With a mission to inform, empower, celebrate and advocate for British Columbia's current and aspiring business leaders, BCBusiness go behind the headlines and bring readers face to face with the key issues and people driving business in B.C.
Issue link: http://digital.canadawide.com/i/296829
bcbusiness.ca may 2014 BCBusiness 43 During our 40- to 70-day season, we fish every single day. Whether the sun is shining and the ocean is glassy, or we're confronted with gale-force winds and sideways rain, we fish. At about 4 a.m. I rouse my sleepy crew. While the crew loads bait for days of fishing, I go through the engine room checking for anything out of the ordinary. If everything checks out, I fire up the engines and let the boat warm up. After the engines are up to temperature, the crew throws off the lines and we idle out of the harbour. On our way to the fishing grounds, we stop in a par- ticular spot to take water for our live tank. Depending on the tidal current, that spot will change over the course of the season. Usually by 6 a.m. we are taking water in a place where the water is deep and cold and there's lots of current, so that we are circulating the best water possible over our product. Once we take water, we will get the boat moving at top speed, and circulate the water through a chiller system that takes the water from a temperature of about 45 F down to about 37 F. As the water cools, we check the salinity level. In order to have the best product, we need to keep our temperature and salinity levels perfect. At 7 a.m. we can legally begin hauling our prawn gear, so by 6:30 a.m. we are sitting by our buoy, water chilled and ready to go. At 7 a.m., the action begins. Our boat has two licences, so we are allowed to haul all of our 500 traps once a day, as opposed to the 300 traps a day that a single-licence boat hauls. The extra 200 traps make for a fast-paced day. We will rip through a string of 50 traps as fast as we can, and if fishing is good, we will set back on the spot; if it isn't, we move. This cycle is repeated over the course of the day. During our day, we may cover over 100 nautical miles. Timing is everything. We have to be back in the harbour and offloaded no later than 6 p.m. so that our live truck, which delivers our prawns to processors in Vancouver every evening, can make the ferry to the mainland. It is equally important to get in and offloaded ASAP to make sure that we are delivering the freshest product possible. Once the truck is off to Vancouver, we finish our day by mending prawn traps and doing various maintenance projects. Two to three days a week, we head back out to sea to fish for crab. All said and done, our days are usually about 15 to 20 hours long. It's a grind but it's a short season—and it's what we know and love. • rEAdy, SET Lance Underwood ensures all systems are go when the fishery opens at 7 a.m. and crew can begin hauling up the day's catch, which will be stored in an on-board cooling tank. a fisherman's tale f i S h i N g Spot-prawn fisher Lance Underwood, in his own words p38-47_Prawns_may.indd 43 2014-04-10 9:00 AM