The True Cost Of Losing America's Wild Oysters | True Cost | Business Insider

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  • Опубликовано: 19 сен 2022
  • Oyster reefs used to line America's coastlines. Today, they've nearly vanished, thanks to overharvesting, increasingly powerful storms, and oil spills. But conservationists are trying to bring back America's wild oysters, not just for eating, but for the benefits they bring to receding coastlines. We went to Louisiana to find out what it takes to farm oysters today and learn about the efforts to replenish these little bivalves.
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    The True Cost Of Losing America's Wild Oysters | True Cost | Business Insider

Комментарии • 515

  • @drumpftodd7887
    @drumpftodd7887 Год назад +441

    The 50's were seen as a great time but we needlessly destroyed our natural stocks of food. The oyster, sardine and almost every other industry can attest to the damage caused by the overproduction of natural resources.

    • @Dandosa1
      @Dandosa1 Год назад +26

      Nothings changed today. It just isn’t always the USA doing it now. The USA is doing more today to speed up climate change than in the past aswell. The Usa pushes for electric cars without caring where the power needed to charge cars comes from (coal power plants usually), wildfires are running rampant due to multiple reasons, but a large one is poor forest management, and poor decisions by visitors that end up starting some fires. While the USA has limits on harvesting wildlife, we end up just buying food from other countries that don’t give a crap about limits, for example, bluefin tuna bought from japan.

    • @MercenaryBlackWaterz
      @MercenaryBlackWaterz Год назад +16

      Me: thinks of the chinese dark fleets of hundreds of ships fishing international waters and gets shivers.
      Future generations are doomed.

    • @HeroOfPandas
      @HeroOfPandas Год назад +17

      @@Dandosa1 yes, but the boomers did MORE damage then in the 50s than we are doing now, since they already killed most of the oysters off, as noted in the video above. The sea would be less polluted w algae growths and such if we had billions more natural water filters running, but hey I guess grandpa needed quite a few oysters w his 15 whiskeys on the weekends

    • @turbolife5912
      @turbolife5912 Год назад +5

      The first step to improving the future is recognising the over production of the past and then using technologies to compensate for our mistakes , respect 🙏🏼

    • @galacticwarlock2271
      @galacticwarlock2271 Год назад

      Boomers had everything and they took a massive chest dump on everything.
      Then they hand over the earth to 20 somethings and don't understand the disconnect. Why are we struggling?
      Answer: you exploited everything. If you could eat it, if you could wear it, if you could watch it. If you could monetize it. You used it up.
      We don't even have decent wages, yet you blame us for not following your idiocy. Trumpism is the last boomer hold out.
      It will fall.

  • @painedkillerk9
    @painedkillerk9 Год назад +196

    As someone who was around in the 90s in Louisiana I can say I remember seeing mountains of oyster shells being sold as filler for holes similar to gravel. I havent seen that in years now. I guess this explains why

  • @Fpl8646
    @Fpl8646 Год назад +202

    Oyter businessmen: “We use to bring in multiple 50-60ft boats DAILY and full them all with oysters”
    Plummeting Oyster population follows
    Oyster businessmen: 😦😦😦 This is crazy! Things aren’t how they used to be

    • @eddiecongdon8017
      @eddiecongdon8017 Год назад +9

      They weren't fished to extinction they were poisoned by spills and storms

    • @n3v3rnyc37
      @n3v3rnyc37 Год назад +30

      keep fishing until they're all gone then blame it on climate change

    • @when_life_gives_you_limes
      @when_life_gives_you_limes Год назад +7

      * inserts surprised Pikachu meme here *

    • @Heworldwide
      @Heworldwide Год назад +8

      This is exactly the comment I was looking for

    • @jeremiahalguire8231
      @jeremiahalguire8231 Год назад +8

      @@n3v3rnyc37 it's a combination of both genius

  • @AdrianaOrtiz-ff7mx
    @AdrianaOrtiz-ff7mx Год назад +384

    The worst injury I’ve ever had was when I accidentally stepped onto an oyster bed while barefoot as a kid. I fell forward a little but kept upright and essentially danced on these poor oysters while screaming and trying to get back to the sand. I just remember my dad canoeing us back to camp while the floor just filled up with a mix of seawater and my blood. In retrospect I almost feel worse for the lil guys than my baby feet, even though I couldn’t walk right for weeks. I was probably an apocalyptic event in that colony

    • @MarkWTK
      @MarkWTK Год назад +85

      they must have passed down that story across generations

    • @kcgfy81
      @kcgfy81 Год назад +19

      OMG thas terrifying. Me remembers of stepping on Legos. Those mechanic pieces are the worst.

