They loaded in reverse order. At low tide, there can be seen out in our bay, the structure of an abandoned oyster farm - 2 in fact. The one nearest the head of the bay silted up and its owner built a second one. Both are now abandoned. Both were built before amended regulations came into force (but not retrospective in application) that any structure built in the Sounds for commercial (or personal) use has to be removed when no longer in use.
There are oysters in great clumps along the shoreline too. It is not a place where you wiggle your toes in the sand.
Oysters have even colonised stranded tree trunks.
To add insult to injury the owner of the abandoned oyster racks, abandoned a small (unseaworthy) barge on a beach near Havelock. A recent extra high tide dislodged the hulk sending it spinning out into the Sound where it became a hazard to navigation and appeared in various posted warnings about its random course until a stormy evening fetched it up in our bay where it grounded and sank.
Its owner took to social media to announce it was not for sale or salvage. (F barked a short cynical laugh.) It is neither saleable nor worth the effort to salvage, being in fact a worthless wreck through which the tides have risen and fallen every day since for weeks now.
It’s a shame the old farms are still there. Especially the old boat. But it looks like it’s actually
ReplyDeleteHelped the oysters totally take over the area.
I’d be reluctant to eat them as well. Although they do look tempting
Hari OM
ReplyDeleteAh, something similar happened in the Hawkesbury River, just up from where I lived in OZ - and where I often went rowing. The rocks along the shores there are now covered in 'feral' oyster. I may once have had a couple of good feasts from foraging... not the same silt issue there. The farm owner went bankrupt. Big court case.... few years later, bought by a couple who have since turned the business into a major reason to go visit Brooklyn (The Oyster Shed) ... ooooooh, you sent me down memory lane! YAM xx
Perhaps the barge could become your version of the Great Barrier Reef? Given time.
ReplyDeleteCan overgrowth of oysters become a problem or is that not likely to happen? Lots of happy seabirds, maybe?
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