MINDING YOUR
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| CRAWDAD
COMMERCE By Katie Wirt |
Way down in
Whaleyville where the corn grows tall, there's a
farmer who's raising a few eyebrows with his
unconventional crop. Bob Shuping, an
aquaculturalist, won't be spreading fertilizer
and praying for rain this spring. Instead, he'll
be checking water temperatures and monitoring
feeding times. Come April, Shuping hopes to
harvest his first crop of Louisiana Red Swamp
crawfish. |
| The
40-year-old middle school teacher bought $100
worth of crawfish last summer from Janet Sutton,
a 10-year veteran of crawfish farming. Shuping
released the creatures into a two-acre pond on
his farm in Suffolk, near the North Carolina
border. Shuping anticipates his initial
investment of 1,000 crawfish, weighing about 50
pounds, will multiply into 500 to 700 pounds of
meat per acre. And at $3 per pound, that's
revenue of $15,000 to $21,000 a season. He got
the idea after eating crawfish in Louisiana,
where they're considered a delicacy. |
![]() artwork by Michael Goodman |
But these are risks that Shuping is willing to take. When the conditions are right, Sutton says, crawfish are mostly self-sufficient. But, she recommends: "Check your cost. Do your research first." Crawfish are not difficult to maintain, except for some minor variables in water temperature and feeding. "Feeding crawfish is really more of an art than science," Shuping says. "If you feed them too much, the water will foul. If you don't feed them enough, they'll be stunted." If Shuping's crop lives -- and that's the hitch, he won't know until spring -- demand is expected to far outweigh supply. Last summer, Shuping says vendors at the Bayou Boogaloo, a Norfolk waterfront festival, sold 5,000 pounds of crawfish. Restaurants and wholesalers are not the only ones looking to buy the creatures: There's a huge demand from bait shops. Fishermen buy them for 25 cents apiece because, Shuping explains, "They're excellent for catching bass." For now, though, Shuping is waiting expectantly. And if the crawfish don't work out for him, there's always next year. He says he may try to grow kiwi fruit.
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