Wednesday, August 28, 2019

Day 4: 4-H Livestock Club Summer Agriculture Tour of Virginia


The Pulaski County 4-H Livestock Club was not quite as enthusiastic about their summer trip this year because we were not planning to leave the state of Virginia.  After having traveled through Kansas, Wisconsin, Texas, Ohio, Indiana and Michigan, staying close to home did not hold much appeal!  Little did they realize how much their home state has to offer and how diverse we are in the field of agriculture. 

Day 4:

Just a short walk along the boardwalk at the Hampton Marina Hotel lies the Virginia Seafood Agriculture Research and Extension Center (AREC).  The center is located on the Hampton River, very close to the Chesapeake Bay. 

Steve Urick spoke with us about the research that is going on at the center to include ways to grow difficult or impossible to raise fish such as Tuna, Grouper, Snapper, etc.  They are developing culture methods to produce Copepod Nauplii (babies) to feed these high value fish larvae.  Copepods are a group of small crustaceans found in nearly every fresh and saltwater habitat.  The smallest look like a speck of dust and live most everywhere in the ocean in numbers too vast to count.  The copepods are a key link in ocean food webs.  The center wants to “grow” the copepods to feed the fish larvae in a farm raised fish environment.

Other areas of research include:

How to improve and stabilize the environment of the farm raised oyster beds so as to prevent massive die offs of oyster larvae. 

What to feed and at what rate to feed Clownfish so as to get the bright orange color in the Clownfish.

Safe and effective ways to ensure food grown aquaponically is free of health risks and safe for human consumption.

Steve also showed the group a live horseshoe crab and a vial of the blood that had been drawn from the crab.  Their blood is blue and is valued at over $60,000 per gallon.  Pharmaceutical companies use the horseshoe crab blood to test the sterility of drugs, vaccines, medical devices and implants.  A synthetic product has been developed but needs more time for testing.  This will reduce the need to bleed the horseshoe crab

From the waterfront there in Hampton you can also see the Norfolk Navy Base which is the largest naval base in the world.

Virginia Beach was our next destination so we boarded the bus and headed that way.  Our summer trips have never afforded us much downtime, so rather than schedule another tour for the afternoon, we took the afternoon off to enjoy the beach.  Our hotel was on the beach and so we spent the day swimming and enjoying the sun and the sand.  During our time on the beach, the group was amazed at the number of ships transporting cargo containers passed by on the near horizon.  We learned that the Port of Virginia is one of the busiest ports on the East Coast.  Its well-connected railway allows a third of its cargo to arrive and depart by rail, representing the largest percentage of any East Coast port.

Enjoying the ocean

Dinner at the Wyndham hotel

Girls posing with Neptune, God of the Sea

One of our littlest travelers enjoying her ice cream


After a day in the salty air, a delicious dinner at the hotel and ice cream on the boardwalk, the group was ready to call it a day.  Day 5 would begin our journey home.

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