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NPR reporting 100% mortality for all Oyster beds affected by flood divertion...
Posted on 5/18/11 at 10:20 am
Posted on 5/18/11 at 10:20 am
those beds will be reseeded as soon as August and harvest is estimated late 2013. Sounds like they've accepted it and come up with a plan.
This post was edited on 5/18/11 at 10:20 am
Posted on 5/18/11 at 10:24 am to Tommy Patel
It was a good run.....oh well
Posted on 5/18/11 at 10:27 am to Tommy Patel
They'll eventually come back
they arent natural to that area anyway
they arent natural to that area anyway
Posted on 5/18/11 at 10:32 am to tgrbaitn08
quote:
It was a good run.....oh well
hopefully those outside Louisiana will see this as a fresh start with "brand new" oysters free of lingering BP oil, flushed away.
Hats off to those in that industry between Hurricanes and floods and BP the last 6 years has been a M'Fer
Posted on 5/18/11 at 11:14 am to Tommy Patel
I keep reading that typically oyster beds come back stronger after something like this.
So it'll just suck for the short term hopefully.
So it'll just suck for the short term hopefully.
Posted on 5/18/11 at 11:32 am to bbrownso
How much oyster production are we talking about here? Also where are the affected beds located? It was my understanding that there are not that many beds in the lake anymore.
Posted on 5/18/11 at 12:24 pm to MountainTiger
so do they re seed the areas that were ruined or should we run the diversion projects at full power to reclaim wetlands.
I know they wont do this in the lake, but it seems like the way to make the best of a bad situation in the other ones if it applies.
I know they wont do this in the lake, but it seems like the way to make the best of a bad situation in the other ones if it applies.
Posted on 5/18/11 at 12:48 pm to ADLSUNSU
Oyster beds have been extremely political for a long time. They have cost citizens of this state in the forms of coastal erosion, huge court payments, etc. I don't see why anyone would be so sympathetic for people leasing public lands for $2 an acre and raising a private crop.
Posted on 5/18/11 at 2:15 pm to ADLSUNSU
quote:
so do they re seed the areas that were ruined or should we run the diversion projects at full power to reclaim wetlands.
I know they wont do this in the lake, but it seems like the way to make the best of a bad situation in the other ones if it applies.
The first. What use is the Oyster Industry if we keep losing land
Posted on 5/18/11 at 4:40 pm to bayourant
I was under the impression that the lake was no longer used for commercial oyster production.
Is that wrong?
Is that wrong?
Posted on 5/18/11 at 6:42 pm to TigerDog83
quote:
Oyster beds have been extremely political for a long time. They have cost citizens of this state in the forms of coastal erosion, huge court payments, etc. I don't see why anyone would be so sympathetic for people leasing public lands for $2 an acre and raising a private crop.
I tend to agree. I wonder what the oyster bubbas say about it.
Posted on 5/18/11 at 8:03 pm to JudgeHolden
They're all over in Calcasieu Lake, raping and pillaging the oyster beds over there.
Posted on 5/18/11 at 8:36 pm to Mung
As salt water intrudes further inland. The oyster beds and oyster leases move further inland.
If you reclaim the areas by introducing fresh water and sediment, which pushes back the salt water and oysters, you are met with lawsuits by oysterman.
As the oysterman talk about coastal preservation/ restoration from one side of their mouth, they also resist any efforts of coastal conservation that change the status quo. Its definitely a Catch 22.
Posted on 5/18/11 at 10:25 pm to ItTakesAThief
quote:Hey phuck them oyster men...teach them to fish.
you are met with lawsuits by oysterman.
As the oysterman talk about coastal preservation/ restoration from one side of their mouth, they also resist any efforts of coastal conservation that change the status quo. Its definitely a Catch 22.
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