Geoducks: Happy as Clams
In the Pacific Northwest, fishermen are cashing in on the growing yen for geoducks, a funny-looking mollusk turned worldwide delicacy
- By Craig Welch
- Photographs by Natalie Fobes
- Smithsonian magazine, March 2009, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 4)
From a skiff tied alongside the 36-foot Ichiban, I watched with Parker's friend Casey Bakker, a geoduck diver and seafood dealer, as Parker's crew packed the mollusks into plastic crates. Parker and his crew members are all Squaxin Island Indians; Native American tribes hold exclusive treaty rights to half of Puget Sound's commercial shellfish harvests. The clams would be taken to a dock, loaded onto a refrigerated truck, then boxed in ice for shipping. Bakker had arranged for the bivalves to be flown that night, still wriggling, to China.
Geoduck fishing is grueling, even hazardous work. Fishermen drag hundreds of feet of line in a nearly weightless environment, wrestling for leverage and toiling against the tides. A few geoduck divers have been killed on the job. Others have been wrapped around anchors, tangled in gear or swept off by undercurrents. A gray whale's barnacled snout once nosed through the silt and struck Bakker's friend Mark Mikkelsen, flattening him like a whack from a two-by-four. He escaped with a bruise. Bakker once came whisker to whisker with a sea lion. "Down there, a thousand-pound sea lion doesn't look substantially different from a grizzly," he recalled.
Parker recently spied a sixgill shark, and not long before, he confronted a flaming red Pacific octopus (both of these were more thrill than threat). Parker said he struggled for years as a commercial salmon fisherman but started hauling geoducks a decade ago after seeing others profit. "The truth of the matter is, I was scared to death to dive," Parker said. "But these guys were making serious, serious money."
For centuries Native Americans grubbed geoducks from the shallowest parts of their range whenever waters receded far enough. They ate them fresh or smoked. European settlers, too, found geoducks savory. Skillfully cooked, a geoduck would "puzzle persons who tasted it for the first time as to whether they were eating fish, flesh, or fowl," naturalist R.E.C. Stearns wrote in 1882. I found that the clams tasted organic and meaty when baked with mushrooms and onions; served raw they're brackish and chewy like squid, with a faint orange-maple tang.
Geoducks are a source of Pacific Northwest pride, exalted in song ("You can hear the diggers say, as they're headed for the bay, oh I gotta dig a duck, gotta dig a duck a day") and romanticized in novels like David Guterson's Snow Falling on Cedars, in which young Ishmael and Hatsue kiss after a glorious day spent digging the clams. Citing the animal's tendency to stick its neck out, Evergreen State College in Olympia adopted the geoduck as its mascot. The Geoduck Tavern, an aging waterfront bar on the Olympic Peninsula, sponsors a contest during the lowest tide of the year to see which patron can bag the biggest specimen. Gray-haired men sprawl on mud flats, arms buried in tidal sludge. "I dig that dirt out and reach down and reach down, way down, and feel the top of its shell, then take a little hand trawl to break the adhesion, then reach down again and wiggle and wiggle and wiggle until it comes," said Roy Ewen, who has been digging geoducks for 50 years. "It's one of life's real joys."
A Navy diver changed the geoduck's fate in the 1960s, when, searching for lost torpedoes near a submarine base in Puget Sound, he discovered geoduck colonies in the icy deep. The state of Washington auctioned the rights to harvest the clams. Brian Hodgson and a group of hunting buddies borrowed money to lease sections of seabed and started selling geoducks to chowder houses in Washington. With a competitive streak and a head for numbers, Hodgson, a former auditor, quickly became the king of the geoduck trade. A Japanese-American business partner helped him make forays into the Far East in the early 1970s. By the 1980s, Chinese consumers had come to relish the clams. From this indelicate creature, a delicacy was born.
"When you break it down there's a taste with geoduck, a freshness," says Jon Rowley, a seafood marketer who helped popularize Alaska's Copper River salmon. With pollution whittling down shellfish beds in Asia, the freshness itself is a commodity. "That taste is the taste of yesteryear," Rowley adds. Consumers pay more for geoducks, pound for pound, than for Puget Sound salmon or Dungeness crab.
Geoduck fishing is heavily regulated, with harvests strictly limited—a perfect recipe for mischief. Hodgson was accused of stealing a million pounds of clams in the 1980s and eventually pleaded guilty. He had underreported harvests, swiped clams from polluted areas that had been placed off-limits and created a map of closed shellfish beds—the "Poacher's Handbook," he called it—which he gave to his divers.
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Comments (16)
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I LOVE PUGET SOUND FOREVER CARLY.........
Posted by CARLTON HARLEN BENNETTJR on August 11,2012 | 08:32 AM
suzanne - good site for "how to cook a geoduck" is www.GeoduckRecipes.com Hope this helps!
Posted by Grant Jones on May 15,2010 | 03:19 AM
where do i buy geoduck?
Posted by paul lahti on October 27,2009 | 09:46 AM
PLEASE TELL ME HOW MUCH YOU SELL GEODUCK. THANK YOU !!!
Posted by DONGLING SUN on July 7,2009 | 06:25 PM
I have lived on Puget Sound all my life. About 8 years ago I started a geoduck farm on my one acre of sand. I’m the little guy you hear about who told his wife that I could make a living (or at least pay for the kids collage) growing oysters, clams, mussels and geoduck on our little piece of paradise. She thought I was crazy. We’ll I’m still working at it. We are finally to the point where we will get some return for our investment. It takes 6 years to grow a geoduck. It’s not easy and the learning curve can be expensive. Our first harvest was last year and we harvested less than 10% of what we planted. This year should be better (learning curve). The impact on the environment is a net positive. Bivalves are nature’s filters; they clean the water as they filter out their food. Pollution is a significant risk to our crops. Yes, we use plastic tubes to protect the small geoduck seed. The tubes are recycled for each year’s crop. We keep a close eye on our tubes. Harvesting is every six years and the scientific analysis supports the farmers. The shellfish farmers make their living off the sea so preserving Puget Sound is critical to our success.
