June 27, 2016 โ WANCHESE, North Carolina โDewey Hemilright has spent more than half his life in North Carolinaโs commercial fishing industry, but he says he has never heard a bigger fish story than the claim by the Outer Banks Seafood Festival that it promotes the harvest he and his colleagues work so hard to haul in.
โItโs a deception,โ he said, after first using a colorful phrase that rolls more easily off the tongue of a career waterman. โTheyโre telling people โ or at least implying to people โ who come down here that theyโre going to get local North Carolina seafood. Theyโre not. What theyโre getting is imported. But put that on your sign and see how many people show up. Itโs not right. You shouldnโt have to read the fine print.โ
A handful of small events along the coast each year feature the blue crabs, brown shrimp, yellowfin tuna and some of the dozens of other shellfish and finfish species that fishermen wrestle from the stateโs oceans and sounds. But two of the most heavily promoted festivals โ the Outer Banks Seafood Festival in Nags Head and the North Carolina Seafood Festival in Morehead City โ predominantly offer the same foreign imports that American consumers typically buy in grocery stores and eat at restaurants.
Festival organizers say they encourage, but canโt force, vendors to serve North Carolina products. They add that those who offer flounder platters and baskets of deep-fried shrimp from booths, between the band performances and the craft tents, say that cost and limited availability make it difficult, if not impossible, to sell only what is homegrown.