    • @peterarnaldo2418
      @peterarnaldo2418 Год назад +9

      For asians, thats part of the norm, except for the part of dancing XD

    • @tavianbooks
      @tavianbooks Год назад +7

      Godzilla moment

    • @sylvestersalad
      @sylvestersalad Год назад +5

      Lmao an apocalyptic event 😂

  • @willcookmakeup
    @willcookmakeup Год назад +454

    2.5 million oysters and only 10,000 survived?! My God how did Scott rebound from that? Thats crazy determination. I cannot imagine what a loss like that must cost

    • @louisfranz1941
      @louisfranz1941 Год назад +14

      probably calculated loss. I guess he knows how much % die in a good or bad season

    • @dspsblyuth
      @dspsblyuth Год назад +4

      Had to get the oysters humping ASAP

    • @TheBlueThird
      @TheBlueThird Год назад +3

      It's more than just a lot of money.

    • @jacobishii6121
      @jacobishii6121 Год назад +3

      That's more like mark up and how species propagate

    • @ty-re9or
      @ty-re9or Год назад

      They will die soon too , because Americans have already made all species extinct , blame it on developing countries , they ended them that's it ,keep killing

  • @cowgirlchrista
    @cowgirlchrista Год назад +28

    If the state governments, DMFs, commercial fishermen and farmers were all willing to actually willing to work together, the problem would able to be solved a lot quicker and easier than they are now. That's the biggest step: getting past the politics and finding a healthy balance.
    Sincerely, an Shellfish Aquaculture Technology major in Eastern NC who has taken part in the Billion Oyster Project.

  • @mattheweburns
    @mattheweburns Год назад +162

    Not many people seem to realize the importance of coral and oyster reefs along the shores of the Gulf of Mexico and Atlantic coast. Just because they aren’t pristine clear green or blue waters like in the tropics, the reefs are just as important if not more important. If there were sufficient reefs I’m sure the water would not be as murky as it is on the Atlantic coast

    • @seanriopel3132
      @seanriopel3132 Год назад +5

      You have to keep in mind the massive amount of silt that is walked down the Mississippi into the gulf. Combine that with algae and cyanobacteria in warm water and you have a recipe for muddy water.

    • @lostinme3191
      @lostinme3191 Год назад +2

      People don't realise shit thies day only money counts for 98% but when ecosystems will start collapsing human will understand we have no time to do anything, just feel bad for all thoes liveky creatures what get extinct because of human being

    • @Mj-kb6ig
      @Mj-kb6ig Год назад +3

      Exactly. Growing up in Texas, I got sick of the people complaining about the dark muddy dirty water. We have to tell them, it's what the ecosystem needs in the Louisiana and Texas coast.

  • @Gear5thGodNika
    @Gear5thGodNika Год назад +8

    Here in the philippines oysters are unlimited because we reproduce the consumed shells and its only four to five months to harvest.

  • @mattheweburns
    @mattheweburns Год назад +58

    In many coastal towns you will see buildings where they added oyster shells to concrete, I believe this is called tabby. Even sidewalks sometimes. Mounds of oyster shells were also found around native sites

    • @drew899
      @drew899 Год назад +5

      Fun fact about tabby. Native Americans in some regions actually would use oyster shells in their earth buildings before the Europeans got to North America.

    • @richardharrison5467
      @richardharrison5467 Год назад +3

      When my grandfather was a young man the fields around me were still filled with oyster Shell's where the indians lived. They shucked the oysters then used the shells to create walking areas within there towns. Just like we do with roads and side walks. It kept the pests away like ticks that thrived in the high grass.

  • @tvdinner325
    @tvdinner325 Год назад +3

    We lived on the Hood Canal, in WA. We collected and ate oysters there. Then, one year we had a -10' low tide. We saw the open septic lines from the old houses on the water. NEVER again!

