Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram
How much would you pay?
By EDWARD D. MURPHY, Staff Writer Portland Press Herald Tuesday, April 10, 2007

Thank goodness lobster isn't an Easter staple.
A combination of weather, water temperature and the timing of fishing seasons has pushed retail lobster prices to about $15 a pound, probably the highest ever.
"Everything that can go wrong has gone wrong," said Peter McAleney, owner of New Meadows Lobster, which had exhausted its supply Monday. "At these prices, ham and lamb is pretty cheap."
Bob Bayer, executive director of the Lobster Institute, said this winter's harsh weather, particularly the wind, made it tough for lobstermen to get out on the water. Even if they had gone out, he said, they'd find few lobsters, because the ocean water temperature is below normal for this time of year. When the water is abnormally cold, lobsters are less inclined to eat, meaning they're not likely to head into a trap in search of a meal.
Finally, he said, tidal lobster pounds have done poorly over the past few years, and lobster dealers have kept fewer lobsters there. A tidal lobster pound is a netted-in area near the shore where lobsters caught in the fall are held and fed until they're sold over the winter.
Maine tidal lobster pounds have the capacity to hold as much as 6 million pounds of lobster, but only half that amount was stocked last fall, Bayer said, further depressing supplies.
The result is sticker shock at the seafood counter.
"It's the highest I've ever seen," said Steve DiMillo, owner of DiMillo's Floating Restaurant on the Portland waterfront. The price "has been ramping up for the past few weeks, and we've been buying less."
His seafood buyer wasn't able to find any lobsters Monday, but it didn't matter, because DiMillo wasn't buying anyway. His customers aren't ordering as much at the higher prices.
DiMillo said he's been paying $45 a pound for lobster meat and $11.50 a pound for whole lobsters -- wholesale. He's added a 25 percent surcharge to all lobster dishes to help cover the higher cost, which is leading some customers to try different menu items.
McAleney said lobsters are selling for about $18 a pound in New York, but "even with the high prices, they're not catching much, so it doesn't even pay for the fuel" to head out.
McAleney said he didn't even open Sunday morning as usual, because lobster supplies are close to non-existent. He said he was able to supply his wholesale customers last week, but that was mainly because the price prompted them to order less.
Both McAleney and Bayer said relief is in sight.
The weather should improve -- sometime. The water will begin to warm and perk up lobsters' appetites, and the Canadian lobster season will start soon. Bayer said Canadian waters are divided into about 40 districts with different opening and closing dates, but most will open by the end of the month.
McAleney said a rush of supply should help to push prices down.
"When it falls, it's going to fall hard," he said.
That's good news for DiMillo, heading into the summer tourist season. However, he said that most tourists who head to his restaurant are looking for lobster, and a few dollars more wouldn't deter many.
It doesn't even scare off some of the natives.
Paul McKenney, a financial planner and town councilor in Cape Elizabeth, said DiMillo's $4 surcharge wasn't enough to stop him from ordering a $16 lobster club sandwich, a treat he indulges in maybe twice a month.
"I don't have lobster all that often, so I don't see it as a really big deal," he said. "If it was a staple, like milk or bread or eggs, I would feel differently."
Besides, "it was delicious," McKenney said.
Staff Writer Edward D. Murphy can be reached at 791-6465 or at:


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MainelyJack of New Gloucester, ME
Apr 11, 2007 1:35 AM
Lived in Portland long, Tilly? That they are "bottom feeders" is relevant in what manner?

Do you know how lobsters are caught? In Traps. Set by people who have to go out in all kinds of weather? That the winter is a real hard time to catch lobsters normally for all kind of reasons? That prices are set by suppy and demand? Sounds like you have arrived from "away."

You'll understand what that means at some point.report abuse
MaineCitizen of Portland, ME
Apr 10, 2007 10:22 PM
If we have a cold winter and the orange trees in Florida freeze, OJ goes up. What is the difference, good ole supply and demand

As for the "poor" using food stamps for supposedly outrageous purchases, I have never seen it, friends and family have never seen it; so some of you must spend one heck of a lot of time with their nose stuck in someone else's food basket :-(report abuse
Tilly of Portland, ME
Apr 10, 2007 8:56 PM
Why are lobsters so expensive? They are bottom feeders that eat what humans just ate. Then the cycle continues.report abuse
Tess of Waterville, ME
Apr 10, 2007 7:02 PM
Just to think that lobster was a staple for the poor years ago...Oh yes, it still is, since they use their food card to purchase it, while the rest of us just wait for the price to come down.report abuse
MainelyJack of New Gloucester, ME
Apr 10, 2007 6:06 PM
The only thing I would pay $15 a pound for is Ann Margaret. (I guess that dates me).report abuse
Betsy clarke of Ocala, FL
Apr 10, 2007 5:47 PM
I GUESS I WON`T ASK MY GRANDSON TO GIVE ME ANY. OR MY SON TO BUY ME ANY AND SEND THEM DOWN HERE TO FL TO ME RIGHT NOW AT THAT PRICE. I HOPE THAT MY GRANDSON CAN MAKE A LIVING ON THEM BEING THAT HARD TO FIND AND THE WATER BEING THAT COLD. KEEP POLLUTING THE AIR AND CHANGING THE OZONE SO THAT EARTH WILL END UP WITH NOTHING. WE CAN`T GET ALONG WITH ANYONE ON MOTHER EARTH WHAT MAKES YOU THINK WE WILL WITH SOMEONE ELSE IF WE DISCOVER SOMEONE ON ANOTHER PLANET? HURRAH FOR SHUTTLES AND ALL THAT MONEY THAT COULD BE USED HERE TAKING CARE OF AMERICANSreport abuse
Bill Brasky of Buxton, ME
Apr 10, 2007 5:08 PM
dude, you need helpreport abuse
Outspoken1 of Lewiston, ME
Apr 10, 2007 4:39 PM
I bet all the peeps in Maine who get food stamps can buy it without blinking an eye...then when they have no more stamps for the month, they can go to the town or city offices and cry "my family has no more food, we will starve...feed me, Seymore"...and they will get more..AARRGGHH!report abuse
antonella of old orchard beach, ME
Apr 10, 2007 1:04 PM
Speaking for me,not antonella,I would go to someones home for a free one,I would not buy any,but thats me David,the junk yard man from oob,anything free is worth taking!report abuse
DP of Westbrook, ME
Apr 10, 2007 12:43 PM
Not me, those are prices for Las Vegas!report abuse

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