Shortage of crab fishermen in Cromer ‘a real concern’
John Lee said there were almost 50 Cromer crab fishermen when he began and now there are no more than 10 of them working regularly.
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A seaside town famed for its crabs is facing a future shortage of fishermen to catch the shellfish as young people are not sticking at the job, a crab fisherman has claimed.
John Lee, 55, of Cromer, Norfolk, said it could be because crab fishing is seen as hard work.
He said experience is not being passed down to the next generation and it is a “real concern”.
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“Yes, it’s hard work, but I look at it as a challenge, especially on the rough days,” he said.
“You just get in the mindset ‘You’re not going to beat me, I am going to keep hauling these pots, I am going to land these crabs’.
“At the end of the day that’s what’s paid my mortgage and paid for my kids to have an upbringing and that type of thing.
“There’s a good living to be had, the demand is there and the demand is always going to be there.
“They need to get off their arse and do a bit of work.”
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He said in a good year he would catch 500 crabs per day early in the season, but this year it was more like 200.
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“That’s probably why there’s only a few of us left as you get years like this where you struggle to make a living.”
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Among them is Matt Bywater, who at 36 is one of Cromer’s youngest crab fishermen.
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He said he was “quite money-orientated”, adding: “The fishing industry, yes, it’s hard work, but if you’re willing to work you can do as much as you like as such and earn as much as you like.”
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“We’ve had youngsters, school leavers, try and do a bit, but if you want a lifestyle of going out with your mates and what not you’re probably coming in at half three in the morning rather than getting up at half three in the morning (to work) so it doesn’t really fit and bode well.”
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