Tranquility Farm Lane, in St. Mary’s County, is tucked away from the bustle of the nearby naval base and ubiquitous strip malls. But the Patuxent River tributaries surrounding the dirt roads and cow pastures have been anything but quiet as an oyster war between shellfish farmers and prominent Southern Marylanders enters its third year.
Former bank executive Talmadge Petty, who owns Hollywood Oysters, moved to his family’s 300-acre farm in 2013 and began cultivating oysters on a lease on Hogg’s Neck Creek. At the time, he says, his three neighbors did not object. One of the neighbors is Sotterley, a restored early 18th-century plantation. The second is a Sotterley descendant, Gita Van Heerden. The third neighbor is the Liu family, which owns a forested parcel abutting Sotterley Creek, just upstream from Hogg’s Neck Creek.
The problems began when Petty applied for a few more acres, this time in Sotterley Creek, not only adjacent to the Liu property but also closer to the plantation house. The plantation’s staff and supporters say the “viewshed” is important for telling Sotterley’s story, particularly how slave ships came up from the Patuxent to support the landed gentry’s opulent lifestyle. A slave cabin remains on site, as does an African-American graveyard.
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MD is just not business friendly unless it involves section 8 or EBT. Only 6,000 acres of oyster leases in MD vs 100,000 in VA and it takes 3 times as long to get a lease in MD.
ReplyDeleteMD oyster harvesting regulations are also worse than VA, both for the Watermen and the environment.
ReplyDeleteWho really gives a flying crap about Sotterly or the descendants that lived there? What right do they have to interfere with oystering? For that matter what right does the State have in Liscensing oyster farmers? B.S. Big government needs to stay out of peoples lives!
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