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Grow, Eat your own Oysters - Dockside Aquaculture Program to equip Recreational Oyster Farmers in Rhode Island

With new recreational aquaculture license from CRMC and training, equipment and oysters
from Roger Williams University, approved dock owners can be farming oysters by fall

Oyster lovers in Rhode Island, get ready. By this September, you could be raising your own oysters on your dock – and by next fall, serving them over a bed of crushed ice.

With a new approval process for recreational oyster farming launched by the state’s Coastal Resources Management Council (CRMC) and a dockside aquaculture package offered by Roger Williams University that will include the required education, equipment and seed oysters to start, recreational oyster farmers can be up and running in the coming months.

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And while startup costs will require a financial investment, fees will be used to support the restoration of Rhode Island’s natural oyster population via the Oyster Gardening for Restoration and Enhancement program (RI-OGRE), which operates out of the University’s Center for Economic and Environmental Development.

“This is a one-of-a-kind opportunity for Rhode Islanders who both enjoy oysters and care about our coastal environment,” says Dale Leavitt, associate professor of marine biology at Roger Williams. “Not only do you get to raise your own oysters to eat – but because proceeds support RI-OGRE, you’ll play a part in restoring the state’s wild oyster population as well.”

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The following information outlines who can participate and how the dockside aquaculture program will work:

• First, the program is limited to individuals who own CRMC-registered docks located in Rhode Island waters approved by the Department of Environmental Management for “the taking of shellfish for human consumption.” Visit www.dem.ri.gov/maps/mapfile/shellfsh.pdf for maps of approved / prohibited waters.

            • For those with docks in approved waters, the CRMC licensing procedure requires that participants complete a recreational shellfish aquaculture course that covers topics including oyster biology, growout systems, predation/disease risks, and permitting and regulations. To allow aspiring farmers to fulfill this requirement, the University will offer a Recreational Shellfish Farming course over three Saturdays this summer – July 20, July 27 and August 3 – from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. each day.

• The course will culminate in a completed Recreational Aquaculture Application, which RWU will submit to the CRMC in August to obtain the recreational aquaculture license.

            • Once the license has been acquired, each participant will receive a set of growout equipment tailored to his or her dock configuration, location and exposure to weather.

• After installation (likely in September) participants will receive approximately 2,000 one-inch seed oysters from the University’s Luther H. Blount Shellfish Hatchery to raise in the growout gear.

• With good management and careful tending over the next year, a healthy percentage of the oysters should be appropriately sized for consumption by Fall 2014.

Roger Williams University will offer the total dockside aquaculture package – course registration, guidance through the application process, submission of the application, gear required to grow the oysters, and 2,000 seed oysters – for a total cost of $2,500. A portion of the proceeds ($2,000) is a tax-deductible, charitable contribution to RWU and will be used to underwrite the work of RI-OGRE, a public-benefit restoration effort that is fully supported through gifts and grants. 

To register for the dockside aquaculture package, visit http://onlinecommunity.rwu.edu/oysters2013. For questions or additional information on the program, call (401) 254-3110 or email cfrancis@rwu.edu.

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