Frank, your description reminds me of the movie "Captains Courageous" with Spencer Tracy. Tough life indeed.

rg


frank theriault wrote:
On 12/2/05, Tim Øsleby <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

This image sets me 50-60 years back in time, making me think about how
people lived their lives back then. It was hard work, and many where lost
while fishing.

http://www.photosight.org/photo.php?photoid=26026
Olumpus 5050W. 64 ISO, f4, 1/400s

Comments please.



I like this a lot.  Nicely composed, and I find the subject matter
very poignant (more on that in a minute).

I also like the muted, overcast lighting.  It fits in perfectly with
such a maritime theme.

Another thing I like about it is that it reminds me of the area in
which my parents lived in Nova Scotia, Canada.  I'd swear that was
taken about 2 miles from their home, up near Mader's Cove.

Until the depletion of the cod stocks in the North Atlantic, that area
of Canada depended heavily on fishing.  It was a hard life, even with
the advent of modern steel-hulled factory trawlers.  But (as you
said), up to about 50 or 60 years ago, when they went to sea in wooden
boats to fish, it was a hard life indeed.  I could go on about fishing
techniques back then (long-liners from dories sent out from the main
schooner), but suffice to say that it was backbreaking work.  And,
every year, each small community lost several men to the sea.  The
gales of August 1927 were most notorious, with four schooners from the
town of Lunenberg lost in one day.  Here's a list of sea tragedies
(mostly fishermen) lost since 1900:

http://www.lostatsea.ca/newspaps.htm

Your photo evokes all of that, and also reminds me that some cultures
(like that of the fisherman) transcend national borders.

Thanks for a wonderful photo.  Sorry for the longish rambling post,
but some photos just do that...  <g>

cheers,
frank


--
"Sharpness is a bourgeois concept."  -Henri Cartier-Bresson


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