San Antonio Express-News

Oyster farming gains momentum

- By Matt Wyatt STAFF WRITER matt.wyatt@chron.com Twitter: @mattdwyatt

The trailblaze­rs of Texas’ fledgling oyster maricultur­e industry are inching closer to establishi­ng farms in the state’s bay systems.

Hannah Kaplan, a 30-year-old Houston native, quit her full-time job several months ago to focus on launching an oyster farm in East Galveston Bay. She was the first person to submit an applicatio­n to Texas Parks and Wildlife Department after the agency laid the framework for the industry last year.

“There’s pros and cons to being the first,” Kaplan said.

“But it’s really exciting to be the first to submit an applicatio­n and have this amazing learning experience with this industry.”

Kaplan is embracing the challenges that come with being a groundbrea­ker. She is jumping into this industry without any prior experience in maricultur­e but is leaning on members of the small, tight-knit community of those building this industry and her father, Joe, who has experience in starting businesses, to learn as she goes.

“I believe the biggest obstacle will be successful­ly growing the first round of oyster spat we put in the water,” said Kaplan, adding she is planning to use two different types of equipment at first to figure out what works best.

“Overall, we have a plan in place for day-to-day operations, but the first round of spat will be a test on us to determine what really works best for the growth of the oysters.”

Kaplan said the sustainabi­lity aspect of oyster farming appeals to her. She said the need is great with wild oyster harvest in decline and reefs closing to overfishin­g. She is also confident in the market for her product.

Also, Kaplan, along with others venturing into this industry, will enjoy the economic advantages that come with farming instead of fishing.

“Our goal is to be able to produce oysters year-round, which gives us an advantage over natural oyster production, which is only allowed during certain months of the year,” said Kaplan. Texas oyster season opened Nov. 1 and will run through April 30. Oyster farmers will also be allowed to harvest at 2½ inches, while wild oysters are considered legal at 3.

Down the coast in Corpus Christi, well-known restaurant owner Brad Lomax will be able to enhance his business with the ability to bring oysters directly from farm to table and cut out the middleman.

Lomax says he sells 600,000 oysters a year between his Water Street Oyster Bar and Executive Surf Club. Those oysters are currently a mixture of wildcaught from Aransas Bay and farm-raised from out of state.

He is planning to meet that demand in the future with floating cages on an eight-acre site in Copano Bay. Lomax is hoping to harvest his first batch around this time next year.

Aside from supplying his own oysters for Water Street, Lomax is anxious to brand and market his product up and down the coast. He already has a name licensed that pays homage to his establishm­ent: O-bar Ranch.

“The branding opportunit­ies are endless,” said Lomax, adding that the rich history of the region, from the Karankawa Native American tribe to 17th century French explorer La Salle and beyond, provide those unique branding opportunit­ies.

Lomax aims to continue educating his customers on a product he considers superior to the wild-caught version on the halfshell market. Farm-raised oysters are cleaner, deeper-cut, better sized and can be refined to produce unique tastes, akin to a vintner creating fine wine.

Like Kaplan, Lomax appreciate­s the sustainabi­lity of oyster farming.

Over a decade ago, Dr. Joe Fox from Texas A&M Corpus Christi encouraged Lomax to recycle his restaurant’s oyster shells back into the bay. As a result, about 15 acres of oyster reefs were created because of Water Street Oyster

Bar.

“One of the things I’m most proud of in my career is that we did that,” Lomax said.

Kaplan, Lomax and the budding group of Texas commercial oyster farmers will lean on the knowledge and experience of Fox, who along with now-retired TPWD deputy director of coastal fisheries Lance Robinson helped spearhead the creation of this industry.

“I’d gotten a little bit fed up with the fact that Texas was really the only state in the nation with a coastline that didn’t have an oyster aquacultur­e industry,” said Fox, who can be considered the father of Texas oyster farming.

The professor runs two research farms, one in Copano Bay and the other in Matagorda. He is currently developing a site suitabilit­y map for Copano Bay in conjunctio­n with Texas Sea Grant, creating a workforce developmen­t facility and renovating a seed hatchery near Palacios. Fox also works with the Harte Research Institute. He is a busy man, to say the least.

The creation of a seed hatchery in Texas will be instrument­al to the future success of the industry. Currently, oyster farmers would have to send brood stock from their bay systems to other states to be spawned.

That is not the only challenge, though. The start-up process is arduous, involving multiple permits from multiple agencies and the actual selection of sites for these farms can be problemati­c. There is a litany of parameters, such as keeping farms out of the proximity of oil and gas operations, other oyster reefs, sea grass beds and other sensitive habitat areas. The sites are also subject to public comment.

Each site will have its own specific ecological challenges to deal with, too.

“Texas bays are very different from other bays around the Gulf and certainly those along the Eastern Seaboard,” said Fox, noting that Texas bays, though the warm water is advantageo­us for growing oysters quickly, are often shallow, wind-driven, mudflat types that can get blown out by North winds and other environmen­tal obstacles.

Marketing will also be a considerab­le hurdle. Texas oysters do not yet have the consumer recognitio­n attached to East Coast oysters, which sell at a higher price. Fox said Texas oyster farmers will have to be creative in selling their wares to the restaurant­s that will push them. Each bay system is different and can produce a unique taste, shape and brand.

“It’s no longer that you’re just the farmer, you also have to be the entreprene­ur. You have to be your own marketing agent and you have to hustle,” Fox said.

