Chesapeake oysters are part of the legacy of the area, history on the
half-shell. Read of their beginning (foot-long bivalves!) through
cultivation today.
The eastern oyster, the humble bivalve and delicous treat, are the
living bones of the Chesapeake, as well as the ecological and historical
lifeblood of the region. When colonists first sailed these impossibly
abundant shores, they described massive shoals of foot-long oysters but
the bottomless appetite of the Gilded Age and great fleets of skipjacks
took their toll. Disease, environmental pressures and overconsumption
decimated the population by the end of the twentieth century. While
Virginia turned to bottom-leasing, passionate debate continues in
Maryland among scientists and oystermen whether aquaculture or wild
harvesting is the better way forward. Today, boutique oyster farming in
the Bay is sustainably meeting the culinary demand of a new generation
of connoisseurs. With careful research and interviews with experts,
author Kate Livie presents this dynamic story and a glimpse of what the
future may hold.