He is the son of the son of a fisherman. A small man, his beard grows down to his chest, flecked with grey. I don't think I've ever seen the hair on top of his head: a beanie covers him up, or a cap, or maybe even a cowboy hat on the weekends when he isn't fishing. He wears polarised sunnies that give off a blue-green hue. I see myself in peacock colours at the truck depot unloading fish into the refrigerator trucks for the city market. He's a few years older than me. His nose looks like it has been boiled in rum. His voice is gravelly from the smokes. He wears skinny black jeans, a blue flannelette shirt that exposes his tattooed forearms and singlet. Fishing boots.
He is stalking around his boat trailer on an early boat ramp morning. He wears olive green waders and he is muttering. I can see he feels like shouting but no fisherman shouts when the Fisheries start going through his nets and his catch with measuring sticks. In another life, he might have been a jockey, a racing car driver, one of those guys who change your tyres or fix the problem plumbing. But he's not. His dad was a fisherman and so is he. He probably did his apprenticeship during primary school. He never gave a shit about getting an education or observing the social contract. These trappings of society would never have served him anyway. He was born into the cycles of nature. He has a code that he honours and it works for him.
When Salt and I are fishing in the channel, we've come across him. He will brandish a knife that looks suspiciously like the Asian machetes seized by Fisheries up north; the ones
shaped from car springs and sharpened, the handles wrapped in string and fish leather. Salt grudgingly respects him, because he knew his dad, and his dad's dad. He could exist in any era. He could be one of those sealers who lurked around here in the 1820s. Bearded, lean, tattooed, full of a stringy, muscular hunger; an anarchic, five foot tall package of a fisherman.
Ms Mer asked how Salt was going. I said he was still fighting with Grievous.
âThat's been goin' on for a while now. He's a bandit, that Salt! Oh yes, he's been a wild one in his day.'
âI've seen him go off once or twice.'
âYou shoulda seen him during Fisheries meetings!'
âI've been in the same room as him during a marine parks meeting...' When Salt starts blathering at meetings I feel strangely protective of him and embarrassed at the same time.
âYes, the marine parks...' We finished our lunch and she tidied the kitchen. âThought you might like to go for a drive.'
I've not spent much time on this part of the coast. It's up near where the Southern and Indian oceans meet and jammed between two limestone capes. The winds are different â a nor'wester here can blow for weeks during the winter.
âYou must need good moorings,' I said, as we stared out at the grey sea through a trail of cracks in the Landcruiser's windscreen. Five fishing boats were rocking madly in the swell that crashed over the reef and into the little harbour.
âOh yes,' she said. âThat's why we don't like leaving them there over the winter. Gotta keep at the moorings all the time.' She'd put on her beanie and wraparounds again and out of the kitchen she appeared like any old man of the sea, but when she spoke her voice was gentle, tough and female. I wondered if I could live her life. When she was my age, she'd already been fishing commercially for twenty years.
âHow do you fuel up your boat? There's no jetties here.'
âWe take out fuel drums in the dinghy.'
âAnd all the ice?'
âYeah, the ice too.'
Ms Mer drove over the hill past the lighthouse to Salmon Beach. âHere it is!' She swept her arm across the horizon. âWest! Straight out there. Leeuwin.'
âThe Cape?'
âYeah. My boat's over there, at Augusta. I woulda brought her down this week, if my back hadn't laid me up.'
âHow long does it take?'
âAugusta to Windy? About five hours. Some blokes would flog it but I take my time. Saves fuel.'
âIs this where you catch salmon?'
âNah! I catch them with my neighbour, up the other end near the Gardner River. Though I saw some down by Cathedral Rock the other day. I was sitting up in the car park and saw this whole school of salmon go single file, like Indians, out to sea through the little channel there.'
They'd tried catching salmon at Salmon Beach. It took two days to walk the catch back over the dunes because they couldn't get a truck down there. âNever again,' she grinned.
The wind was brutal at wild Salmon Beach. Intermittent sunshine sent the water's strained surface into a blinding mess of white.
âYou used to be able to land an aeroplane on this beach,' she said. âActually, I think someone did!' Then the Department of Environment and Conservation planted the dunes with introduced grasses, to protect them, she told me. They protected them so well that two more dunes appeared and now the beach was a tiny strip of sand. âYou can hardly walk along it.' The marram grass ran away up into the bush, waving against the native scrub-like flags.
Later, back in her kitchen, Ms Mer began to explain the obstacles that she must overcome if she were to continue fishing. One of the leasehold conditions on her home is that
she mustn't spend more than twelve months away from commercial fishing. âIf I do, I'm supposed to pull down the house and return the block to its natural state.' She blew lightly. âSo I'd have to sell the licence too and then sell the house lease with it. There's all these things happening â the marine parks, the review â all wild cards. We just don't know where we are at the moment. We can't sell any licences until we know what's going on.
âThe Fisheries are gonna do this review soon and then we'll know where we are. They don't seem to know when they are gonna do it. They don't even know what time period they will be reviewing or the cut-off catch rates â or they're not saying. I've got a good enough history on my boat. I've been fishing since 1971. But they might decide that I'm not killing enough fish for a certain time period and take my licence off of me. At the moment it's all up in the air.
âThen there's the marine parks. The government has just changed their proposal and now they want this patch out here.' She pointed out the window.
âBut won't all the reserves be three or more nautical miles out?'
She looked at me. âWe don't fish any closer in. We're finished if that goes through.'
âBut you can still fish the inlets?'
âYeah, while they're open waters. Six months of the year. See, the line fishing is my main kind of fishing now. Snapper, dhuies, kingies, that sort of fish.'
