Mac’s Seafood is branching out in search of a bigger market for the shellfish that has made this town famous.
Mac’s Seafood, which was started as a single retail store on Wellfleet’s pier in 1995 by Mac Hay and his brother Alex Hay, has grown to include two markets, one in Truro, the other in Eastham, a certified wholesale processing facility in Truro, and now, as of last month, the Wellfleet Shellfish Co., with its 5,000-square-foot processing plant in Eastham.
Twelve Wellfleet shellfishermen, including Jim Connell, Bob Wallace and Barbara Austin, formed the Wellfleet Shellfish Co. in 2001. It has been selling up to four million clams and oysters yearly nationwide.
Alex Hay, who has been running the Eastham processing plant, located off Holmes Road, since the sale went through, said he and his brother “have been talking to the owners of Wellfleet Shellfish Company for quite some time about getting involved and helping them market the business a little bit more.”
That talk met receptive ears last month, when the owners of Wellfleet Shellfish agreed to sell their company to Mac’s Seafood.
Since then, Alex has been putting in long days at the Eastham plant, which has two 4,000 gallon tanks filled with ice and with hard-shell, soft-shell, steamers and scallops that are placed there to be purged of sand and grit.
When Wellfleet’s famous oysters come in, staff culls them, taking out the small irregular ones, and putting the others in the cooler where they can be bagged up for shipment around the world.
Sam Bradford, cousin to Mac and Alex, and chief financial officer for Mac’s Seafood, said he and his cousins “have our hands full trying to manage the merger of operations, but we are really excited about our potential to get more product and more oysters moving through that place and Wellfleet Harbor.”
Bradford said everyone “seems to be happy that this transition is taking place. The fishermen seem happy with the changes we are making and I think it will a great thing.”
Alex said while Mac’s Seafood has acquired Wellfleet Shellfish Co., both names will still remain.
He said in recent years, “the wild fishery has given Wellfleet a bad name since the wild harvesters have a tendency to pick stuff that is not very desirable. What we will try to do is rebrand the Wellfleet oyster with our company as the Wellfleet Shellfish Company and Mac’s Seafood that sells this high quality oyster. I think it will take a little time to get the supply volume back, but there is a lot of good stuff out there now and we are working with hundreds of shellfishermen.”
Andy Koch, Wellfleet shellfish warden, and a former shellfishermen, said he thinks the 12 shellfishermen who started Wellfleet Shellfish Co. wanted to make sure they had a place to sell their product. They probably sold “because they realized it was not a cash cow.”
Connell, one of the founders, said in press release said, “It’s difficult to mind the farm and the shop at the same time.”
With this purchase, said Alex, Mac’s Seafood’s staff would be more than 200, with the full-time employees living in Wellfleet, Truro and Eastham. With summer approaching, they will have 10 to 12 working around the clock at the Holmes’ Road plant packing orders to go out by truck and Federal Express to their customers.
In addition, Mac’s Seafood will soon have a new website. “We are hoping that new look will spark a huge increase in our web sales,” he said. “We have plenty of business in the summer. We are trying to make it a 12-month business, and keep a year-round full staff.”
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Shopping police illegal parking caught on camera (From Watford Observer) - Watford Observer
Police caught on camera parking on yellow lines for shopping trips in Watford
10:00am Friday 1st June 2012 in News By Mike Wright, Chief Reporter
Police officers in Watford have been caught on camera for the second time in two weeks parking on double yellow lines to go on shopping jaunts to supermarkets.
The town’s force is facing a mounting outcry after officers were snapped on Friday parking up on a pavement in central Watford for a trip to Iceland.
The revelation comes just a week after pictures emerged of police illegally parking in St Albans Road to visit a Tesco Express.
The pictures have been branded “disgraceful” by one former police detective who said the abuses damaged the force’s standing with the public.
Watford’s Chief Inspector Nick Caveney has also come down hard on the practice, saying the officers involved have been reprimanded and prosecuted.
The town’s top policeman also described the two incidents as a “rare lapse” in the behaviour of his committed and dedicated force.
