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Missouri
shrimp harvest, conference noted
Shrimp harvest shows possibilities of
aquaculture
Monday, January 8, 2007
By TJ Greaney ~ Southeast Missourian
CHAFFEE, Mo. -- It's been four years since
Bill Crites, 37, of Chaffee looked at his
muddy back yard and thought it would make
a nice place to raise crustaceans.
Four long years since his friends thought
he'd gone a little crazy.
But now, with an annual harvest of 2,200
pounds of Pacific white shrimp, which he
sells to private customers and out of his
newly opened convenience store, Crites believes
he's found a good way to supplement his income.
"It's worked well, and I think eventually
it will be profitable," he said.
Crites and a panel of local experts will
be at the University of Missouri Cape Girardeau
County Extension office in Jackson Wednesday
to take part in a one-day aquaculture conference.
Aquaculture is the practice of inland farming
of marine animals such as shrimp, catfish
or trout for commercial sale.
Its proponents call it a good way for farmers
to diversify.
"It used to be every farmer kept hogs
and chickens or had a couple of milk cows
and sold some cream on the side, but we've
gone away from that now. So, a lot of farmers
are now looking at alternative crops," said
Gerald Bryan of MU Extension.
Bryan said a savvy aquaculture farmer can
earn 20 to 30 percent back on his investment.
But don't get into the business thinking
it will be simple, Crites warns.
"I put a lot of money into it early
on," he said.
Some of that initial investment includes
$5,000 to dig the ponds, $3,500 to dig a
well for the water source, $800 for a drainage
system, $2,500 for an aeration system, $1,300
for the shrimp nursery and $700 for the first
100,000 shrimp.
And that doesn't even include the tractor-load
of salt he dumps into his ponds each year
to maintain suitable salination levels.
"There's a lot that goes into it," he
said.
It's a careful, delicate business and Crites
wakes up at 2 a.m. just to check the oxygen
levels in his pond. He buys his shrimp stock
in late May, holds them indoors for several
weeks where he slowly weens them off saltwater
and then puts them in the ponds in June.
He harvests the shrimp in September.
Shrimp
must be restocked each year in Missouri's
climate because they cannot survive the winter
months. Crites "double stocks" his
ponds and raises trout there during the winter
months.
But he's most proud of the little pink hors
d'oeuvres.
"They have just an unbelievable taste.
I think it's just a matter of time before
people stop going to Schnucks," and
start eating aquaculture shrimp, he said.
The
aquaculture variety aren't quite as "fishy," he
says.
"When you clean them there's no odor
like where your fingers stink. If you buy
these peel and eat shrimp you can throw them
in your trash can and not even know they're
there. If you try that with other shrimp,
your whole house will be odored up," he
said.
"Now,
why that is, I don't know."
Gerald Bryan said the goal of the conference
is to get area farmers thinking of creative
ways to make money on their land.
"We just want them to know that where
they have an abundant water source, the fish
and shrimp industry is certainly a possibility," he
said.
Bryan said even more than Cape Girardeau
County, that applies to Bootheel counties
whose proximity to the Mississippi River
diversion channel make water an abundant
commodity.
Attendance at the conference costs $5 (lunch
included); those interested can register
by contacting Bryan at (573) 547-4504.
Source:
http://www.semissourian.com/story/1184139.html
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