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Oyster Industry Great Barrier Island
At the end of the court-case, the judge, being a fair man and having the wisdom of Solomon, awarded the protagonists one half of the oyster’s shell each and thanked them both for the fleshy delight within, the taste of which he pronounced ‘delicious!’…which is some indication I suppose, of what’s important, and what is not. However, an entire oyster-picking industry around the Barrier seems not to have entered the historical records apart from a brief mention in passing here and there. For those involved at the time though, good money was to be had if one had the stamina to contract and supply 30 large sacks of live oysters weekly for several weeks until the season ended toward mid-winter when the crayfishing season started. The lines of rocks put in place to capture and on-grow wild spat are still visible today - the only reminder of a significant industry in the island’s past.
My initial interest came about by accident, with an enquiry from the curator of botany at the Auckland Museum wanting to know where Oyster Island was. (It’s a tiny island between Nagle Cove and Mohunga Bay). As a result, in mid-August, 2002, I talked to the late George Mason, the late Garth Cooper and Pat Cooper as well as an ex-MAF oyster scientist Les Curtin, about the history of this industry on the island. Shannon Robertson supplied me with a copy of a Marine Department chart of Area XVI showing the 25 numbered and marked oyster-bed sections or areas running from Oneura Bay aka Red Cliff Cove just south of Man O’ War Passage, including all the shores of Fitzroy Harbour and inner Kaikoura Island, and around the coast as far as Nagles Cove. (I should mention that these shellfish were the native rock oysters (Saxostrea glomerata), and not the Japanese oysters introduced somehow in the 1970s that predominate at least in the more brackish areas today. The native rock oyster lasts much longer in the shell than the Japanese Oyster, but doesn’t grow as big or as fast. Both species’ spat swim about for three weeks before settling.
The Marine Department were the employers (since 1908 when 11,000 sacks from the Hauraki Gulf and Northland sold at 12/6d), and a lump sum payment was in cash at the end of the season – George recalled a 2000 pound payment as normal, “It was good money! And the only income for some” he said. “Pickers were on contract to supply 30 sacks per week for the Auckland market, and if a picker couldn’t get 30 sacks a week he wasn’t employed for long.” He recalled that there were 3 or 4 pickers when it ended in 1939. These included Garth Cooper, then a 15 year old, George being 21 and having picked since about the same age.
A typical day would start about half-tide when pickers, sometimes in rubber thigh-waders would use a bizarre variety of picks (for different rock types) to prise off the oysters into kerosene tins through to when the tide came half in again. It was hard on the hands. The pick handles were about 15 inches long with a double-ended 10-11 inch tempered iron head. The late Bob Whistler, a blacksmith, used to repair and temper oyster picks for the pickers. The late Garth Cooper
The sacks were large Chelsea Sugar Company bags that held 5 x 4-gallon kero tins of oysters. These were supplied by whomever was the Fisheries Inspector and chief picker at the time. Selected sections were picked clean every three years. No clumps of more than three shellfish were acceptable, and the oysters had to be washed clean of mud. Full sacks, tied and tagged with the picker’s number or name were left at high tide to be collected by punt back to one of the Paddisons’ vessels ANZAC or Maquini (30-40 ft wooden launches). A hand winch was used to load them onto the Fitzroy wharf where they stayed sometimes a few days but “at times as long as 10 days to two weeks” said Garth, until vessels such as the Northern Steam Ship Company’s ‘Kawau’ or ‘Hauiti’ carried them to Auckland.
George said it was common when the tide was getting up for 4 or 5 large snapper to be in around the pickers’ legs getting morsels of oysters etc. A quick spike with the pick secured dinner for the evening, the smaller snapper being preferred.
Don Armitage©
1898 Advert for oysters from Great Barrier Island
OYSTERS! OYSTERS! OYSTERS!
1s6d per bottle
2d per dozen in shells
Imported twice a week direct from
GREAT BARRIER ISLAND
Egmont Oyster Saloon
(Opposite J. Abbott's)
Source: Taranaki Herald 22nd July, 1898, page 3.