The latest picture taken by a Watford resident who saw officers park their car on the pavement in Albert Road South, a stone’s throw away from Watford Police Station, where there are double yellow lines.
The resident, who asked not to be named, said: “A patrol car pulled up with all four wheels on the pavement, two officers jumped out slammed the door shut and left the engine running, presumably with the keys inside.
“I thought they were going to make an arrest but they strolled over to Iceland to do a bit of shopping.
“They emerged from the shop 10 minutes later with a bag of shopping. I wouldn’t mind but it would be quicker to walk from the police station in Shady Lane than to drive there.”
A retired Metropolitan Police detective, Terry Hymans, who lives in Rickmansworth, said he felt there was no excuse for officers misusing parking privileges.
He also said actions like the ones caught on camera damaged the public’s trust in the police.
“I think it is disgraceful personally,” he said “I don’t think there is any excuse. This is part of the reason people have little regard for police officers today.
“It sends out a signal of don’t do as I do, do as I say. People will naturally assume they (the police) all do it and that is not true.”
The first pictures police parking on yellow lines was first captured by Abbots Langley resident Kevin Brown who submitted them to the Watford Observer last week.
He said he was “amazed” to see an officer park on a double yellow lines on a pavement in St Albans Road before spending seven minutes in Tesco Express and emerging with a shopping bag.
Following the revelations Chief Inspector for Watford, Nick Caveney said he was “shocked and surprised” to see the pictures.
He said: “As police officers, we have a very clear responsibility to operate totally within the law, whether this is when dealing with people we have arrested or while using a public highway in a police vehicle.
We have to set a good example to our communities and these incidents clearly do not. I am glad these have been brought to my attention and have since spoken with the officers concerned to establish the circumstances.
“Had they been responding to an emergency, illegal parking is justified and allowed, but this was not the case.
The officers concerned have been reprimanded for their behaviour and just like any other member of the public, are being prosecuted for their actions.”
“I’m very proud of our team here in Watford who work beyond the call of duty on a daily basis in order to keep our communities safe.
“These incidents are a rare lapse in an otherwise committed, dedicated and upstanding team.”
Comments(14)
TRT says...
10:02am Fri 1 Jun 12
Hornets number 12 fan says...
10:04am Fri 1 Jun 12
Taximan says...
11:07am Fri 1 Jun 12
AWatfordTaxpayer says...
11:34am Fri 1 Jun 12
One of the horses then did his business right there in the middle of the pedestrian walkway, a few yards from the entrance to McDonalds, leaving a load of manure for any lucky gardener passing by, or any unlucky pedestrian going by, if you get my drift.
I asked the rider, a policewoman, what she was going to do about it. She replied it was a job for the council and that she was going to do nothing about it. After chatting a while longer, the riders went on their separate ways, leaving the steaming deposit for the people of Watford to enjoy at their leisure.
As a dog owner, I would be liable to a £1000 fine for leaving a dog poo on the pavement. The police leave something altogether more impressive and just ignored it, and that outside a popular fast food restaurant.
It really is one rule for us, and one for them, isn't it? The policewoman was not embarrassed at all, it was really just a case of "tough luck, shoppers".
I took photos to send to the council, of the horse in the act and the mess left afterwards, but decided not to as I doubted they would care or do anything about it.
I must admit, I was very disappointed in the police for leaving this steaming manure in the middle of the street and doing nothing at all about it. The policewoman just tried to ignore it until I brought it to her attention, whereupon she dismissed it.
Taximan says...
11:47am Fri 1 Jun 12
Reg Edit says...
11:53am Fri 1 Jun 12
Reg Edit says...
11:59am Fri 1 Jun 12
garston tony says...
12:12pm Fri 1 Jun 12
TRT says...
12:25pm Fri 1 Jun 12
garston tony says...
1:05pm Fri 1 Jun 12
LSC says...
1:10pm Fri 1 Jun 12
TRT says...
1:14pm Fri 1 Jun 12
onlyonerodthomas says...
1:22pm Fri 1 Jun 12
Maclanx says...
2:57pm Fri 1 Jun 12
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