  • @andybarr6751
    @andybarr6751 Год назад +33

    Most oysters that are consumed in the US are farmed and they are very different than the native oysters. Look up "Tasty Mutants: The Invention of the Modern Oyster", and you can read how the farmed ones have had polyploidy induced in them.

  • @gerardocenteno3424
    @gerardocenteno3424 Год назад +6

    That happens when people get greedy with oysters. All year fishing them to a point of extinction.

  • @cofee28
    @cofee28 Год назад +1

    As a carpenter living in Minnesota. I recall doing work on a building that was full of oyster shells. Apparently they would ship them up to Minnesota by barge loads as a supplement for chickens.

  • @Steve-em4tb
    @Steve-em4tb 7 месяцев назад +2

    Cod in Canada got hit by the same near wipeout in the 1990s. Stocks are only beginning to come back.

  • @emiliomunozlevine1565
    @emiliomunozlevine1565 Год назад +12

    In nyc the wild oysters were completely decimated. The harbors water was completely destroyed due to this. The billion oyster project is working to restore the nyc harbor and I hope you take a look at them and see what you can do about it

  • @yoursafeplace8476
    @yoursafeplace8476 Год назад +45

    It's the fault of our great grandparents and grandparents. They just came in and raped the land for everything it was worth with absolutely zero mind towards conservation. Our parents generation didn't do so great with it either and it's fallen onto our generation and the next to be almost fully activated towards conservationism and figuring out how to fix all these fuckups. Unfortunately for some things it's too late or it's going to take a very very long time until we see the benefits of things happening today.

    • @lup7271
      @lup7271 Год назад

      I mean you don't even have to go that far, go back to your parents or their parents and already there they were setting us up for failure. That huge island of plastic out at sea? from the 70s mostly. Boomers got to have everything and they left nothing for those who came after them.

    • @countsudoku6305
      @countsudoku6305 Год назад

      and since that time not much changed, we will continue to poison waters because of greed, until there will be too late

    • @yoursafeplace8476
      @yoursafeplace8476 Год назад +12

      @@WeissB94 Is it? I used to think it was an overdramatic statement Native Americans would make until I realized just how many things have been entirely abused to the point of extinction or near extinction. How much the literal landscape of the country was entirely overhauled.
      Ignorance is not an excuse. Plenty of decision makers had the benefit of knowledge starting in the mid-late 1800's up until current times. They just chose to ignore it.
      I've got plenty of appreciation for how we got to where we are now but while your everyday person may be able to get away with ignorance as an excuse. As said, those at the top had the knowledge they just ignored it for profit.

    • @jordanharer9931
      @jordanharer9931 Год назад +2

      Did you not hear that even in the 90’s and 2000’s this has been happening?!? This is recent. Our generation is just as bunk and obviously just as lacking in the accountability department, if you’re any indication.

    • @smrtrthnu1571
      @smrtrthnu1571 9 месяцев назад

      Get over yourself. Every generation is guilty of terrible ignorance and makes huge mistakes in some regard or another to nature. And it has been going on since the dawn of time. Ancient humans pretty much hunted alot of the large land mammals to extinction way back in the ice age. Each generation learns a little more and hopefully can do a little better but we'll see

  • @DoyleHargraves
    @DoyleHargraves Год назад +3

    Growing up in louisiana, our driveway was paved in oyster shells

  • @rebeccamoyer9358
    @rebeccamoyer9358 Год назад +87

    I love oysters so much but they’re unbelievably expensive now and I can see why. I can’t even swim in the same waters I grew up swimming in every day. What’s happening to this country?

    • @shino8854
      @shino8854 Год назад +7

      Come to Spain, nice clean waters here, I wouldn't reccomend the oysters though, unless it's winter.

    • @tauiattwood6566
      @tauiattwood6566 Год назад

      It's not that you could swim in that water, it's just that you didn't know you shouldn't, and one day someone pointed out that you shouldn't. It's the price of the 20th century wild industrial expansion, why bother being conscious about, say, mercury poisoning and pollution when there's so much gold to be made , the wars didn't help either, who's gonna care about chromium slag seeping into underground water systems when our men are dying in the fronts. Just to mention a fraction.

