Likes Likes:  0
Thanks Thanks:  0
HaHa HaHa:  0
Results 1 to 6 of 6

Thread: Entrepreneur’s vision: A carp cooperative

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Feb 2010
    Location
    Slayden, MS
    Posts
    157
    Post Thanks / Like

    Default Entrepreneur’s vision: A carp cooperative


    I saw this on another site. Figured yall would like to read it!

    Entrepreneur’s vision: A carp cooperative

    Posted: Friday, April 16, 2010 9:08 pm

    By JOHN BRANNON
    UC Messenger- Staff Reporter

    A former California attorney wants to establish a $20 million “Carp Catchers Cooperative” at the Cates Landing riverport near Tiptonville.
    Jim Miller of Cecilia, Ky., has asked the Northwest Tennessee Riverport Authority to sell or lease to him 10 to 15 acres to build a shipyard and three wooden ships to harvest Asian carp that have become a “serious problem” for American waterways.

    “They are voracious eaters. They eat 20 to 40 percent of their body weight a day in algae and plant plankton and zoo plankton, which is animal plankton,” he said. “They are decimating our native fish.”
    Both the Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency and the Fisheries Division, Kentucky Department of Natural Resources, are concerned about the burgeoning threat of the fish to native game fish.

    The State of Illinois and the federal government are trying to keep the fish out of the Great Lakes.

    Miller is president of a fisheries business with the unlikely name of Mutual Aid Society of America Inc. He said the company is still in the “pre-startup stage.”

    “My previous title is ‘recovering attorney’,” he said.
    He asserts he is a graduate of Stanford School of Law, Class of 1959. In private practice, he specialized in real estate and business and eminent domain. He was county counsel for Imperial County, Calif., four years and deputy county counsel of San Diego County, five.

    “In my retirement years, I’m (reinventing) myself as a fisher/marine engineer,” he said. “I have a degree in agricultural engineering. I’m fairly comfortable in this new role.”

    In his April 3 letter to Jimmy Williamson, chairman of Northwest Tennessee Riverport Authority, Miller lists 10 goals to be met in order to establish a “home port” for the carp cooperative. One of them is that the port authority must be capable of issuing industrial revenue bonds and other assistance for the economic development of the venture.

    “Specifically, we will need a written contract by which we can acquire a shipyard location (subject to conditions) and a resolution by your board of intent to issue industrial revenue bonds in support of establishment of the shipyard ...

    “With the contract and resolution in hand, we can then truly represent that we have a ‘home port’ which will support the large-scale commercial solution to the Asian Carp invasion problem ...”

    Here are the basics of Miller’s plan:
    • The name of the Asian carp would be changed to “Silverfin” for marketing purposes. Commercial customers would include outlets in China. “The Chinese just love them, and there’s a guy in Iowa that has a restaurant which serves 30,000 pounds of carp sandwiches a month.”

    And these are not the common carp, the bottom-feeder, he says. They are the “top-feeder” high quality carp. “Don’t confuse the two. It’s the difference between eating mud and eating filet mignon. The Asian carp is the filet mignon of our American fresh waterways.”

    • The board would lease or sell 10 to 15 acres for Miller to build a shipyard.

    • After the shipyard is built, construction would start on three ships. Miller sometimes uses the word “barges.”

    Construction of the shipyard and three wooden ships — he says he prefers wooden ships — would take about two years.

    “Three barges, all hooked together like a railroad train, going up these rivers, hauling in carp,” he says. “The first boat catches them, the second boat processes them and the third boat is a ‘flotel,’ a ‘floating hotel.’ That’s where the crew would live.”

    He even has names for the three ships — the first ship, the harvester, is the “Carp Avenger.” The second ship, “the factory, the processor,” is the “Carpe Carpae,” meaning “seize the carp.” The third ship is the “Carp Ark,” which would have sleeping quarters for 50, a restaurant, a commissary, an entertainment center and a first aid office.

    • Like other ventures, funding is a challenge.

    “It will cost roughly $20 million,” Miller says. “What I need right off the bat is a $300,000 grant. We need a set of drawings for the shipyard and the three ships. Then we go to the port authority and say we want them to issue revenue bonds to build the shipyard. Then we can go to the federal government and say we need $3 million to build these three ships.

    “I need somebody from the port board of directors to say, ‘Yes, we will entertain a contract with you to allocate X-number of acres. ... We will extend to you a 50-year lease. And if you get funding for building the ships, we will sell industrial revenue bonds and apply that to construction of the shipyard.”

    Miller complains he’s not “heard a word” from Williamson and the port authority board.

    Williamson was noncommittal when contacted about Miller’s plan. He said the board will give it due consideration.

    Published in The Messenger 4.16.10
    Broke, but not broken.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Mar 2006
    Location
    Oakland,Ms
    Posts
    1,757
    Post Thanks / Like

    Default

    I think I will pass on a Silverfin (CARP) sandwich !! But who knows what those square fish are that they serve in fast food restruants.

    I do agree that something has to be done with the Asian carp but I don't know that a floating fish processor is the answer. There are a few protected species in the Mississippi river Sturgeon and paddle fish so I don't think they are going to let them just drag some big nets up the river and catch all the fish. There needs to be a way to sterlize them without harming other fish but that may be something that is impossible to do.

    They could just put a bounty on them and it would help out the local economy and get rid of them too!!


    Slabologist
    "Professor of Slabology 101"


    Keep your line tight !

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Mar 2008
    Location
    booga bottom MS
    Posts
    6,534
    Post Thanks / Like

    Default

    It sounds like he is going to catch them as they jump. Certain sound waves make them jump and sounds like they have a way to capture them without nets. Maybe why he needs a wooden barge.
    [SIGPIC]Drake Waterfowl Prostaff, Dakota Decoys Prostaff,F&F Boats, Mercury Marine, Rig Em Right, Crappie Logic Jigs, Slab Bandits, Hayes Calls, and Kick's Choke Tubes.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Dec 2007
    Location
    MO
    Posts
    11,057
    Post Thanks / Like

    Default

    Up in this area, you can take a jon boat (on the Missouri River) and go behind any wing/trail dike and stomp the bottom of the boat and they'll jump everywhere. It's sad to see how many there are.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Jan 2005
    Location
    Boise, ID
    Posts
    484
    Post Thanks / Like

    Default

    I've never had one, but supposedly the jumping silver carp are good eating. They are aquacultured for food in Asia, and often sold in Asian markets.

    Even if they don't catch on as people food here, perhaps there's a market to grind them up for animal feed.
    Don't worry, catch crappie.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Apr 2009
    Location
    Memphis
    Posts
    176
    Post Thanks / Like

    Default

    Shooting them with a bow as they fly looks fun. seriously, they are a very big problem. They will injure you quickly and they are ruining our oxbows. Something need to be done to rid us of them

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  

BACK TO TOP