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Oyster Picking Areas Map kindly supplied by Shannon Robertson of Fitzroy, Gt Barrier Is.
1908
AUCKLAND OYSTERS
The Marine Department states that up to the present it has been able to fill all orders for Auckland rock oysters. A very big demand is expected during Fleet Week, but it is not intended to make an attempt to supply all that will be required, as to do so would pretty well exhaust the supply. The Chief Inspector of Fisheries (Mr. L.F. Ayson) does not deem it advisable to take any more oysters from the Waiheke and Sandspit beds, Hauraki Gulf, this season, and the men under his control are now confining their attention to the beds at the Bay of Islands and in Fitzroy Bay, Great Barrier Island. The first shipment from the latter place, consisting of 500 bags,has just been received in Auckland.
Source- Evening Post, Vol.LXXVI, Issue 31, 5 August, 1908, page 8. (Papers Past)
L.F. Ayson, Chief Inspector of Fisheries
(photo: NIWA)
Here is material in the National Archives that needs looking at-
L F Ayson, Chief Inspector of Fisheries, Wellington - Oysters - if time permits, another scow load of oyster rock should be sent to Great Barrier Archives NZ Reference 1913 Agency: BBAO Series: 5544 Box/item: 146a Record: 1913/1000 March, 1893 A commercial oyster-picker at Port Fitzroy. Mr H. Carter of Mangapai, who left here in his own fishing yacht in the beginning of March for the Great Barrier to gather oysters paid his home a flying visit and returned by the Wellington yesterday via Auckland for Port Fitzroy, the field of his labours. Mr Carter found the oysters plentiful and has employed extra hands for the work.
Source: The Northern Advocate, Saturday June 3rd, 1893, page 4.
1893 The commercial oyster-picking going on at Great Barrier Island. Our Oyster Grounds Mr H. Carter of Mangapai, has recently come home from the Great Barrier where he has been since the opening of the season employed gathering oysters. The weather has been so wet that he could not follow the work to advantage. He intends returning thither when the weather becomes more settled. The oysters at the Barrier are not so good as those in Whangarei, when growing on rocks containing mineral are not so good, and there being so much copper at the Barrier they are inferior in quality. There are a few spots in this harbour the same, the oysters are almpost poisonous, but they are now becoming so scarce that any sort or quality will be saleable.
Source: The Northern Advocate, 12th August, 1893, page 5. State Control of Oyster picking and sales announced 1908.
OYSTERS State Control of Wholesale Industry. (Per United Press Association.) WELLINGTON, March 20. Mr. L. F. Ayson, Chief Inspector of Fisheries, is now in Auckland arranging for a depot at which oysters can be delivered and sold, and also for the picking of the Hauraki Gulf. The picking will be under the control of the Inspector of Fisheries at Auckland and that at the Bay of Islands will be in charge of the Inspector at Russell. These inspectors will have under them gangs of pickers, and the gangers will be responsible to the Inspectors. The pickers will be experienced men. In connection with this work the Department has just let a contract to Mr. Charles Bailey, junior, of Auckland, for the construction of two oil launches at a cost of £328 each. At the depot nothing under a sack of oysters will be sold, the State confining itself to the wholesale business. Thus, if dealers want 100 or 50 sacks or under the oystcrs will be despatched from the depot direct. An important point is, the price is to be reasonable; that is to say, no monopolists as in the past will be allowed to "corner" the oyster market and sell the bottle at 2s. when its proper value is only 1s. It is anticipated that the season's demand will be met by an output of 20,000 sacks, and that quantity from present indications is easily in sight at Waiheke Island, in the Hauraki Gulf, on the Great Barrier and in the Bay of Islands. At the latter place after the close seasons the young oysters are, says the sectretary, doing splendidly.
Source: Wanganui Herald 21 March 1908, Page 6
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