one being robert t. brown who is the current president of the watermen association in maryland. >> aquaculture, it's a number of people who have started [indistinct]. it's a way where we can keep oysters on the market. it's a way that we help put more oysters into the bays and the rivers to help filter the water. it's a good program. >> scrolled up a load of these freshly picked up oysters. maryland's finest. >> if we want to eat oysters, we should grow them like we do everything else that we eat. >> ah, there we go. >> we don't go out, and hunt, and gather anymore because there's very few resources that c sustain hting and gathering anymore, and oysters is no exception, and the natural resource probably should be left for its ecological value where it belongs. >> these are farm fields that we're trying to get going. underwater farm fields. and farming is a good industry. >> eric wisner and his uncle, mike lindemon, have about 360 acres of leased bottom in the nanticoke river. they dredged the public fishery d