1, flooding the markets with even more bivalves. A wild-caught bushel that had fetched $50 dockside in the fall of 2019 got only $30 this year.

Then Covid-19 cases surged again, bringing renewed restrictions on dining at restaurants. Demand plummeted once more for both shucked and half-shell oysters.

“Come Oct. 1, the bottom just fell out of the market,” said Fred Tull, who raises oysters on 10 acres in the Little Annemessex River by Crisfield. In mid-December, when holiday demand for shellfish is usually strong, he said, “I’ve got oysters to sell and no market.”

At Mobjack Bay Seafood, a family-run wholesaler in Ware Neck, Va., sales are down as much as 70% this season, owner John Vigliotta said.

Struggling and innovating

The swoon in sales couldn’t have come at a worse time. Before Covid-19 showed up, the Bay’s oysters appeared to be rebounding from two years of woe. Heavy rains in 2018 and the first half of 2019 had diluted salinity in the Chesapeake with freshwater, hampering wild bivalves’ reproduction and growth, even killing some. Hatcheries that supplied oyster farmers had problems as well.

But weather conditions turned favorable in the latter half of 2019. Last season, Maryland watermen raked in 270,000 bushels of oysters, nearly doubling the previous year’s landings, despite a reduction in the number of days they could work.

In Virginia waters, public and private oyster grounds have yielded a steady harvest of between 500,000 and 600,000 bushels a year, state officials say. Private landings represent a mixture of oysters grown in cages and those harvested from oyster reefs leased from the state. Public landings are harvested from the wild on state-owned oyster grounds.

Surveys there found record-high densities of small and market-size oysters on public grounds, but the Virginia Marine Resources Commission made few changes for this season, retaining the vessel limit of 16 bushels a day by dredge or patent tongs.

For this season, the Maryland Department of Natural Resources also kept in place harvest restrictions it had imposed in 2019. Harvesters are allowed to work only four days a week, and most of the reefs north of the Bay Bridge remain off-limits. The bushel limits remained unchanged: up to 24 bushels a day for tongers and 20 for dredgers.

The DNR had tightened harvest regulations last season after a study warned that the state’s stock of market-size oysters had shrunk amid widespread overharvesting. But recent surveys, reflecting improved water conditions, found the stock recovering and only a few areas still overfished.

Many Maryland watermen say they were disappointed that the state didn’t relax its harvest limits in the fall, when demand for oysters is traditionally strongest.

Stephan Abel of Ferry Cove Shellfish, a new Maryland hatchery, stands between two 10,000 gallon tanks to be used for producing juvenile oysters.

“They’re regulating us to death,” Ronnie Robbins said. He also predicted he’ll only be able to harvest oysters two days a week for the remainder of the season because processors and wholesalers will cut back their purchases in response to the depressed demand.

With traditional buyers limited, some watermen are taking steps to find new ways to sell their oysters, including direct sales to consumers through farmers markets and other means.

Rachel Dean, a Calvert County resident who harvests wild oysters and raises oysters on leased bottom with her husband, Simon, is installing a refrigerated box on the back of one of their trucks to deliver oysters to homes in the area.

“I guess they call it farm to table, but this would be more boat to table,” she said.

Some oyster farmers have also begun selling directly to consumers. In Crisfield, though, Fred Tull said he’s not set up to offer his farmed oysters online. He estimated his 2020 sales were about 30% below what they were in 2019.

That’s par for the industry, at least in Maryland. As of Dec. 10, holders of shellfish aquaculture leases in the state reported harvesting 39,913 bushels, more than 25% below the 2019 harvest, according to DNR data. In Virginia, anecdotal reports show a similar fall-off.

“The industry is kind of just limping along right now,” said Mike Oesterling, executive director of the Shellfish Growers of Virginia. Until restaurants can reopen, he said, “it’s going to be quite some time before the industry recovers.”

Financial help

The beginning of the year is a crucial period for many oyster farmers, because that’s when they place orders for baby “seed” oysters to plant months later. Most hatcheries want a deposit to hold the order, Tull noted, so lack of cash could undercut future production.

Some relief may be on the way. Congress included $300 million in nationwide fisheries assistance funding in the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act it passed in March.

Maryland’s share of CARES funding was $4.1 million, and the DNR allocated $3 million to make direct payments to commercial and charter fishing, aquaculture and seafood processing operations that could document a 2020 revenue loss of 35 percent or more because of Covid-19. The rest is to go to individual workers in seafood processing and marketing.

