Clam farms created on Beals Island Novel method may be future of industry

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BEALS – The wind off the ocean is ear-stinging cold, but the clam farmers in Molly Cove don’t appear to notice. They are digging their rakes into the oozy mud, hollowing out a trench to surround their personal 20-foot-wide strips of mud flat between the…
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BEALS – The wind off the ocean is ear-stinging cold, but the clam farmers in Molly Cove don’t appear to notice.

They are digging their rakes into the oozy mud, hollowing out a trench to surround their personal 20-foot-wide strips of mud flat between the high- and low-tide marks.

Once the ground is ready, approximately 11,000 tiny seed clams – one-quarter to one-half inch in diameter – are broadcast over each 216-square-foot plot.

The final step is protective netting, stretched over the baby clams and tucked into the trenches.

The men are creating Maine’s first private clam farms.

Using seed clams supplied by the Down East Institute for Applied Marine Research and Education, the farmers will tend their plots – checking to assure that nets stay in place and aren’t torn by predators – for the next 21/2 years.

If all goes as hoped, the seed clams will grow to harvest size by October 2005.

“They’ll need to treat it like a garden,” said Brian Beal, a professor of marine biology at the University of Maine at Machias and a technical adviser for the project.

Beal created the Beals Island Regional Shellfish Hatchery – the state’s first public clam stock enhancement program – in 1987.

Since then, the hatchery has produced seed clams for every town in the state that manages its clamming resource, and the Beals Island Regional Shellfish Hatchery has grown into the Down East Institute for Applied Marine Research and Education.

The institute recently acquired a grant from the National Science Foundation to create a new marine research laboratory and education center to create economic opportunities for area fishermen.

The Beals clam farm project is a joint venture between the town and the institute. Beal said the project is built on experience.

It has become apparent over the years that seeding town clam flats has its limitations, he said, because a small number of people did the actual work, but everyone wants to participate in the harvest.

The clam farm project gives each of the seven participating clammers exclusive rights to their plots by way of an experimental aquaculture lease from the Maine Department of Marine Resources, he said.

Robert Alley, chairman of the town’s shellfish committee, was on hand for the seeding.

“In two or three years, I have an idea we’ll have quite a few clams to market,” Alley said.

Alley, who is 55, said clamming on Beals has eroded to the point that there are only 21 diggers. Only three or four of those are full-time, he said.

“We had 100 diggers 25 years ago,” he said. “My father used to lobster-fish until October, take his traps out, and clam from November to July.”

Clam stocks are so depleted that most young men no longer see clamming as a way to make money, he said.

Clam farming – where the seed stock comes from a hatchery and the clams are protected while growing to maturity – may be the future of the industry, he said.

“I don’t want to see this die,” he said as he looked out over the flats. “This is our way of life.”


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