Home Page

Find the Best Oyster Gear Without Guesswork

We help home shuckers choose the right oyster knives, gloves, kits, and accessories so you can buy confidently and shuck safely.

Start Here

Our Top Oyster Gear Picks

Want the simple answer? These are the first places we would start for most home oyster lovers.

Best First Buy
Beginner oyster knife

Best Oyster Knife for Most People

A simple, sturdy starting point for home shuckers.

See Price on Amazon
Safety Pick
Oyster shucking glove

Best Oyster Shucking Gloves

The safety item beginners should not skip.

Compare Gloves
Upgrade Pick
Premium oyster knife

Premium Oyster Knife

A better-feeling knife for frequent oyster nights or gifts.

Check Amazon Price

What Are You Looking For?

Beginner Setup

The Easy Starter Setup

If you are just getting started, keep it simple. A good oyster knife, a cut-resistant glove, and a basic safety guide are enough for most home shuckers.

  • One sturdy oyster knife
  • One cut-resistant glove
  • A towel or stable surface
  • A quick safety walkthrough before your first oyster
Shop Starter Knife Add Gloves
๐Ÿฆช ๐Ÿ”ช ๐Ÿงค

Best for first-time home shuckers

Simple, safe, and easier than trying to sort through dozens of products.

Choose Your Oyster Knife

Best for Most People

Beginner Oyster Knife

A practical first oyster knife for most home shuckers.

See Today’s Price Read Review
Better Gift

Premium Oyster Knife

A nicer upgrade for frequent shuckers, oyster lovers, and gifts.

Check Amazon Price Compare Knives
Pick Best For Why It Works Action
Beginner Oyster Knife Most home shuckers Simple, sturdy, practical Amazon
Premium Oyster Knife Gifts and upgrades Better feel and presentation Amazon
Safety First

Do Not Skip the Glove

A cut-resistant glove is one of the easiest ways to make oyster shucking safer, especially when you are still learning.

Compare Oyster Gloves

Learn Before You Shuck

Before opening your first oyster, learn the safe hand position, where to insert the knife, and what not to do.

Read the Safe Shucking Guide

Still Not Sure What to Buy?

Start with the basic oyster knife and add a cut-resistant glove. That is the easiest setup for most beginners.

Shop Beginner Knife Compare Gloves
As an Amazon Associate, this site may earn from qualifying purchases.

Oysters Working Toward Improving Water Quality in NY-NJ Harbor Estuary

One of the projects of NY/NJ Baykeeper is to improve the water quality of the NY-NJ Harbor Estuary by repopulating the area with oysters.  Oysters are a keystone species native to the area and are key to improving the health of the Estuary.

Baykeeper is the only nonprofit organization conducting oyster research and restoration in both New York and New Jersey.

In NJ, Baykeeper is producing baby oysters for oyster restoration projects at the Aquaculture Facility located at Naval Weapons Station Earle. Here, hatchery raised oyster larvae attach, set, and grow on shell substrate. Once the oysters have “set” on the shell, and have grown for about two months, they are ready for release onto newly established oyster beds or reefs.

Last month, the Baykeeper Oyster Restoration Team launched the Oyster Skiff and set out to check on the oysters at Naval Weapons Station Earle. In summer 2013 over 250,000 baby oysters were produced at the aquaculture facility and hung off the trestle at Earle. June's monitoring trip revealed high oyster survivorship and growth rates, with many organisms present in and around the cages including barnacles, sea squirts, mud crabs, mud snails, polychaetes, spider crabs, Asian shore crabs, blood worms, tautog, and soft shell clams. Soon, spat will be set on shell and reefballs at the aquaculture facility and placed with last season's surviving oysters into structures on the ¼ acre research plot. Sign up for the Baykeeper Newsletter to follow their progress!

In NY, Baykeeper created a large oyster reef at Soundview Park in the Bronx which is split up into a scientific reef where partners monitor oysters for growth and survivorship; and a community reef which holds baskets of oysters used to educate volunteers about the reef and monitoring long term survival of oysters. Both are essential tools in the future of oyster restoration within the estuary. Volunteers are a huge help to Baykeeper because they help monitor oyster growth and notate survivorship. To sign up for the volunteer list, email Allison at allison@nynjbaykeeper.org.

Please support and learn more about the Baykeeper: