Bluff Oysters & Oystering
Some say that Bluff oysters are the finest in the
world. They are grown slowly in the cold clean waters of the
Foveaux Strait. In season, they are dredged by Bluffs oyster
fleet.
Oystering first began commercially at Stewart
Island in the 1860s. Coastal cutters were simply beached on the
beds at high tide and the oysters shovelled aboard as the tide
dropped. The catch was transported in the shell to the mainland and
right from the outset demand was so high that within a few years
the beds were exhausted. Depleting beds caused the closure of the
harvesting in 1877. In 1879 new larger beds were discovered in
deeper water and the centre of activity gradually shifted from
Stewart Island to Bluff.
Although
commonly known as the Bluff oyster, it is known by others names,
including mud oyster, flat oyster, dredge oyster, Foveaux Strait
oyster and deep water oyster.The species is actually found
throughout New Zealand, but is most common in the south.
A quota system was introduced in 1963, the twelve
oyster boats then engaged in the industry being set a limit of
170,000 sacks per season (each sack containing, on average, 800
oysters). The quota was progressively reduced until in 1970 with 23
boats operating, it was 115,000 or 5000 per boat (in eating terms
that equates to two dozen oysters for every man, woman and child in
the country). Seasons were relatively good until the 1986/87 season
when the beds were struck by the parasitic protozoan Bonamia. This
caused the oysters to become watery and black. Because of the
Bonamia the season was ceased in 1991 and did not reopen until 1994
with a limited quota and fewer boats.
When oystering first began it was a race to get the
first oysters back to the wharf. Today some boats are met by
helicopters who whisk the oysters away to be distributed throughout
the country.
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