On the 1st of May the United States placed a one year embargo on Costa Rican shrimp because of a failure by the Costa Rican government to monitor and punish those shrimp trawlers not using Turtle Excluder Devices (TEDs). The TED is an internationally required device for commercial shrimp trawlers that allows over 90% of netted sea turtles to swim free. Last year commercial shrimp trawlers not using the TED netted over 15,000 sea turtles in Costa Rica alone, the majority of which died. Over the past five years there have been 29 unpunished offenses in Costa Rican waters among the 55 licensed trawlers and several of them have been second offenses.
I read this article first, with shock, and then disappointment in Costa Rica, the country in which I live and work, for its failure to enforce simple actions to save natural resources. Shrimping here is big business. Last year the United States bought over 161 MILLION pounds of shrimp from Costa Rican fishermen. The Costa Rican government has gotten big press internationally lately for all the green things it is doing to preserve the natural resources of the country, but it is only now getting started on preserving the waters that border it on either side, and is obviously turning a blind eye to the offenses of big business.
After I read the full story about the shrimp embargo I thought about my previous post and of Santos Castillo, a man I characterized as "Pescadero Supremo". And I thought about how fishing and shrimping are done here in our little part of the Ballena coast. Santos, and so many pescaderos like him, go out each night in their ancient and oft-rebuilt botes, two or three to a crew. They chug to familiar spots along the coast and put out their lines in hopes of bringing in enough pargo or rovolo to keep their boats in fuel and their electricity turned on. I could see Santos' house in my minds eye, with no doors or windows and the thin-walled but spotlessly clean fish cleaning room. I thought about tiny Santos proudly showing me his day's catch with his wife and business partner at his side wheedling me to take some pargo as well as camarones and reminding me that I was 2500 colones (about $4.25) short. I also thought of the 161 million pounds of shrimp versus Santos' two or three five gallon buckets.
The shrimp fishing here on the Ballena is done with hand thrown nets, usually at the mouths of rivers just after it rains. The shrimp spawn in the combination of fresh and salt water and the area in which to maneuver a boat is pretty damn tight. Santos' catch of fifteen gallons of shrimp was a good one and probably weighed in the neighborhood of 30 pounds. I bought five kilos from Santos and paid him 4500 colones per kilo for juveniles (15-20 per #), or about $3.50 per # for hand caught fresh shrimp, and he was happy to make the sale.
The turtle is quite respected here in our part of Costa Rica and Playa Tortuga just down the coast is a preserve where the turtles come to lay their eggs. Yes, there are unscrupulous fish sellers here who will discreetly sell you a turtle egg and the Ticos do think of them as an aphrodisiac. But it seems that here, without the lure and the temptation of big US bucks for shrimp, that the entire marine eco-system in kept in balance. Generation after generation hands down not just their boats and secret fishing spots, but also the wisdom and warnings about maintaining the balance of the waters.
There is talk that this entire coast, rather than just the segment here in front of La Cusinga will be turned into a Marina Parque Nacional and although the pescaderos are fighting it, there would be precious little they could do. It would be a shame to see Santos and his hermanos del mar lose the right to fish the waters they've spent their lives fishing, but the belief that preserving the coast is a good one. But I wonder how much Santos and the other lifelong fishermen have done to keep their fish-rich waters productive. They, more than any of us, rely on the continued health of this coast
I hope it can be seen that the pescaderos are a part of the coast that needs to be preserved. Corporate shrimpers should make Corporate farms, somewhere safe, leaving the natural coast to the natural fisherman.
ReplyDeleteIt was always fun and impressive back in the day when I worked with you in San Francisco, that you took such care in selecting your suppliers. You always knew that good food came from good people. You developed and enjoyed a relationship with each of the dozens of unique, boutique suppliers you used to bring delightful food to the customers.
Doing the same in an even more interesting locale now, must bring great joy to you and to the lucky people who are restored by your care and creativity.