This week, 草莓传媒 takes you from the bottom of the bay to the picnic table in our four-part series聽Claws and Effect: The murky future of the Chesapeake Bay blue crab. Listen on air and read it online. This is Part 3. Read Part 2 here.聽
There are plenty of crabs throughout the Chesapeake Bay region, and while it costs a lot of money, anyone looking to host a crab feast can do so. But there are warning signs about the future of the crab population that scientists are still trying to grapple with. The future of those who catch all the crabs you like to eat is also filled with uncertainty.
There are almost 5,400 licensed commercial crabbers in Maryland this year, the first time in more than a decade the state has licensed fewer than 6,000 commercial crabbers. And it鈥檚 not clear how many of those who have a license actively harvest crabs on a regular or even part-time basis.
The state doesn鈥檛 have records detailing the number of commercial crab licenses issued before 2013. But there鈥檚 a lot of reasons for the decline.
‘Nothing鈥檚 guaranteed when I leave the dock’
鈥淚t鈥檚 gotten a lot harder (to be a waterman),” said Ian Horney, one of the founders of
He starts crabbing near the Virginia line as soon as the crab season opens up, and makes his way north, before migrating back south for the end of the season.
鈥淚 chase crabs until the end,鈥 he said.
He estimates he spends about $400 just to go to work every single day, between the bait and boat fuel needed.
鈥淣othing’s guaranteed when I leave the dock,鈥 he said.
It鈥檚 a risk that Jason Ruth, who owns Harris Seafood Company in Grasonville, said fewer people are willing to take.
鈥淲e don’t have the amount of watermen that we used to 20 years ago,鈥 said Ruth. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not an industry that people flock to for a living, because there is so many variables into it. I mean, you can have bumper crop years, and then you can have five or six lean years, and it’s kind of hard to stomach that.鈥
He said the watermen they do buy from are an aging population.
He also noted that commercial watermen are often the ones who have to deal with limits and restrictions while residents are free to take what they want from the waters.
Dead zones, cost and inflation
Horney expressed frustration about increasing development in the Baltimore-Washington area that generates runoff and sewage, which impacts the water he works on.
鈥淭hey wonder why we have dead zones in waters 鈥 places where there’s no oxygen in water,鈥 said Horney. 鈥淵ou can’t use it for a toilet and expect anything different.鈥
But long term, he said costs and inflation will drive many away from the water.
鈥淵ou go to the grocery store 鈥 it costs twice as much as it did (in the past). The price of our product hadn’t gone up,鈥 said Horney. 鈥淚 know people think that we make a lot of money because they pay a lot of money for crabs. We’re not the ones making the money.鈥
- Read Part 1 of 鈥淐laws and Effect鈥: The murky future of the Chesapeake blue crab
- Read Part 2 of 鈥淐laws and Effect鈥: Who鈥檚 to blame for the blue crabs鈥 disappearance?
- Read Part 4 of 鈥淐laws and Effect鈥: Everyone thinks there鈥檚 only one right way to eat a crab. What if they鈥檙e wrong?
In fact, he said he鈥檚 making less than he used to.
鈥淵es, because the overhead’s more,鈥 said Horney. 鈥淔uel is more, oil is more, boat slips are more. Just to pack our lunches 鈥 more.鈥
He added that he makes less per bushel than he used to.
鈥淥ur crabs are getting cut on this end, but on the other end 鈥 on the retail end 鈥 there’s no drop in the price,鈥 he lamented. 鈥淚’d like (to be) sharing some of that.鈥
As he approaches 50, crabbing is all he plans to do in life. But between the costs he deals with every day, and the cost to just to get a license from the state, Horney said he understands why the next generation is more hesitant.
In fact, he said neither his son or his daughter are following in his footsteps.
鈥淯nless you’re already established and already have your equipment bought and paid for, it鈥檚 hard for a young man to go out and spend 鈥 to jump in this business and go crab potting or do something that takes a lot of equipment,鈥 said Horney. 鈥淵ou’re talking about hundreds of thousands of dollars. You tell (a) young man that he’s got to spend a couple hundred thousand dollars to get in the business, not knowing whether he’s going to make a dime back at it.”
鈥淎 man’s probably more apt to just go get a job in a trade somewhere where it’s a steady paycheck,鈥 he added.
And if no one follows in his footsteps?
鈥淕uess it comes to an end,鈥 he said.
In Part 4 of our series, 草莓传媒 explores the most efficient ways to pick crabs, and how to cook up the crustaceans.
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