| A Mussel Cruise |
| Cruising for the jewels of the sounds |
| Dec 16, 2006 By Alexia Brue |
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I am lounging outside on the open-air deck of a 40-foot launch as it putters away from shore in Havelock, the self-proclaimed world capital of greenshell mussels. It's February and, as friends freeze back in New York, I wear a short-sleeved shirt and wide-brimmed hat to protect me from New Zealand's sun. I have never before heard of a greenshell mussel and, truth be told, I am a reluctant eater of bivalves back home. But what crabs are to the Chesapeake Bay and lobsters are to Maine so, too, are greenshell mussels to the Marlborough Sounds, a region of inlets and bays on the northern tip of New Zealand's South Island. These particular mussels, our guide tells us, were a favorite food of the indigenous Maori. So finding out there is a three-hour boat tour that not only cruises the sounds but also dishes out wine and mussels, is a deal-clincher. As we pull away from Havelock's marina, Dave Morgan, our captain, tells us about the European pioneers who settled in the sounds in the 1830s and about how living here still requires an off-the-grid mentality. Mail is delivered by boat twice a week, as are groceries. I peer into the water, an inviting hue of greenish blue, and ponder drinking it. I spot no flotsam and nary an oil patch and, for the first time, "fresh from the sea" sounds like a delicious idea. As we approach Kenepuru Sounds, about an hour north from Havelock, we see where the mussels are cultivated: Long rows of natural-fiber buoys float like lined-up cadets on the water's surface. Hanging down from these buoys are lines of rope on which the mussels anchor themselves. |