Two dates on the Chinese calendar matter more to a Canadian lobster harvester than most realize: Chinese New Year (January–February, moving with the lunar calendar) and Mid-Autumn Festival (September–October). Both concentrate banquet dining and gift-giving, and premium seafood sits at the center of both traditions.
What the peaks look like
Banquet tables anchor family celebration, and live premium seafood (lobster prominently) is a status centerpiece. Gifting culture adds a second demand stream: premium food gifts are exchanged, and gift-grade seafood participates. Live-tank retail stocks up ahead of both. The result is demand spikes with prices to match, followed by a post-festival cool-down.
Why timing beats negotiating
Landing product into a peak versus after it can swing the outcome more than any price negotiation. The peak is also when air-cargo capacity tightens (everyone with live product wants the same flights), so freight is booked early and harvests are planned backward from the demand date, not forward from the catch.
The planning cadence
For a live-lobster program aimed at Chinese New Year, the working-backward looks like: confirm buyer volumes and specs well ahead; book air capacity early; plan harvest and holding so animals are strong, not just alive, for the flight window; and build documentation before the rush, because certificates don’t move faster in January.
Where frozen fits
Festival demand isn’t only live: frozen premium product supplies banquet menus and retail too, and reefer timelines are longer: a container aimed at a festival ships weeks ahead. The reefer lane has its own calendar.
The supplier takeaway
Festival timing turns the calendar into a pricing instrument you control. If your species and season can be planned toward a peak, that’s free money relative to shipping the same product into a trough. We plan programs around these windows as a matter of course. Start the conversation early enough and the calendar works for you.