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THE CHANGING NATURE OF LUBEC’S ECONOMY
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Settled in 1785 and incorporated in 1811, Lubec was once a proud and bustling sardine canning and fish-smoking center. It was here in the Quoddy region that America’s sardine canning industry was created.
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McCurdy's Smoke House |
SARDINE CANNING
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During the Franco-Prussian War of 1870, the New York sardine
importer, Wolff & Reessing had great difficulty getting supplies and then only at highly increased costs. As Julius Wolff saw his supply of French sardines diminishing and a gold-based government duty
imposed on imports, he began looking for alternative sources, and found the Passamaquoddy region with its abundant supply of superior product. He came to |

Credit: NOAA National
Marine Fisheries Service |
the area and established the Eagle
Preserved Fish Company at Eastport in 1875, packing and selling 60,000 cans the first year.
As other importers became interested, new canneries were built and by 1880 there were 18 factories in Eastport and one in Lubec. In the following two decades, 23 sardine plants started-up in Lubec and over the
next forty years the industry continued to thrive.
Around World War II, the sardine canning industry boomed when purchases by the Federal government to feed U.S. troops accounted for 80 percent of the industry’s annual pack. In 1950, there were 50 sardine
canning plants along the coast of Maine.
As markets developed for herring by-products such as fish oil, pearl-essence, pet food and lobster bait, more plants were constructed. But by the 1960s, the domestic market for sardines had diminished, production
was low and stocks were depleted by foreign fleets. Cheaper imports and costly mandatory pollution controls further constrained the industry. By 1975 only 15 packing plants were left in Maine. After 1977, Lubec
had one working sardine factory still in operation while the second had switched to processing locally-farmed salmon.
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SALMON FARMING
These locally-farmed salmon are first reared in a freshwater hatchery
for about eighteen months, during which time they go through a physiological change known as smoltification. This makes the anadromous fish, which are born in fresh water in the wild, ready for life in the sea.
As smolts, they are then transferred to the farm pens in Johnson’s, Cobscook and Passamaquoddy Bays, where they spend the next eighteen to twenty-four months growing large enough to harvest for market.
Salmon aquaculture first began in Canada and quickly spread to the United States during the mid-1980s. Pen aquaculture succeeded in the region in large part
because of the flushing action |

Transferring Smolts

Salmon Farms in Johnson's Bay |
provided by the unusually high tides (>20 vertical
feet) in the region.
The technology of aquaculture was first adopted by
families and small groups of individuals who built pens by hand, and undertook the experimental phase of establishing aquaculture as a commercially-viable marine enterprise. They were helped initially by the high
prices pen-raised Atlantic salmon garnered in the marketplace. As aquaculture flourished in Maine and other areas, the price of Atlantic salmon decreased and the profit margin became too narrow
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to run pens on a small scale. This lead to Canadian corporations
buying-out pens, aquaculture leases and businesses. The corporations compensated for the small profit margin by handling larger volumes. Some years ago the local salmon processor received the harvest from ten
salmon farms. Today, since some of the companies have moved, there are fewer harvests to process. |

Fisheries Facility |
Notwithstanding this decrease, in Maine the
salmon-farming harvest has a farm-gate value in excess of $65 million dollars, with the salmon farms off Lubec being just a small part of the global production.
However, over the past few years the number of active farms in the
Cobscook Bay area has diminished along with the volume of fish
harvested. Salmon farming is second only to lobstering as
Maine’s most valuable marine product, though there are other marine products that also have value.
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URCHIN
AND SEA CUCUMBER HARVESTING
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During the 1980s, a delegation of Japanese businessmen came to Lubec looking for an alternative source of sea-urchins, should their preferred choice, the red urchin of the west coast, become unavailable. They
experimented with the local sea urchins and have since kept the industry active. |