Posted by Tim Salo on March 12,2009 | 12:02 AM
Articles glorifying the taste of geoduck seem to being promoted throughout the world increasing the demand for this non essential commodity. Now that the demand is creating a need to use our intertidal beaches, we are watching our shorelines being scraped off of vegetation necessary for salmon and native species, stomped with 40,000 potentially toxic PVC tubes in each acre, covered with nets restricting the feeding of native species and our beaches being liquefied at record rates. In the past, many destructive practices were done when people did not seem to know better---but in this case greed is replacing common sense. Puget Sound is a world class treasure known for its beauty and the native species who are struggling to survive here. Those participating in the few minutes it takes to eat this commodity should think of the future generations who will need to go to a beach museum to see what native beach life used to look like before our habitat rich bays and coves were turned into geoduck feedlots covered in plastics with natural beach life a memory. If you would like to see more on this issue please go to our websites at ProtectOurShoreline, CaseInletShorelineAssociation or APHETI.
Posted by Laura Hendricks on March 9,2009 | 09:16 PM
After reading "Happy as Clams", I am saddened that the environmental concerns of commercial goeduck harvesting were barely addressed. The author touched on it briefly, almost as an afterthought, but focused on the somewhat darkly romantic side of the smuggling and money-making maddness that is associated with this mollusk. As a life-long Washingtonian, and a member of a family that owned beach property on Puget Sound for 46 years, my family has had real life consequences of living next to a working geoduck farm operated by Taylor Shellfish. The PCV pipe and netting process mentioned in Mr. Welch's article has proven to be a hazard for sealife, animals, and eagles who feed on beaches covered in nets. Also, the nets break apart during severe storms and float away, along with the PVC pipe, polluting beaches and the sea floor. Puget Sound is a delicate balance of creatures that are a food source for other creatures, including the dwindling population of salmon and Puget Sound Orca. The physical act of covering a beach with foreign matter changes the beach, affecting this delicate balance. There is a ground-swell of concerned citizens in Puget Sound, the most noted being Laura Hendricks, who are working to protect our Sound's environmental health against commercial harvesting. Ms. Hendricks has helped landowners and concerned environmentalists pull together to fight the big business of commercial geoduck production. This is a David and Goliath battle--very big money vs. the small voices of individual landowners who struggle for a balance in business practices that will address very real environmental concerns. Your readers have a right to know that some practices on first glance look like a good thing; but they also need to be able to look deeper and see the end result. Take a walk on a beach after it has been liquified during the harvesting process. They might think twice about ordering geoduck the next time they dine in that "Swanky New York bistro".
Posted by Teresa Frank on March 8,2009 | 04:43 PM
I used to get my Geoducks with a friend who was a pro. He created an open cylinder by removing the bottom of a 35 gallon lubricant drum. The drum was positioned over what we called a rose bud. One individual would get on top of the drum with help from his partner. The weight and hip wiggle of the person would drive the cylinder almost flush with the sandy surface at which both clammers would immediately put maximum speed at removing the sand from the drum. I mean it was head down and butt up scooping sand faster than a fox digging a fox hole. About the time you reached the bottom of the drum,and if you were fast enough you could grab the neck and gradually remove the Geoduck. Two people could get six clams at one tide change which had to be the lowest tide for the month.
Posted by Kenneth M Nilsson on March 5,2009 | 08:13 PM
The Evergreen State College's (Olympia, WA) school mascot is the Geoduck.
Posted by Barb on March 5,2009 | 05:46 PM
And now, are these too in danger of being over fished,er, clammed? If they survive only in the Pacific Northwest, then they seem to have a limited habitat, and therefore, are themselves limited. I hope we manage their harvest carefully. I grew up on Puget Sound and had some occasion to try to dig them up, and to marvel at their size and well, not too attractive appearance! I remember them fondly.
Posted by Pamela Freeman on March 5,2009 | 04:49 PM
"Geoduck, the poor mans Abalone" newspaper ads in the 1980's sold a lot of geoduck "breasts" supplied to my restaurant north of Seattle by Brian. Menu priced at $7.95 they were a hot item until Brians' arrest for geoduck rustling .
Posted by Dave Foley on February 26,2009 | 09:01 PM
Sarah Zielinski's article gives good descriptions of geoduck cooking methods. One can also separate the siphon meat from the body meat; cut the siphon meat into chunks and then pound them with a meat tenderizer mallet into thin patties. The body meat needs no pounding if sliced crosswise into thin slices. The siphon meat patties and body meat slices can then be sautéd, or breaded and deep-fried, similar to cooking abalone. Very fresh geoduck can also be thinly sliced and made into sushi or served raw as sashimi with a soy sauce and wasabi dipping sauce.
Posted by Lynn Goodwin on February 26,2009 | 06:40 PM
My son works for Boeing Computer services and heads a major computer project which carries the nickname goeduck, based on the clam. I forwarded this article to him.
Posted by john grandine on February 26,2009 | 12:48 PM
To learn how to cook geoduck visit http://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/How-to-Cook-a-Geoduck.html or click the link above at the right of the article.
Posted by Cheryl on February 25,2009 | 06:31 PM
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