The Life of a Crabber

by Crab Guy on October 14, 2008

Crabbing signCrabbing requires long and grueling hours, sometimes out in some of the worst elements. Depending on where you live, there are several terms for the occupation of crabbing including watermen, fishermen, or just plain old crabbers. Those who make a living by fishing, crabbing, and oystering, on the Chesapeake Bay in particular, are referred to as watermen. Many come from generations of crabbers, and they continue to keep the art alive. They work long days and are seeing fewer crabs, as there are not the amount of crabs around today as there were in the past. But the watermen persist, often working ten plus hours a day. Some are up as early as 4 A.M. and out on their boats, keeping the age-old traditional alive as they set sail in search of fish, crabs and oysters.

Most watermen understand that it is necessary to have restrictions and regulations in place to protect the resources. With this said, they need to implement these rules in a manner which still allows the watermen to stay in business. Watermen still want to be able to go out and make a living off of the water. It will take environmental groups, government agencies, and watermen working together to find a happy medium. Some towns on the Chesapeake Bay that once flourished as fishing and crabbing communities have no watermen left.

Almost every waterman will tell you that they love their job and being on the water. Most watermen really enjoy what they do for a living. It is their history, their living and the only future they hope to sustain. Most watermen make their livelihood on the water, usually working until they no longer can. Some boat owners are struggling to stay afloat in this ever-changing market. Watermen are the most independent group, so it makes it difficult to form a commercial buyers corporation. If they did create this type of corporation it could help to alleviate the cost that is produced by having a middleman and they could potentially see more profit.Crab in a net

The crabbing industry has changed significantly over the years. Many watermen find that the catch has decreased and the prices have not changed enough to reflect that fact. Watermen are catching less live crab, and spending more money on fuel and bait. Most watermen are in the business for life, or at least want to be. There are many trials and tribulations that watermen have faced throughout the years and they will continue to face as crab populations dwindle and regulations become stricter.

{ 1 comment… read it below or add one }

1 Joe Randall 10.16.08 at 1:40 pm

Great post. Hopefully the blue crab populations on Chesapeake Bay will rebound. While they’re lower than ever before, there are still fairly big catches every season. For people that live at or near the bay it’s a lifestyle and culture, would be a shame to lose that tradition.

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