    • @lup7271
      @lup7271 Год назад

      well, capitalism kinda happened, gotta keep a leash on it or it will suck your natural resources dry and poison the land. since it's cheaper to do that and their only goal is to maximize profits over all else.

    • @dspsblyuth
      @dspsblyuth Год назад +1

      It’s called the free market and it will eventually kill us all in the name of profit and power

    • @Kiiba88
      @Kiiba88 Год назад

      The real problem is that people at the end of their life are making laws for the rest of us to follow. Those people are easily swayed by corporate money. We have about 50 years before it's too late to do anything about climate change. Maybe then the government will actually do something. Extinction is assured.

  • @Keep_Feeding_Me
    @Keep_Feeding_Me Год назад +1

    You mean to tell me we've overfished! Wow amazing

  • @themaindude3218
    @themaindude3218 Год назад

    In Connecticut there’s a company called Coops island Oysters, we work with many oysters and clams. We even grow our own little oysters and seed around the rivers

  • @cindysmith5104
    @cindysmith5104 Год назад +136

    50,60 foot boats everyday? I wonder why your in this position today....

    • @dodoextinct4597
      @dodoextinct4597 Год назад +9

      You are*

    • @Coquette974
      @Coquette974 Год назад +8

      @@dodoextinct4597 you’re* 🤓🤓🤓

    • @dodoextinct4597
      @dodoextinct4597 Год назад +19

      @@Coquette974 both means the same thing 🤚🤓

    • @Sol-os5pk
      @Sol-os5pk Год назад

      Oysters grow pretty quickly. The problem, the single largest problem which we should be fighting against every single day is climate change. We know that its the largest threat to humanity and yet we refuse to do something because its easier to deny and ignore. Thats whats killing oysters and so many other extremely important species. Biodiversity has been falling at unprecedented rates never seen before in the history of the earth. The results of this will be so disastrous that we cannot even image the amount of carnage.

    • @Mcnibbus
      @Mcnibbus Год назад

      That isn’t the reason you manus. (Idiot for those ill informed) global warming and man made disasters are to blame

  • @mattheweburns
    @mattheweburns Год назад +13

    Flood mitigation, coastal building projects and all fishing and farming should be collaborating together not fighting against each other

  • @ayeshaclassesgk
    @ayeshaclassesgk Год назад +4

    मैं आशा करती हूं कि यह चैनल कभी खत्म न हो और खुशियां फैलाता रहे।

  • @keza3250
    @keza3250 Год назад +4

    Australia had the world's largest commercial oyster an shellfish beds but by ww2 we had depleted them restoring shellfish beds is great for your economy an ecosystem

  • @rono4723
    @rono4723 Год назад +6

    Never cared for em' raw, but love em' smoked open on the barbie with lots of beer or deep fried with egg wash & cracker crumbs. I'm in Washington state, probably not how they do it in New York City, lol.

  • @j121212100
    @j121212100 Год назад +9

    I've seen the changes to our local bay due to the decimation of our long island quahog clam stocks. Every fishery declined due to the clamming boom of the seventies and early eighties. winter flounder used to be plentiful. you could catch a bucket full in an hour. now you are lucky to catch one in a whole day.

  • @aaronjohnson718
    @aaronjohnson718 Год назад +28

    I don't mean to sound like a jerk but I totally like everything that they're doing to reintroduce the oysters and help with erosion and everything but there's got to be a point when we remember that we were just over harvesting I mean did we really need to take that many oysters out and the fact that back then they weren't putting the shells back to help rebuild where are the oysters are going to live it's going to take a long time to get the oysters back to where they should be but at least we're trying to be on the right path

    • @dandellar200
      @dandellar200 Год назад +1

      Yea I agree with you. It's easy to use hindsight and state the obvious decades later. It's very satisfying, crying over spilled milk.

  • @lutomson3496
    @lutomson3496 Год назад +6

    over harvesting...never heard a word about letting them come back like the abalone here in california have been poached and over harvested and the season is shut off till they can recover

    • @stevenotero2627
      @stevenotero2627 Год назад

      Abalone is a privileged item. Just like oysters. Expensive

  • @DogeMultiverse
    @DogeMultiverse Год назад +1

    In the 50s there were so many oysters they had to be canned and shipped. Demand was so high and the supply matched. Now, barely any wild oysters left from the exploitation.

