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No claws for concern? Hurricane Michael could be good news for stone crab season.

 
Stone crabs like their water stirred. The season opens Monday.\uFEFF
Stone crabs like their water stirred. The season opens Monday.\uFEFF
Published Oct. 10, 2018

Florida stone crabs just can't catch a break. Last year, the season started strong but traps swiftly dried up, the season limping along with very low numbers and high prices.

And this year, in anticipation of Monday's season opening, we've dealt with toxic blue-green algae problems, a historically long-lasting Red Tide and Hurricane Michael poised to wreak havoc on the Panhandle. A disaster for crabs, right?

Not so fast.

Many attribute last year's strong start to Hurricane Irma, which hit about a month before the season opened, churning up the water and making it silty, just the way crabs prefer when they are ready to walk around in search of food. Crystal-clear water leaves them too vulnerable to predators and they stay buried and pine for the cover of dirt.

"The storm will mean that there's rough and dirty water out there that will hopefully make them crawl and look around for food," said Kris Sahr, owner of Offshore Seafood. Sahr used to have 3,000 traps in the Tampa Bay area but now buys and sells from crabbers, crabs he mostly sells to Crabby Bill's restaurants.

Scientists don't agree on what will happen after the storm. Some say it's likely to break up the Red Tide. Others predict the hurricane will simply move it around. Sahr is counting on the former.

"It's a blessing in disguise," he said. "We need the water cooling down and the shorter days — Red Tide feeds off warm water and sunlight."

Until Michael's track was firmer, he said, most seafood industry experts anticipated that stone crab hauls from Fort Myers up to Egmont Key were unlikely to be strong because of Red Tide. An average season's haul is somewhere around 3.7 million pounds of claws, valued at $27.8 million. Last season's haul was a measly 2.1 million pounds.

"The crabs are smart. They run from Red Tide; they are pretty resilient," Sahr said. But it's still complicated. Many of the crabbers are hedging their bets and putting only half of their traps out. If the storm is fierce, better to only lose half their equipment, even if the crabbing looks good.

Crabbers started putting traps out Friday and spent the last two days trying to retrieve many of them, said Tommy Shook, general manager of Frenchy's Seafood.

"We've got 11,000 to 12,000 traps out, about half of what we should at this point. But will we be able to find the traps after the storm goes by? We're talking about getting 40- to 60 mile-per-hour gusts. That will drag the gear all over the place."

Florida is responsible for 99 percent of stone crab landings in the United States. It's among the state's top four most valuable fisheries, behind spiny lobster, red grouper and shrimp. There's a psychology to the price of stone crabs, Shook said. Too steep and consumers are turned off.

"When it gets too expensive, people go back to eating lobster and shrimp."

In the Florida Keys, where the bulk of the stone crabs are from, things should be normal following a normal lobster season. But what happens elsewhere in the state has the power to set pricing for the beginning of the season.

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"From what I'm hearing, it doesn't sound too good from Fort Myers past Sarasota," said Gary Graves of Keys Fisheries in Marathon, a key supplier to Joe's Stone Crab. "Pretty bleak. And from Tampa to St. Marks, this storm could destroy what traps are in the water. We don't need extremely high prices. It's not good for consumers or for us."

Because hauls have been disappointing the past few years, many local crabbers have gotten out of the business.

"A lot of guys have gone on to do other things like drywall or cut lawns or fish for other products," said Matt Loder, CEO of Crabby Bill's restaurants.

While Loder used to rely primarily on crabs from the greater Tampa Bay area, he's had to expand his reach from down to the Keys and up to Homosassa. He thinks many crabbers near the path of the storm will wait to put out their traps until after it has passed, a move that could mean a scarcity for the opening of the season.

For Shook, who has been in the business since 1978, this is a classic game of planning for the worst and hoping for the best.

"We looked at some traps here and we had some crabs in the traps after a two- or three-day soak. But, good lord, come Monday I'm going to have a line of people wanting to eat stone crabs."

Contact Laura Reiley at lreiley@tampabay.com or (727) 892-2293.