Totes of Sea Urchins
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Sea cucumbers, (Class
Holothuroidea) are cylinder-shaped invertebrate animals that live in
seas worldwide. They are found in a variety of sea floor habitats, from
warm tropical waters to cold deep sea trenches. These nocturnal animals
have a life span of about 5 to 10 years and are harvested in local
waters and processed in town on Water Street. Dragging or diving for sea
urchins during the winter months, (the same method used to harvest
scallops), has since become a sustainable local business. The harvested product is sold to buyers who take them to Portland or beyond for processing.
Generations of Lubec families have continued to use their skills, talent and regional knowledge to make a living from marine and other natural resources.
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SEA SALT
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During the 1800's Downeast Maine was home to the richest fishing
grounds in North America. Salt was used to preserve the valuable
catches and correspondingly, during that period, several coastal
saltworks operations flourished in Washington County Maine. Today, the
time-honored tradition of salt-making has returned to Lubec. |

Bay of Fundy
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Using the frigid, pristine
waters of the Bay of Fundy, the company produces an all-natural high
quality sea salt in a variety of grades, crystal sizes and flavors.
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LOBSTERING
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Lobstering is a year-round fishery, though it is slower and more
difficult in winter. Unlike southern Maine where it is common to fish trawls of 10-15 pots, Lubec area lobstermen fish ‘doubles’ and ‘triples’, i.e., only two or three traps per set of buoys. The
environment in Lubec waters limits the number of traps that can be efficiently handled in a trawl. Lobstermen here typically put 100 lbs. of weight in a lobster trap to keep it from being moved around the
bottom by the unusually high tides and strong currents. These same tides and currents limit lobstermen to a window of about 45 minutes to pull traps. The |

Lobster Boat in Lubec Narrows |
currents are so strong that the trawl buoys are
irretrievable except in slack water. These conditions make it difficult to fish large numbers of traps.
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OTHER SHELL FISHING
Other marine products are harvested in their respective seasons, including scallops, crabs, periwinkles and clams. In order to earn a year-round living, this seasonality of fishing activity finds the hard-working
population engaged in many other non-fishing-related, season-dependent, work.
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BLUEBERRY RAKING
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Maine is one of America’s largest blueberry-growing states, raising
90% of the low-bush blueberries in North America. Sixty thousand acres in production produces a harvest of over 75 million pounds, the major proportion of which is raked in Washington County. Many families from
Lubec participate in blueberry raking. The prized, antioxidant-rich berries are harvested in the month of August and early September. |

Blueberry Barrens in Fall |
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TIPPING AND WREATH-MAKING
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Forest products provide another source of income. From approximately the first week of November, multi-generational families begin the process of tipping, which is harvesting balsam fir brush for wreath-making.
The process of tipping and wreath-making begins once the sap in the trees has set. The sap setting 'sets' the needles, allowing a wreath to stay fresh and to last |

Wreath-Making |
for months. Harvesters look for young tree
growth that has had sufficient light to yield fuller boughs. The boughs selected are preferably sixteen inches long, pyramid shaped and look like a ‘hand with five fingers’. Tipping continues through early
December and wreath-making to mid-December. Wreaths, handmade in Lubec, are shipped to homes and businesses nationwide, to decorate the year-end Holiday season and fill the air with their unforgettable
fragrance.
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SERVICE AND TRADE INDUSTRIES
Lubec has celebrated its isolated existence and unique, unaffected
character, community and culture for close to two hundred years. And with every intention of retaining that uniqueness, local businesses have begun to welcome and cater to a growing number of summer residents,
new home-owners from 'away', and seasonal vacationers.
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For a small town, Lubec is blessed with a variety of accommodations for travelers and seasonal visitors alike.
There is a motel and hotel,
inns, several bed & breakfast establishments, vacation homes, apartments and log cabins for rent. These privately-owned small businesses, coupled with the
local restaurants, cafés, coffee shops and local
stores, provide further
opportunities for employment.
There is a substantial number of self-employed people in Lubec, among
them skilled artisans
ready and willing to address the construction and maintenance needs of seasonal visitors and year-round residents.
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The future of Lubec will continue to rely on the support of the service and trade industries as well as marine, forest and agricultural products. Added to
these, an increase in seasonal vacationers, who appreciate the natural beauty of the area’s great outdoors and the uniqueness of Lubec’s culture, will bring further prosperity to the town. And to assure a stable future, economic development is essential and new businesses choosing Lubec as their location
will be
warmly welcomed.
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