  • @cyankirkpatrick5194
    @cyankirkpatrick5194 Год назад

    Yes, and over harvesting, also horseradish sauce reacts to luminol

  • @brandonwilson7520
    @brandonwilson7520 Год назад

    that oyster he ate in the end looked scrumdiddlyumptious, i want that minionette recipe

  • @ayeshaclassesgk
    @ayeshaclassesgk Год назад +2

    "Success usually comes to those who are too busy looking for it"❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️😘😘😘😘❤️

  • @longlivethefish
    @longlivethefish Год назад

    Beautiful stuff I wish I could get to taste'em there in Louisiana🤤🤤🤤😎👍

  • @shaunpreston2839
    @shaunpreston2839 9 месяцев назад

    In england we have few native oysters left but we have endless supplies off rockies seasons just about too start!

  • @teej6632
    @teej6632 Год назад +2

    we need oysters in the water. they do so much for the enviroment.. also they taste delicious so im gonna harvest them all

  • @pepymunson2832
    @pepymunson2832 Год назад

    Outlaw oysters in Netarts bay in Oregon! Amazing oysters!!❤❤❤

  • @jesusisable7052
    @jesusisable7052 8 месяцев назад

    Thanks 🎉

  • @DanielleCapichano
    @DanielleCapichano Год назад +3

    What a shame, I hope they succeed in bringing them back.

  • @thejtd21
    @thejtd21 Год назад

    Appilachicola Bay Oysters here in the forgotten coast of the Florida Big Bend are the best Oysters you'll ever eat.

  • @mck5549
    @mck5549 Год назад +4

    We need conservation areas. I am glad tha Scott is conscious of the need for us to preserve the heritage that the earth has endowed to us.

  • @SIC-SEMPER-TYRANNIS
    @SIC-SEMPER-TYRANNIS Год назад +1

    Born and raised on the Eastern Shore of Virginia, we have the best Oysters in the World here!

  • @makijoy
    @makijoy Год назад +1

    I’m going into biotech and hoping to work with oysters at some point.

  • @jolynmiller3194
    @jolynmiller3194 Год назад

    YES LINDSEY!!! reuse those shells!

  • @sethnaugle984
    @sethnaugle984 Год назад +22

    Me and my friend were fishing in the eastern shore and we saw a tiny island. We decided to walk around with our flip flops. We stepped on an oyster every now and then and cut our ankles up. The closer we got to the center we realized the mud we were trekking through was a safe haven for an oyster bed. We made a big mistake because our flip flops didn't stay because the mud kept taking them off and our feet were cut the hell up. That's when I learned how sharp oysters are.

    • @seedspittinspacecowboy
      @seedspittinspacecowboy Год назад +2

      Yep, oyster was that kid sitting in the front and answering all the questions. Sharp indeed.

    • @trebor000
      @trebor000 Год назад

      Idiot

  • @elluisito000
    @elluisito000 Год назад +1

    A lot of people will be clutching their pearls after this video

  • @lobsterme
    @lobsterme Год назад

    Nice

  • @Porkpickle
    @Porkpickle Год назад +1

    I know in nsw aus any known fish nursery, you can't fish or anything. I know some entire lakes under this reserve act

  • @alanstrong55
    @alanstrong55 9 месяцев назад

    I always liked oyster stew. I mentioned that dish to a classmate and he answered "uhhh". I get Earl's portion.

  • @watermenjohn4574
    @watermenjohn4574 Год назад +1

    Chesapeake Bay oysters are mostly wild and we have plenty of them. Our oysters are salty and fat. Check out America’s best wild oysters from the Chesapeake Bay. 😊

  • @Amitdas-gk2it
    @Amitdas-gk2it Год назад

    Interesting

  • @Zilla__man
    @Zilla__man 10 месяцев назад

    We're doing just fine up here in the Northwest thanks...

