2014-07-08



Kirk Lombard holds up a locally caught Dungeness crab during a tour offered by his community supported fishery Sea Forager. Photo courtesy: Sea Forager

With the advent of farmers’ markets, community supported agriculture and urban gardening, getting fresh local produce has never been easier. Some CSAs even include meat and dairy making a trip to the grocery store almost unnecessary.

But what if you want fresh local seafood that hasn’t been frozen and flown thousands of miles to sit in a display case for a week? Enter “community supported fisheries.” Modeled after community supported agriculture, community supported fisheries in the Bay Area provide members with a weekly or monthly supply of fish and shellfish from the California Coast.

Participants pay a “share” in a CSF, which goes directly to the fishermen. By funding the fishermen upfront it guarantees they have a steady supply of work and are able to run their fleet. It also means subscribers have a chance to meet the person who caught their food and ask questions about where it came from.



Siren Fish Co. founder Anna Larsen gives seafood to a member of her community supported fishery. Photo: Douglas Gayeton

Kirk Lombard runs Sea Forager, a community supported fishery in San Francisco, and even offers to take members on guided fishing tours in San Francisco and Half Moon Bay to catch fresh fish and shellfish.

“People wanted to know where their food was coming from,” Lombard said. As a former fisheries observer for the California Fish and Game Commission he was uniquely positioned to provide a behind the scenes look.

I did these tours and then people wanted to get fresh seafood on a regular basis so I had the a-ha moment of, ‘hey I can make that happen.’”

For as little as $24 a week you can pick up a box of sand dabs, sardines and Dungeness crabs that were caught that same day. Which is a major feat considering 91 percent of the seafood consumed in the U.S. comes from overseas. It’s frozen, shipped and is at least three days old before you buy it said Siren Fish Co. founder Anna Larsen.



Anchovies, night smelt and clams are a few of the offerings from San Francisco-based community supported fishery Sea Forager. Photo courtesy: Sea Forager

“How often do you get fish 24 hours out of the water?” Larsen said. “Freshness and temperature maintenance are huge for seafood which is why our salmon doesn’t taste fishy.”

“It has this lovely savory quality and it it’s like eating a steak almost. Our sardines also have a meaty umami flavor.”

Fishermen Calder Deyerle and Justin Riddleberger provide caught Dungeness crab to Local Catch Monterey Bay, a community supported fishery in Monterey, California. Photo: Oren Frey

To keep the seafood fresh, most CSFs charge a few extra dollars to deliver fish straight to your door. Or you can pick up your shipment at several locations around the Bay Area. If you’re a lucky Facebook or Google staffer, Sea Forager delivers directly to your workplace.

For anyone who thinks CSFs are just a passing trend, the nearly 200 CSFs in North America suggest otherwise. With four in the Bay Area and more popping up each year, we’ve listed what you get from three local CSFs, how much it costs and where to sign up as you contemplate your dinner plans:

Bay Area Community Supported Fisheries

Sea Forager
Location: San Francisco, CA
Membership fee: $24 or $47/week
What you get: About a pound of seafood.

Weekly deliveries of fresh fish like sand dabs, halibut and rockfish or Neptune’s Delight which is a surprise box of fish and shellfish like clams and mussels. Each delivery provides dinner for two.
Pick-up or delivery: Both. Ten pick-up locations in San Francisco
Delivery fee: $10
Available as fillets: Yes
Benefits: Owner Kirk Lombard will take you out on seafood foraging tours in the Bay Area to show you how local fish and shellfish are caught.
More info: seaforager.com

Siren Fish Co.
Location: San Francisco, CA
Membership fee: $20 or $40/week
What you get: $20 for a pound of fresh fish or $40 for two pounds.

Dover, rock cod, herring, salmon, oysters, crab, sardines, squid, mussels, crayfish; Dungeness crab, sable fish, albacore tuna, lingcod, sand dabs, California halibut. Standard package contains a mixture of everything.
Pick-up or delivery: Pick-up.
Available as fillets: Yes
Benefits: Siren Fish Co. offers prepared fish like smoke house, lox, smoked albacore, hot smoked salmon and beer-brined hot smoked salmon with whiskey. They also offer home smoking and curing classes.
More info: sirenseasa.com

Local Catch Monterey Bay
Location: Monterey, CA
Membership fee: $22 or $26/week
What you get: For $22 you’ll get a range of different seafood like salmon, sablefish, Dungeness crab, ling cod and squid. For $26 you’ll get the types of fish you see on most restaurant menus. Each packages contains 1-1.5 pounds of fish.
Pick-up or delivery: Pick-up. 27 locations in San Francisco and Monterey.
Available as fillets: Yes
Benefits: Meet and greet events with Local Catch fishermen and chefs including cooking demos.
More info: localcatchmontereybay.com

Emma Lovewell holds freshly caught black cod, a fish commonly provided to members of seafood subscription service Local Catch Monterey Bay. Photo: Alan Lovell

Related Stories on KQED:

Fish to Fork: The Rise of Community-Supported Fisheries (QUEST)

Imported Seafood May Be Cheaper, But What’s the Catch? (Forum)

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