(Fishermen on Lesvos)
Now
that most tourists have left the island, a saturated silence has
descended upon the greening hills and mountains. The quietness is
only disturbed by twittering birds or a gust of wind playing through
the trees. With no Zeus reining his horses across the white
foam-capped sea, the waters are also resting. There’s a little
fishing boat approaching, the sound of its purr-purring motor good
for meditation. That may be why so many men on Lesvos love going
fishing: either swaying in a little boat on sea or from the beach
while smoking and gazing out to sea. If a fish decides to bite, so
much the better.
However
last week the coast of the north was vibrating due to roaring motors
far away. In the Turkish waters there were at least twenty enormous
fishing trawlers emptying the sea. Because of their super bright
lights, it was like being across from Istanbul. I can’t bear to
think about the tonnes of fish lifted from the sea that night.
Like
elsewhere in the world, the number of fish on Lesvos is decreasing
dramatically. Not due to the Lesvorians: they have only a few big
trawlers (Greece has approximately 300). The fishing fleet of Lesvos
consists mostly of small, traditional fishing boats, some still
wooden. There will be one man looking out for a school of fish, while
another man steers the boat over the waves. The island has many
picturesque harbours where the colourful little boats wait to embrace
the sea.
Two
years ago the fishermen really had a bad year. They nearly only
fished
refugees out
of the sea. Not only did they not bring home fish, many of them
became traumatized. Now war ships and those of Frontex guard the seas
and pick up the 2 to 4 boats of refugees arriving each night, leaving
the fishermen with plenty of time to do their fishing things.
Small
fishermen deliver mostly to local restaurants. Super fresh is the
fish that will appear on your plate. Fish however also have seasons:
now it’s the time of palamida
(bonito) and lakerda
(as many Lesvorians call this small kind of tuna; originally lakerda
is a way to pickle fish). The world famous sardines from Kalloni are
only served in the summer, while in winter you can enjoy shell fish.
On stormy days or nights when the full moon makes the nets visible
even to the fish, no fisherman shows up on the water, meaning days
without fish.
In
Eftalou (not far from Molyvos) there once lived the famous fisherman
Adonis. He lived on the beach with many cats, dogs and a seagull.
His father was also famous. The book Ψαρόγιαννος
(fisherman Yannis) by Takis
Chatzianagnostou is based on this family and was even made into
a movie shot
on Lesvos, with great music from
Yannis
Markopoulou. Watching a
trailer of the
movie, I experienced
déjà vu: the images show unashamedly the Lesvorian version of the
famous Zorba-the-Greek dance, once so beautifully performed by
Anthony Quinn. I checked it: Zorba was released in 1963 and the other
mentioned movie in 1966.
Andonis
can be seen in an interesting documentary about the fishermen of
Molyvos: Ψαραδες
και ψαρεματα
(Fishermen and their ways of fishing). This movie shows that in
earlier times the battle between fishermen and fish was much more
honest. With dancing feet and stones the fish were lured to the nets
or spotted through
bottomless buckets.
There
is no longer communal fishing, apart from those huge fishing
monsters, hiding along the Turkish coasts, emptying the seas around
Lesvos. And there are not many young people following in the steps of
their father, taking a little boat to the sea: the catches are less
and less worth the trouble. If this continues fishermen will also be
threatened with extinction, just like the donkeys which,
after the death
of donkey man Michaelis, are rarely seen in the north of Lesvos. What
a shame if the purr-purring sound of little boats gets lost and I am
wondering who will be the first starved out: the fishermen or the
fish.
(with
thanks to Mary Staples)
©
Smitaki 2017
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