runsongas
Contributor
@Eric Sedletzky weather is worse and the vis in the chesapeake makes half moon bay look good. the crab cakes and wawa ain't worth it.
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Wow! Brilliant! (as @Happy Diver would say.
I get mine in the town of Marshall at a place called Hog Island Oyster Co. in Tomales Bay.
The medium size are $2 a piece so it adds up fast.
They are pretty damn good. I eat several raw then cook up the rest.
As I’m doing research with Department of Fish and Wildlife, you can take oysters but there are many restrictions including no use of scuba or surface supplied air (hookah). So that means wading in intertidal zones and/or snorkelling/freediving. Our oysters are also not native, they are an east coast variety that were planted here but they thrive. The native ones were harvested to extinction many years ago.
It sounds like you are in a much better place for oysters. Maybe I should move to Maryland?
@Eric Sedletzky weather is worse and the vis in the chesapeake makes half moon bay look good. the crab cakes and wawa ain't worth it.
Now, in this moment in time?... sure, I agree 100%. I live out in the county and we all drink tea with our pinkies in the air! My grandfather's stories are from 50 years ago. There was a time when Baltimore was blue collar and not full of such poverty, there was a "good ole days"... where I live might as well be on a different planet. Corn fields and tractors!that just sounds like russian roulette with shellfish poisoning, buying oysters off Donnie from Dundalk
Ahh, ha! I think someone I know accused me of doing this!I live out in the county and we all drink tea with our pinkies in the air!
It's because it takes one to know one!Ahh, ha! I think someone I know accused me of doing this!![]()
I have never been to California, it's my understanding that everything is more expensive then here?You’re super lucky that you can go out and get that many quality oysters!
At Hog Island I can get a bag of 60 mediums for $109 I think. The mediums are probably on the smaller side of what you get. The smalls are less $ but too much work. Tomales Bay is very clean. The enviro-nazis have actually done a pretty swell job of continually testing the water and keeping things clean. There was a campground in the area that had been there for years with some old and outdated/faulty septic systems that were leaking into the bay. The coastal commission and water quality people shut them down quick and made them do a huge clean up, plus they had to get rid of a bunch of old 1940’s dirt bag trailers that were disintegrating into the ground along the sea wall.
The urchin divers years ago complained that the urchins from Tomales Bay had a smell, well that’s why, but they don’t anymore.
They also don’t harvest oysters at least three days after a hard rain because of runoff contamination from the dairies around there. The coastal dairies which have a watershed that feeds into Tomales Bay will be the next thing to go.