With the serpentine permitting process, site and gear selection and finding buyers out of the way, the day-to-day work itself is also not a walk in the park. Oyster farms need constant management and supervisio­n.

“It’s real hard work. You’re dealing with a living organism… it doesn’t take off like you might want to take off on the weekend,” said Fox.

Despite these challenges that Texas oyster farming pioneers face, the advantages over the wild-caught oyster market are still immense. Farmers can optimize their products with single, half-shell oysters that sell for a higher price than clumps harvested off reefs. Oyster farmers get to sleep in their own beds, and they know exactly where their handiwork is at all times. The costs associated with boats and fuel will be minimized, all while helping the environmen­t with an oyster that can be produced year-round and at a smaller size.

Lomax will have a public hearing for his site in early March and Kaplan hopes that she will have one not long after.

After sites are approved and permits obtained, it will finally be time to break ground — or water, rather — on a new industry in Texas.

TODAY-SUNDAY

Texas Parks & Wildlife Department: Volunteers needed for annual Texas Abandoned Crab Trap Removal Program. Numerous drop-off locations along the coast. Go to tpwd.texas.gov, click the media tab then news releases, call Holly Grand, 361-825-3993, or email crabtrap@tpwd.texas.gov. Houston Safari Club: Annual Worldwide Hunting Expo & Convention, George R. Brown Convention Center, Houston. Speakers, seminars, outfitters and gear. Click on houstonsaf­ariclub.org.

SATURDAY-SUNDAY

Port Aransas Chamber of Commerce: In lieu of the annual Whooping Crane Festival which has been canceled because of the pandemic, a series of guided Wings of Winter Walking Tours will be conducted. Leonabelle Turnbull Birding Center, 9-11 a.m. Also Sunday, 10 a.m.-non; Feb. 27, 9-11 a.m.; and Feb. 28,10 a.m.noon. Free. To register, click on whoopingcr­anefestiva­l.org.

MARCH 5-6

Texas Trophy Hunters Associatio­n: 11th annual TTHA Bucks and BBQ Cook-off, National Shooting Complex. Brisket, pork spare ribs, chicken, beans, wild game and showmanshi­p awards. Sanctioned by Internatio­nal Barbeque Cookers Associatio­n. Shooting sports, vendors. Click on ttha.com, call 800-800-3207 or email info@ttha.com.

MARCH 6-7

Texas Outdoor Family: Hands-on basics of camping for those with little or no experience with tent, gear provided, Bastrop State Park. $75 for family of up to six. Call 512-389-8903 or email tofsp@tpwd.texas.gov.

MARCH 6

Mitchell Lake Audubon Center: Coastal Shorebirds: World Travelers, Winter Texans, an online workshop conducted by birding enthusiast Patsy Inglet, 10-11 a.m. $5. Register at mitchellla­ke.audubon.org.

MARCH 8-10

Cibolo Nature Center & Farm: Spring Break Camp for ages 5-12, 140 City Park Road, Boerne. 9 a.m.-1:30 p.m. daily. Includes survival basics, swimming and fishing in the Cibolo Creek and bird identifica­tion. $165. For more informatio­n, email nature@cibolo.org, call 830-249-4616 or click on cibolo.org/calendar.

MARCH 10

Mitchell Lake Audubon Center: Intro to Native Plants for Birds, online workshop, 6-7:30 p.m. Free. 10-11 a.m. $5. Registrati­on required at mitchellla­ke.audubon.org/events.

MARCH 18

Cibolo Nature Center & Farm: Introducti­on to Birding for Adults, online workshop 6-8 p.m. conducted by Audubon birders Tom and Patsy Inglet. $5. For more informatio­n, contact Laurie Brown, 830-388-7680 or laurie@cibolo.org. To register, click on cibolo.org/calendar.

MARCH 19

Coastal Conservati­on Associatio­n: Annual San Antonio Chapter Hooked on Clays sporting clays shoot, check-in 11:30 a.m., National Shooting Complex, 5931 Roft Road. Lunch, prizes, raffles. Click on ccatexas.org.

MARCH 20-21

Texas Outdoor Family: Hands-on basics of camping for those with little or no experience with tent, gear provided, Palmetto State Park. $75 for family of up to six. Call 512-389-8903 or email tofsp@tpwd.texas.gov.

MARCH 24-25

Texas Parks & Wildlife Commission: Regular meeting, 9 a.m.-5 p.m., TPWD headquarte­rs, 4200 Smith School Road, Austin. Click on tpwd.texas.gov.

MARCH 24

Texas Parks & Wildlife Department: Deadline for public comment on proposed changes to freshwater and saltwater fishing regulation­s including changes to length and bag limits for blue and channel catfish statewide and at specific locations and clarifying red snapper bag limits when fishing in Texas and federal waters. Click on tpwd.texas.gov/ business/feedback/public_comment.

MARCH 26-28

San Antonio Boat & Outdoor Expo: Latest models of RVS, bay and offshore boats, personal watercraft, kayak and wakesurfin­g; gear; seminars; fishing tank; Expo Hall, AT&T Center grounds. Call 512-481-1777 or click on sanantonio­boatshow.com.

APRIL 1

Texas Parks & Wildlife Department:

 ?? Brett Coomer / Staff photograph­er ??
Brett Coomer / Staff photograph­er

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