Mother Jones

THE ROCKWEED RUSH

Corporate harvesters are ripping up native seaweed—for use in everything from dog food to fracking.
Larch Hanson, harvesting rockweed the old-fashioned way

ROBIN SEELEY SAW them back in the summer of 2008, in Cobscook Bay, a pristine Maine estuary near the Canadian border. “All of a sudden this small fleet of blue boats appeared,” she recalled as we walked along the shore of the sparkling bay at low tide. “They all looked the same. I thought, ‘What on earth are they doing?’” As Seeley watched, the skiffs fanned out along the shoreline, and the pilot of each boat lifted a strange metal rake fitted with a cutting blade, reached out over the side, and filled his boat with rockweed, the dominant seaweed of the North Atlantic intertidal zone. Each skiff delivered it to a central raft, where it was bagged in one-ton sacks, floated to shore, loaded

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Mother Jones

Mother Jones17 min readPolitical Ideologies
The Democracy Bomb
A DAY AHEAD of the third anniversary of January 6, President Joe Biden traveled to Valley Forge, Pennsylvania—where George Washington encamped during the Revolutionary War—before delivering what he described as a “deadly serious” speech framing the s
Mother Jones6 min readPolitical Ideologies
Thumbs-Down
VOTERS LOVE TO complain about the two-party system, which can leave us feeling stuck: Trump and Biden again? Yet most of our elections rely on a process that guarantees frustration. Plurality voting—pick one candidate and the top vote-getter wins—usu
Mother Jones14 min read
Blood Money
TOMMY ALBA COULD be a pain in the ass. It’s how he ran two bustling cafes in coastal Virginia. His linebacker physique and booming baritone, with more than a hint of a childhood New Jersey accent, could make him intimidating. Even Lorene Alba, who ad

Related Books & Audiobooks