âWhat about the petitions?'
Ms Mer's patch has recently been subject to another recreational fishing group targeting the netters.
âOh that idiot!' She laughed. âIt's just constant, isn't it, keeping up with blokes like that. I'd like Fisheries to start jumping on those amateurs who are selling fish out of Windy Harbour too! You wouldn't believe the amount of fish they're pulling out of here.'
Ms Mer had her arms resting on the table with her hands
folded together, just like a farmer does when he comes in for a cup of tea. âThis sittin' around is drivin' me mad, you know. I'm normally up and at it by four thirty, five, in the morning. I want to get up to Augusta and bring the boat back and get out fishing. I'm fine sitting down, which is why I can drive around like always but I just can't bloody walk. Can't do anything. Read some good books though. There's so many things to sort out, the boat, the Fisheries review, the marine parks thing ... but first, first there is my back operation. And my deckie's gone AWOL.'
Despite the limbo period imposed upon her, it seemed that nobody told Ms Mer that she couldn't go to sea, build her own boats, run lobster pots or catch shark for a living. She shrugs off any thought of a cosseted life. Theatre nurse in a civilian hospital during wartime, busting the gearbox in a heavy swell with a gang hook through her foot ... (âThey've got boltcutters at the nursing post now. Didn't have them
that
day.') They sound like tales of derring-do and adventure; to the woman who sits in front of me now, amid her placemats and crocheted rugs, it is the only life she has led, and a fine one too.
âThere's no future in this for me,' I told Salt as we sat outside at a plastic table at the fishing camp.
âWhat do you mean?'
âYou know.'
Inshore and estuarine commercial fishing is played out in the magenta light of dawn and dusk but it is also the most visible kind of fishing. Our interaction with the public is daily, whether it be at boat ramps, beaches, the bream banks, or selling the produce at the markets. It also seems to be the most criticised form of commercial fishing by anglers and other special interest groups. The irony here is that small-scale, inshore fishing has historically shown the least impact on fish stocks and the general ocean environment. The guys you
don't
see at the boat ramp, trawling the ocean floors off the Continental Shelf with huge operational overheads, by-catch wastage and quotas, are the ones who I would examine more closely for environmental concerns. Estuarine and inshore fishers tend to have few overheads and work a small operation. It's also in the best interests of local fishing families to keep the fish stocks healthy, so they can return the next season and their children can inherit their licences, through the âGrandfather Clause'.
On the south coast, the gentrification of inshore waters and the social shying away from primary industry to embrace the more profitable sea-change real estate and leisure industries mean that small-scale commercial inshore fishers are really copping it. Estuarine and small wetline licences are
being bought back by the Government, killed off by quota restrictions or simply taken away by Fisheries Department reviews when there is no evidence of a licence being worked hard enough. Recreational fishers run populist campaigns on the internet and in local fishing tackle shops to rid certain areas of commercial fishing, their argument often plonked on top of a misleading environmental plinth.
In July 2010, the State Minister for Fisheries announced the closure of commercial netting from Busselton to Augusta, putting eleven fishing families out of work. Although they will be compensated for their licences, the natural history knowledge and the cultural heritage of these fishers deserts the beaches with them. The Fisheries Department conceded that the decision to ban commercial netting on that coast was based primarily on appeasing beachgoers and anglers and had nothing to do with conserving fish stocks. In fact, the kind of fish that were netted on the beaches between Busselton and Augusta tended to be small run and bait fish â environmentally sustainable, high in omega-3 oils and very cheap to buy.
There are twenty-five estuarine licensees in the southwest of Western Australia and the Government is trying to cut them down to fifteen. The licences cannot be sold or leased to anyone else, though this may be subject to change in the future. The owner of an estuarine licence must be present during netting. None of these guys are getting any younger.
âBut there's more isn't there,' I ploughed on, reckless and a little annoyed that Salt wouldn't commiserate with me being stuck working for him. âLook at what is going on in Oyster Harbour. There are folk who've spent a million bucks on a house overlooking the sea who don't want to be woken up by a dirty old two-stroke at five in the morning. They go to Greece or Thailand if they want to experience
authentic
fishermen. And those other guys, the ones who buy one-fifty horsepower jet boats and use it for a black bream anglers' competition? They don't want you catching
their
fish. These
people have the power of wealth behind them, more than old-school fishermen. They'll just import fish, or farm it, or something.'
âIt's not over yet. We'll be here for a long time yet.' Salt refused to believe my argument but still a fat tear rolled down his cheek. âHow many anti-commercial campaigns have you seen since you started fishing?'
âOh, three?'
âWell, we've been dealing with them for years. And the government. They haven't stopped us yet.'
Maybe he's right, and crusty old fishermen in waders with gaffer tape covering the holes in the bum will continue to fish the harbours around here for another century.
These fishing families are the greatest observers of aquatic change and diversity in the Great Southern. They've been decades, generations, watching and interacting with nature. It's another reason though, why I sit outside this shack talking to Salt, why I get up before dawn to punt a boat smelling of fish guts out into the inlet; and why I struggle with the two-stroke and put up with the same stupid crab jokes and get scared stiff at night surfing the channel home and pick sea lice from between my toes and get mutinous but never really, truly quit. When I pick apart the politics of this work, I get an ominous sense of the industry's fragility. Perhaps it is just that, like farmers, commercial fishers have always felt endangered by outside forces beyond their control and I am daily exposed to their woes. But although I feel close to the tribal ties of these south coast fishers, I am still an outsider, an observer, and the social historian in me worries that fishing lifestyles on the south coast are dying of a thousand cuts; and that the stories and knowledge will go with them.