  • @UCBerkeley6272
    @UCBerkeley6272 Год назад

    i remember you could get them in the supermarket for around $2 each

  • @ScottAT
    @ScottAT Год назад +1

    One thing people rarely discuss is Chinese Fishing Fleets operating just a few miles off the west coast, scouring everything they can get. You would think it were a national security issue however there is no political motivation for preventing it.

  • @thebuddha4208
    @thebuddha4208 Год назад +3

    Who would’ve thought you eat something for a couple hundred years nonstop pulling thousands of pounds of it out every day And it disappears

  • @longsleevethong1457
    @longsleevethong1457 Год назад +1

    In Destin we lost all our sea urchins 10 years ago

  • @kelliesugai-dahl1294
    @kelliesugai-dahl1294 Год назад +3

    Check out how Japan is using oysters to restore their bay and oceans. It’s amazing.

    • @diounly5102
      @diounly5102 Год назад

      It’s to late for the US 😂

    • @riamriam6758
      @riamriam6758 Год назад

      Don’t even mention japan. They are the biggest over fishers on the planet right next to China. They do more damage than good to the ocean

    • @timexyemerald6290
      @timexyemerald6290 9 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@diounly5102 not really. as long as there are native oisters still alive. There is hope

  • @1flash3571
    @1flash3571 Год назад +4

    This is what happens when they are over harvested, and added to that, contaminations and natural disasters make it harder for them to survive. These harvesters should seed those waters with baby oysters and not harvest them so much.

  • @andreysamuylik8047
    @andreysamuylik8047 Год назад

    Oysters are not just for eating? What a brilliant statement, who might know that.

  • @prabhushankar8520
    @prabhushankar8520 Год назад

    Good.

  • @johnsheetz6639
    @johnsheetz6639 11 месяцев назад

    How to identify a good oyster bar right next to the water in the whole parking lot is oyster shells

  • @inchikkkk
    @inchikkkk Год назад

    Wait till they try baked oysters in the Philippines, those were lit af

  • @tranger4579
    @tranger4579 Год назад

    I used crushed oyster shell in my saltwater aquarium.

  • @mr.gamewatch8888
    @mr.gamewatch8888 Год назад

    Times change, things deplete and it’ll happen over and over again till everything is gone

  • @nagasako7
    @nagasako7 Год назад +1

    Instead of prison time in Louisiana, people should be made to be oyster farmers in Louisiana too boost wild population. That's one govt run thing that I would support.

    • @jerrykobylt7387
      @jerrykobylt7387 Год назад

      Brilliant. Prisons are a waste of money. All prisoners should serve as slave labour for the betterment of society.

  • @bryanjackson405
    @bryanjackson405 Год назад

    Our daughter & son in law are Oyster Farmers in N. Carolina. N. Sea Oyster Company.

  • @rarulis
    @rarulis Год назад

    Yeah

  • @F14foreverF14
    @F14foreverF14 10 месяцев назад

    Giant Ps5 console at 8:55
    LOL

  • @stevenkidd6761
    @stevenkidd6761 Год назад

    Our rivers and streams in Indiana have lost clarity after overharvesting our natuve bivalves. What should be clear, clean waters are just muddy , runoff canals.

  • @m.lymann2185
    @m.lymann2185 Год назад +1

    Over harvest for the past 100+ years have decimated the oysters population. These fishermen thought the sea will provide unlimited supply of oysters and other sea life. Tragic and utter lack of conservation.

  • @HideBuz
    @HideBuz 9 месяцев назад +1

    The real reason is deregulation and pollution. Companies are dumping toxic chemicals there and have been killing all those oysters.

  • @johnjohnfrederickh.webber2124
    @johnjohnfrederickh.webber2124 Год назад

    Oyster Aquaculture might help keep wild oysters available in the shores...

  • @travistran9081
    @travistran9081 Год назад

    i am travel and eat here and there and there is no better oyster in there world than the ones I had at New Orlean, Louisiana, probably they are fresh than any other places

  • @user-nk4ot4zh9o
    @user-nk4ot4zh9o Год назад +1

    So very sad. We've taken, taken and taken more. Will we learn while there is a short time left for everything else living?

