Gone Fishin’
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Alex Coolman
The wheels of Tom Pearson’s skateboard are clicking along the wooden
planks of the dock in the quiet of the early morning.
He’s got two cardboard boxes of frozen mackerel stacked on the board and
he’s skating them down to the water’s edge, where his boat, Harvest, is
moored. Pearson gives a few pushes for speed and hops on top of the
frozen fish, coasting along like a kid.
The sunlight is only beginning to break through the haze as Pearson dumps
the mackerel bricks in his hold, kicks Harvest’s engine to life, and
cruises past the black rock jetties of the Dana Point Harbor. He clicks
on the weather radio, lights a cigarette and slips into a battered pair
of green rubber overalls.
Time to go to work.
Pearson, 38, is a lobster fisherman. He’s been pulling traps from
Southern California waters for more than two decades, following in the
footsteps of his father, Roy, who passed away in December of 1998.
The Huntington Beach resident sells his catch, along with fish that he
and his wife Terese buy from other fishermen, at Pearson’s Port, a small
floating market anchored in the channel to Newport’s Back Bay. It’s a
market that was started by Roy and his wife, Vi, and it continues to be
the center of the family’s life, though Roy is no longer around.
The market is low-key and inconspicuous, a weathered wooden shack
festooned with shells and nets. It’s easy to drive right over it in the
traffic that races along East Coast Highway without even realizing it’s
there. But for what will be 28 years next month, Pearson’s Port has been
quietly doing business, family-style.
Out in the water off San Clemente, Pearson motors up to a cluster of
black buoys and begins to pull up traps. He hooks one of the floats with
a gaff and threads a yellow buoy rope onto a motorized winch, drawing the
cage up from the sandy bottom.
When the cage finally surfaces, its gnarled wire form covered in maroon
weeds, a handful of lobsters are thrashing around in a corner.
It looks like a good catch, but only to an unpracticed eye.
A lobster must be three-and-a-quarter inches from its eyes to the edge of
its carapace in order to be a legal catch. Pearson can tell just from
looking at these undersized creatures that they don’t make the cut. He
flips them indifferently back into the ocean with a flick of the wrist.
A few others look more promising, and these he measures with a brass
lobster gauge. Only one out of the entire lot is worth keeping.
“It’s kind of a late year, all in all,” Pearson says. “The lobsters are
still spawning, and there are a lot of traps.”
But Pearson, cutting the head off a mackerel and throwing the fish into
the bait compartment of the cage, remains philosophical.
“Some years are good, some are bad,” he says.
Taking the bounty -- and, sometimes, accepting the scarcity -- of the
ocean harvest is something he’s done his whole life. When he isn’t
pulling traps, he can often be found surfing breaks like Lower Trestles,
cruising to outer islands for adventure, or doing a little diving. It’s a
lifestyle that has Pearson always attuned to the fickle behavior of the
water, even when he’s standing on dry land.
Sundays are “designated daddy” days for Pearson, when he spends time with
his daughters: Haley, 5, and Carley, 3. More often than not, the
threesome heads down to the beach to check out the waves and play in the
sand.
Terese, no less than her husband, lives a life wedded to the sea. The
market’s supplies of fresh fish -- from buttermouthperch to sheepshead to
shark -- are replenished through her frequent trips up and down the coast
to buy from fishermen.
“This business is one of those where you just have to work hard to make
it go, so that’s what we do all the time -- work hard from the moment we
wake up,” Terese said.
There have been lean years -- like in 1983, when El Nino surf destroyed
almost all the family’s traps at the beginning of the season.
And it can also be difficult to cope with the sheer stress of doing so
much work, much of which can be fairly repetitive and -- needless to say
-- fishy.
“I always think I’ll never get rid of the smell,” Terese joked. “I think
I’m going to go to a wedding and people will say ‘Oh my god, does she
ever wash?”’
Catch Pearson at the end of a morning hauling traps out of the water and
he’ll make his own form of confession: “after 20 years of doing this
stuff, of course it’s a grind.”
But it’s hard to miss the flicker of glee that animates Pearson’s
normally reserved expression when he launches into a particularly juicy
surf story, or when he tells a tale about catching a spotted bass. In
such moments, the kid in Pearson ignites the man who must handle all the
hard work.
“God, you know what? It’s so fun,” he said. “You catch a million of them
and you still love it.”
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