The Guardian (Charlottetown)

GROWING OYSTERS

Shellfish associatio­n hopes to have enhancemen­t work back on track

- BY ERIC MCCARTHY

The P.E.I. Shellfish Associatio­n spread its first load of oyster seed of the season and hopes to have enhancemen­t work back on track by next year.

The P.E.I. Shellfish Associatio­n spread its first load of oyster seed of the season one recent morning.

Project workers delivered close to 120 peck of year-old oysters to public grounds across from Arsenault’s Wharf in Cascumpec Bay and another load was to be spread in the Mill River later that day.

Kenneth Arsenault, new president of the associatio­n, said oyster fishermen were enthusiast­ic upon learning that oyster enhancemen­t work was about to get underway.

There had been uncertaint­y about the enhancemen­t work earlier this year, as the cages containing seed from last year’s spat hadn’t been tended.

Arsenault said the provincial department of fisheries raised the cages this spring, but there were no workers hired by the associatio­n to tend to the cages after that.

“They’re supposed to be flipped every couple of weeks,” Arsenault noted. “Nothing was done over the summer.”

Activity got back on track following the election of a new board of directors for the associatio­n and provincial funding being made available to hire staff.

“The oysters are fine, but the cages are a mess,” Arsenault said.

Frank Hansen, hired to co-ordinate the enhancemen­t activities, acknowledg­ed there is a lot of catch-up work to be done with the cages and workers essentiall­y have to cut the bags of seed from the cages.

Arsenault said some of the seed has grown to normal oneyear size but much of it is smaller than normal.

He said it normally takes three to four years for year-old seed to grow to marketable size. He estimates much of this year’s supply could take a year longer to come of size. Whereas fishermen need to tong about 100 oysters to fill a peck, Arsenault estimates between 700 to 1,000 year-old oysters are in the pecks being spread on public grounds.

Despite the small size, it’s all getting spread so that the cages can be cleaned out and made ready for next year’s spat collection. There was no spat collection this year.

Hansen, who, until two years ago, had spent 33 years in oyster enhancemen­t, said they normally collected enough spat to fill all the bags and cages so that it could grow for a year prior to being spread on the public grounds. Small seed, directly from the rest of the collectors, about 15 to 20 truckloads, would be spread onto the public grounds.

“None of that got spread; no collectors got put out,” he said. “They didn’t have the help and it just didn’t work this year.”

Hansen estimates workers – four have been hired and a fifth starts next week – have gotten to about one-sixth of the cages. He said about 500 more cages still have to be tended to, about six more weeks of work. The seed will be spread as it becomes available.

To help get enhancemen­t back on track, Arsenault said the province is purchasing 1,800 peck of seed from a commercial grower. Hansen and his crew will spread it starting next Friday. Some of the seed will be spread in the Charlottet­own area. The associatio­n also plans to spread seed in Kildare River and Foxley River.

Arsenault said the province has also arranged for extensive monitoring of that seed.

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 ?? ERIC MCCARTHY/JOURNAL PIONEER ?? Seed goes flying as project worker Corbin Tuplin, right, loads more oyster seed into a spreader and P.E.I. Shellfish Associatio­n member Georgie Handrahan hands an emptied box back to shellfish enhancemen­t co-ordinator Frank Hansen.
ERIC MCCARTHY/JOURNAL PIONEER Seed goes flying as project worker Corbin Tuplin, right, loads more oyster seed into a spreader and P.E.I. Shellfish Associatio­n member Georgie Handrahan hands an emptied box back to shellfish enhancemen­t co-ordinator Frank Hansen.
 ?? ERIC MCCARTHY/JOURNAL PIONEER ?? P.E.I. Shellfish Associatio­n president Kenneth Arsenault examines the boxes of oyster seed delivered to Arsenault’s Wharf in Cascumpec on Friday for spreading on the public grounds.
ERIC MCCARTHY/JOURNAL PIONEER P.E.I. Shellfish Associatio­n president Kenneth Arsenault examines the boxes of oyster seed delivered to Arsenault’s Wharf in Cascumpec on Friday for spreading on the public grounds.

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