  • @babbybailey2534
    @babbybailey2534 Год назад

    Wow, that last bite says it all, /mmmmm

  • @MICHVEl12
    @MICHVEl12 9 месяцев назад +1

    Listen to this idea, I know it’s hard to understand, it’s so crazy…
    OVERFISHING

  • @jeaneth5349
    @jeaneth5349 Год назад +1

    Can’t imagine why there isn’t any oyster after farming them without giving a damn

  • @rzpogi
    @rzpogi Год назад +10

    Thry could learn from the Japanese who had this problem years ago. What the Japanese did was took care of the forests upstream. The forest provides nutrients for the oysters. The oysters thus returned and increased in numbers and size.

  • @geneard639
    @geneard639 8 месяцев назад

    We need more oyster reefs to be constructed.

  • @kylecorrow6743
    @kylecorrow6743 Год назад +2

    Oh no we're running out! But let's keep eating the shit out of them.

  • @michaelburchard3131
    @michaelburchard3131 Год назад +1

    To archive greatness, you need to start working towards it. Investing remains the smartest way to prepare for the unexpected been into this for years now and I’m pleased with returns. The good news is it’s not too late to start

    • @Johnnjlee
      @Johnnjlee Год назад

      Best time to grow a tree was 20 years ago, the second best time is now.

  • @broadwaywes
    @broadwaywes Год назад +14

    I LOVED this video, except for the part where he put his fork directly into the oyster topping touched the oyster with it, and then put it back in his bucket of sauce

  • @mugzyhillbillie6284
    @mugzyhillbillie6284 Год назад

    Get your oysters 🦪 from Humboldt County cal there amazing

  • @jameslatofa5961
    @jameslatofa5961 Год назад +1

    expected from America actually im surprised it lasted this long

  • @curiouslymavismade
    @curiouslymavismade Год назад +8

    I wouldn't mind getting into oyster breeding. I love Oysters as a food. If their good for the environment, I wouldn't mind selling some in order to save the environment.

  • @winreacts6528
    @winreacts6528 Год назад +12

    When I was living in Washington State, I would always go out to the reefs and find oysters by the dozens.
    But nowadays, last time I went back a couple of years ago, the place that I always go to for a decade has disappeared and the surrounding areas.
    Note: Washington is FAMOUS for Oysters, you can literally find them anywhere.

  • @211212112
    @211212112 Год назад

    Some islands in gulf of Florida are made from generations of natives eating oysters then tossing shells.

  • @klasyk86
    @klasyk86 Год назад

    And you should add the fact, that after years of catching, ignoring the problem, you did put yourself in that today position.

  • @richardrose9943
    @richardrose9943 Год назад

    Our federal government killed off almost all the oysters on the Mississippi gulf coast when the opened the Bonnie carry spillway

  • @ExploringJ
    @ExploringJ Год назад

    Umm. Here in NC there are millions on the coast

  • @eduardozuniga6675
    @eduardozuniga6675 9 месяцев назад

    I love sea food but one thing I cannot eat its oysters probably try them grill but not raw

  • @impianotespaul
    @impianotespaul Год назад

    And murca is also busy preaching Brazil about the amazon. LOLz

  • @Crimson0047
    @Crimson0047 Год назад +1

    Not going to lie, the intro hurt me personally as a person who loves oysters on top of being from Louisiana.

  • @MoZz..
    @MoZz.. Год назад +4

    what about a quota system, we have that in EU and it works.

  • @CommissionerLofi
    @CommissionerLofi 9 месяцев назад

    Hopefully... they can make a comeback.

  • @Redvines69
    @Redvines69 Год назад +1

    Sounds like instead of eating them we should be letting them sit where they are lol.

  • @1.4142
    @1.4142 Год назад

    The world is your oyster to farm oysters

  • @Outdoorsactivities
    @Outdoorsactivities Год назад

    👍🏼

  • @ConnorGhostHeart
    @ConnorGhostHeart Год назад +1

    I hate to see them vanishing. On a more personal note, eating oysters is absolutely disgusting and it makes me literally vomit.

  • @themanwnoname3454
    @themanwnoname3454 Год назад +1

    2022(G) “Respect and dignity.” Furthermore:

  • @flynnstonezz
    @flynnstonezz Год назад

    Her oyster tattoos are gnarly lol