Dozens of crab fishermen roared out the Golden Gate at dawn Wednesday to set their pots in time for the midnight opening of crab season, after crabbers and fish wholesalers reached agreement on a price.
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In this 2010 file photo, Captain John Atkinson brings in the first
9,000 pounds of crab to Albers Seafood at Pier 45 aboard his sports
fishing boat "New Rayann" for the opening of the Dungeness crab season
in San Francisco.
Photo: Kat Wade
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The creamy, buttery Dungeness crabs should start arriving at local markets by Friday morning.
Crab fishermen will get $3 a pound, meaning the retail market price will be a little more than $6 per pound, according to distributors who approved the agreement Tuesday.
The usually contentious negotiations between crabbers and wholesalers were cut short this year when distributors quickly agreed to pay fisherman from Bodega, San Francisco and Half Moon Bay $3 a pound.
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In his second year aboard the Linda Noelle, Ed Amato is optimistic
about the crab season. At Fisherman's Wharf and Pier 45 in San
Francisco, Calif., everyone is awaiting the opening of the commercial
Dungeness crab season although early indications are the season won't be
as good as last year.
Photo: Brant Ward |
Last year's price dispute delayed the start of the season for almost two weeks.
"I'm more surprised than anything else," said Tim Ports, the general manager of Ports Seafood Inc. in San Francisco. "It is not very often that we have such a smooth start to the crab season."
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Dungeness crab is cooked at Princeton Seafood at Pillar Point Harbor
on Friday, December 24, 2010. Visitors come from miles around for the
fresh seafood that is pulled right off the boat just yards away on the
docks of the harbor near Half Moon Bay, Calif.
Photo: Carlos Avila Gonzalez |
Recreational fishermen have reported catching fewer crabs this year compared with previous years.
"I think there is less product in the water than they thought originally - you would not see the buyers line up that easily behind what the fishermen wanted otherwise,"
Ports said.
Last year, wholesalers paid fishermen $2.25 a pound. But increased labor and fuel costs, as well as the smaller supply of crab, all led crabbers to ask for an extra 75 cents per pound this year.
"We do the dance every year," said Larry Collins, president of the San Francisco Crab Boat Owners Association, which represents the roughly 60 crabbers who dock in the city.
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The boat "Phantom" pulls up next to Captain Bob Burchell's boat
"Madeline" to load 500 crab pots on there boats for the opening of the
Dungeness crab season in San Francisco, Calif, on Tuesday, November 16,
2010.
Photo: Kat Wade |
Story Contributed By SFGATE.com's Will Kane