A Sailor-recalling the Gulf Coast Shrimpers

A Sailor-recalling the Gulf Coast Shrimpers

A Chapter by Larry Dyson
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in progress

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A Sailor

He…..was truly of the sea and its seaweed and crustaceans. Part and parcel of the ‘make a living’ selling fish and shrimp, and squid .Everything about the way of life, coffee in the morning smelling of chicory and sea salt. Hardboiled egg and a hardtack biscuit. Heavy on the black pepper and a little garlic if on hand. Mending nets as the schooner set out to the reefs...shuttle  in- hand and weaving back the holes the ocean took from the last runs. The gulls and pelicans were the ever present pilferers and begger vagabonds. Just a bit of fish Sir, one needs a small bit if ones to survive. And galumph hard swallow when it’s tossed skyward, acrobatics for the prize and then formation once again.

Picturesque in the morning pre-dawn light, Red in the Morning, sailor...what was it...oh sailor take warning, Painted like the watercolors of a true beach comber. Visual images of the Still Lives of the proud few who still plied this trade and hoped beyond hope a son would carry the sea water in his blood, one more, yes one more generation to the likes of Captain, nay lubber and the hard way of the sailors and hands of the sloops and diesel engine shrimpers of the Gulf Coast.

Gone is the time of masted ships and rigging to spin about the main sails and capture the sea breezes and not becalmed of a turn; a tack into the gentle breeze to speed the laying of the nets ...the cry shrimp on and the sails taut to the pull, lines dropped with skills that the fathers taught the sons, the grandfathers taught them.Buoy away and net in the schools and runs, times a wastin' son ..the first to lay the nets gets the run and the others a lookin for the tells. Woe be he who cuts the excluders , required now to test the patience and skill of even the best of the old salts. Shark meat was the fin cuts now used in the kitchens as clams or scallops or other sort of shell fish less likely due to the red tides and the slicks of the rigs leaking and blow outs.Estuaries and birthing grounds of the coastal marshes,brackish to over winter the sea birds and crustacians,crabs ever plentiful in the past are now just mostly a dream...What say you to the crabbers and shrimpers and redfish gleaners for trade and for license is pricy and hard fought...maintain your quota or loose next year come.

We sang the song of the trade by the moon...'Shrimp boats are a comin' their sails are in sight' Shrimp boats a comin' there 'll be dancin' tonite."



© 2012 Larry Dyson


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absolutely adore the use of literary inflections and intotations which become a huge part of the art of this piece~ reminds me of the brief tales told in moments of pause by my grandparents and great aunties which short forms opened the imagination onto the world and all its wondrous lives living as they live inside their own puzzle pieces of this lovely puzzle shifting we call existence~

This review was written for a previous version of this writing

Posted 12 Years Ago


This is a story told in verse .. lyrical and salty and wonderful. ' The gulls and pelicans were the ever present pilferers and begger vagabonds. Just a bit of fish Sir, one needs a small bit if ones to survive. And galumph hard swallow when it’s tossed skyward, acrobatics for the prize and then formation once again ' .. .. could almost hear those words .. wonderful, how it would be exactly.

Your post truly conjurs up a scene of paintings done by one of the Newlyn painters in England but don't doubt you have your own brave fishing history and its men with salt hands, who go from home to mid ocean rough swells.

A brilliant write .. you seem able to put your pen to any subject, Laury.

This review was written for a previous version of this writing

Posted 12 Years Ago


Oh, I wish it would continue! I was so caught up in it. I was raised visiting the craggy coasts of Maine, often watching the lobster and crab boats pull up daily with their catch of the day. Clamming when the tides went out, glumping through the mud. The old man and the sea...a timeless rendering, my friend.

This review was written for a previous version of this writing

Posted 12 Years Ago


what a quick moving bit of sea breeze this is

This review was written for a previous version of this writing

Posted 12 Years Ago


Nice story telling. Ironically I was just trying to think about the sailor warning and it's here within your story. Coincidence! Great write!!

This review was written for a previous version of this writing

Posted 12 Years Ago


THAT wa good Laury...

This review was written for a previous version of this writing

Posted 12 Years Ago


story, poetry, prose.........I have no idea, all I know is that it is wonderful. I could picture this sailor..........awesome!

This review was written for a previous version of this writing

Posted 12 Years Ago


oh, I can't decide if it is a portrait or a poem . . . beautiful either way

This review was written for a previous version of this writing

Posted 12 Years Ago



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Added on October 20, 2011
Last Updated on March 28, 2012
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Author

Larry Dyson
Larry Dyson

Tomball /Magnolia, TX



About
WARNING!!--- my writing approaches Mature most of the time, read with caution if you are concerned ,or so WC thinks? - I'm a retired southern woods walker..who writes and lives modestly..I love n.. more..

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