How I spent my Solstice - Set-netting 2008
Some choose “dip-netting” which requires the fishers to repeatedly drag a long-handled net on a metal/fiberglass/resin frame through a strong current while wearing uncomfortable hip/chest waders in hypothermia-inducing water.
Others choose “set-netting” which requires a number of friends, family, a four-wheeler or all of the above to drag a gill-net into the water on each tide, thus allowing the participants to watch the fish hit the net while they have coffee and sit around the fire.
As you might guess, we choose the latter.
Out at the mouth of the river, the sites where folks have established their nets extend to the end of the beach in both directions. Most folks are friendly and wave to each other as they pass.
The nets are on a pulley system. Ropes stretch out from stakes at the top of the beach into the water. Other stakes are pounded-in far out at low tide by folks in waders who slog through the mud. The ropes are then attached to the net; one pulls it into the water and another pulls it out.
Each net represents a family with a special subsistence “tag” allowing the “head of household” to take 25 fish and each additional family member 10 fish a piece. Also, while many folks use ATVs and small 4x4 pickups to haul equipment to their sites and to haul their net(s) in and out of the water, many others replace technology with friends and family members hauling on the ropes. Even the kids get to work together as a team!
This is an event where “the more the merrier” definitely applies…especially in the preparation of the fish after they are caught. Salmon-gutting and filleting stations are set-up by the water which often consist of nothing more than two large trash cans with a slab of wood on top. It’s easy to see who is working on their fish by the swarms of gulls that follow, eager for a free meal...the same gulls who alert net-watchers to the presence of fish in the nets when they try to peck at them.
This year, we were very lucky with the weather. My husband and father-in-law went out to the beach (about 30 miles from the house) to be there for the high-tide at 6:00 am while I was to follow with my mother-in-law, the kids and lunch later on.
When I woke about 8:00 am I thought the Kenai River sounded much louder than usual (my in-laws live above the river) but discovered the rushing sound was a downpour. Fortunately, by the time we left the house the rain had stopped and did not return until we left on Sunday.
Set-netting is not only a lifestyle, it is an addiction.
In 2005, just hours before my husband and I were getting married, there I was on the beach destroying my hands, nails, hair, feet and everything else gutting and filleting salmon. I thought the manicurist was going to have a coronary on the morning of my wedding when I explained to her why I had the ugly callouses and the decimated nails.
Next year, we will be playing an even more active roll. We'll be taking close to a week of vacation time to help set-up the campsite, much to the delight of my daughter and her cousins.
We're also feeding our families healthy food that we wouldn't otherwise be able to afford at $25.00 a fillet.
2 Comments:
I'm so jealous. My son and I were going to go to Chitina tonight, but the reports from there are AWFUL.
Yeah, rumor has it that they are going to shut down the Kenai for a bit they way they did the Deshka this weekend.
I'm glad we did set-netting this year cause set-netting and dip-netting may be the only way to catch salmon. :(
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