The DNR began taking applications for financial relief Nov. 4, with a Feb. 28 cutoff. By late December, officials said they had received more than 440 applications, approved about 340 and paid out more than $330,000. Another round of likely larger payments is to be made in the spring.

Virginia got $4.5 million in CARES Act funding, an amount that state officials complained was woefully inadequate for its seafood industry, which produces more oysters than any other state on the East Coast.

The Virginia Marine Resources Commission distributed the funds more quickly than Maryland, paying out $3.9 million in the fall to 618 qualified holders of fishing or aquaculture licenses, or about $6,300 per applicant.

Applications for the remainder of Virginia’s CARES Act funds, which were reserved for unlicensed seafood industry workers, were still being reviewed in December, according to deputy VMRC commissioner Ellen Bolen.

Mobjack Bay Seafood was among those qualifying for CARES financial help in Virginia. “It didn’t make us whole, but it helped us from really being clobbered,” owner John Vigliotta said.

Tull and 19 other Maryland oyster growers are in line to get economic relief from a different source. The Nature Conservancy announced in October that it would buy 5 million “surplus” oysters from aquaculture operators in seven states, from Maine to Maryland, and use them in oyster restoration projects.

“We’re looking particularly to buy some of the larger oysters that growers wouldn’t be able to sell into the market,” said Mark Bryer, the conservancy’s Chesapeake Bay program director.

On Jan. 19, with logistical help from the nonprofit Oyster Recovery Partnership, the conservancy took delivery of the first batch of oysters from three aquaculture companies and two individual shellfish growers and placed them in an oyster sanctuary in Prospect Bay, in the northern end of Eastern Bay. The group consulted with the Maryland DNR on sanctuary locations where as many as 500,000 purchased oysters in all could be planted, Bryer said. 

Weather permitting, the group also plans over the next month to buy from Southern Maryland growers for planting in a sanctuary in the nearby St. Mary’s River, followed by a similar purchase from Lower Eastern Shore growers for placement in a sanctuary in the Nanticoke River.

Growers were offered a price about 20 percent below what they got in 2019, before the pandemic hit, Bryer said.

“We know this program isn’t going to solve all their problems,” Bryer explained. But he said that the groups see this as a first step and hope to continue and expand their efforts to help aquaculture.

Tull figured in late December that he’d have as many as 50,000 oysters ready to sell by now. He said he’d been told that, depending on the weather and other factors, the conservancy could buy that many, though maybe as few as 10,000.

“It will definitely be a big help,” he said, “and it will get the cash flow going so I’ll have cash to buy seed.”

Despite all the difficulties, Tull said he still believes aquaculture holds promise.

“If we can get through the next six months, or even four months, if that’s possible,” he said, “I think things will start straightening out.”

A new hatchery

Others hope so, too. Ferry Cove Shellfish, a new nonprofit commercial oyster hatchery, is under construction near Sherwood, in Talbot County. The 20,000 square-foot facility is underwritten by the Annapolis-based Ratcliffe Foundation.

It is being equipped to filter and heat the water it draws from the Bay, which will allow oyster larvae production to be extended beyond the traditional April-to-September season, explained Stephan Abel, president and CEO of Ferry Cove.

The facility will produce its own algae to feed the newly hatched oyster larvae to be spawned in a complex of 35 tanks. And it will include back-up systems to ensure operations during tropical storms, periods of low salinity and other episodes of poor water quality that can upset hatchery operations that draw water from the Bay.

“You want to support the industry, you can’t have down times,” Abel said.

The facility is designed to mimic traditional Shore architecture and is placed on a 70-acre tract that will include native wildflowers, wetlands and a living shoreline.

“The focus is to demonstrate how you can have a green business,” Abel said, “and also do good for the environment at the same time.”

By May, Ferry Cove Shellfish hopes to be ready to begin producing as many as 1 billion seed oysters a year for sale to oyster growers throughout the Bay. Abel said he’s confident the slump the seafood industry is in now is only temporary.

“I think there’s going to be huge demand now and in the future,” he said, “in spite of the issues with Covid.”

Jeremy Cox is a Bay Journal staff writer based in Maryland. Tim Wheeler is the Bay Journal's associate editor and senior writer, based in Maryland.

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