The Palm Beach Post

Coastal Va. homeowners stirring up oyster war

Angry residents cite concerns over privacy, safety.

- Associated Press

VIRGINIA BEACH, VA. — Oystermen, pirates and police clashed violently more than a century ago over who could collect the Chesapeake Bay’s tasty and lucrative oysters. As the shellfish makes a comeback, a modern-day oyster war is brewing, this time between wealthy waterfront property owners and working-class fishermen.

Over the past five years, oyster production has doubled on the East Coast, driven by new farming methods, cleaner water and Ameri c a n s ’ g r owi n g t a s t e f o r orders on t he hal f shel l . The resurgence has led to unpreceden­ted resistance f r o m c o a s t a l Vi r g i n i a n s who want to maintain picturesqu­e views from their waterfront homes and has fueled a debate over access to public waterways.

“These people can’t have it all,” said Chris Ludford, an oysterman in Virginia Beach who sells to nearby farm-totable restaurant­s.

Ludford said he faces fierce pushback along a Chesapeake Bay tributary from people with “a $2,000 painting in their house of some old bearded oysterman tonging oysters.”

“But they don’t want to look out their window and see the real thing,” he said.

Homeowners say the growing number of oystermen — dressed in waders and often tending cages of shellfish — spoil their views and invade their privacy. Residents also worry about less access to the water and the safety of boaters and swimmers.

Low tides often expose oyster cages, usually accompanie­d by markers or warning signs that protrude from the surface. In some places, cages float.

“All of sudden you have people working in your backyard like it was some industrial area,” said John Korte, a retired NASA aerospace engineer in Virginia Beach who’s among residents concerned about oyster farm- ing’s proliferat­ion. “They may be a hundred feet away from someone’s yard.”

B e n S t a g g , c h i e f e n g i - neer at the Virginia Marine Resources Commission, said the state is poised to break its record of leased acreage for oyster growing. But nearly 30 percent of more than 400 new lease applicatio­ns face opposition, an unpreceden­ted number that has led to a backlog of leases awaiting approval.

“Occasional­ly I can resolve those by having the parties get together and adjust the area further offshore,” Stagg said. “But oftentimes, I can’t.”

There hasn’t been thi s much interest in oysters in Virginia since the early 1960s. Since then, disease and overfishin­g took hold and growers started to disappear.

Over the last few decades, breeding programs have produced more disease-resistant and faster-growing oysters. The water’s cleaner. American palates have evolved, increasing demand.

Farming techniques also changed. Traditiona­lly, oysters are grown on the bottom of a calm and salty river or bay, then harvested with tongs or dredges that pull them onto boats.

N o w, f i s h e r m e n a r e increasing­ly using cages to grow oysters over a two-tothree year period. The equipment keeps predators away and produces oysters with a more uniform shape and size, which restaurant­s prefer.

But the cages are often placed in shallower water closer to shore — and people’s homes.

Virginia Beach is perhaps ground zero for today’s oyster war. The state’s largest city sits at the mouth of the Chesapeake Bay. And oysters thrive in the city’s Lynnhaven River, a network of bays and creeks flowing past expensive homes. Lynnhaven oysters are well-known for their salty taste and size.

A s t a t e t a s k f o rc e was formed to find compromise. It recommende­d giving residents more power to block nearby oyster leases. But the idea was rejected by the Virginia Marine Resources Commission, with the majority of commission­ers saying state lawmakers should step in.

Proposals in the St ate - house have included raising the cost of an oyster farming lease from $1.50 an acre annually to $5,000. But legislator­s haven’t found a solution.

Conflicts also have flared up along Maryland’s Patuxent River, the coastal lagoons of Rhode Island and on Martha’s Vineyard in Massachuse­tts.

In Delaware, a group of people who mostly own vac ation homes successful­ly blocked potential oyster farming along their part of an inland bay.

“Oftentimes, affluent and new members of the communit y have the point of view that they own the water in front of them, which is really not true,” said Bob Rheault, executive director of the East Coast Shellfish Growers Associatio­n. “We need to win back our social license to farm.”

Rheault s a i d he’s s e e n these battles “up and down the East Coast” — even before the crop began to double five years ago.

“The industry was there before the waterfront mansions were built,” Rheault added. “But it hasn’t been there for this generation.”

Ludford, who also works as a Virginia Beach firefighte­r, is relatively new to the business. He and other relatives started growing oysters in 2010 after leaving the crab industry.

On a recent morning, Ludford sorted through cages as he stood in the Lynnhaven River, hundreds of yards from the nearest home.

He dragged cages into view as grass shrimp wriggled on the shells. He and two helpers retrieved more than 500 oysters, which he sold at 75 c e nt s a pi e c e t o t hre e restaurant­s — totaling about $375.

“Really, people haven’t seen an oysterman behind their houses in 50 to 60 years,” Ludford said.

Steven Corneliuss­en, who owns a waterfront home in Poquoson, Va., said he’s among a group that successful­ly protested new leases along his corner of the Chesapeake. He said waterways should be subject to zoning, like land.

“That water out in front of me doesn’t belong to me,” he said. “But it doesn’t belong to them, either.”

 ?? STEVE HELBER / AP ?? Chris Ludford sorts oysters amid his leased oyster beds on the Lynnhaven River in Virginia Beach, Va. “These people can’t have it all,” he says of residents who complain about a lack of privacy.
STEVE HELBER / AP Chris Ludford sorts oysters amid his leased oyster beds on the Lynnhaven River in Virginia Beach, Va. “These people can’t have it all,” he says of residents who complain about a lack of privacy.
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