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BACK IN TIME
by
Jan Hrutfiord
Today
salmon are caught with nets in the commercial fishing fleet, but
in the first years of fishing in the Blaine area, salmon were
caught in traps. In 1877, legislation
was passed which forbade traps to cut off more than three fourths
of a spawning stream.
These fish traps became rather sophisticated catching devices,
and were located where the fish would run during spawning season.
There were traps located on Boundary Bay, South Shore, and two
were off of Birch Point, but the largest concentration was off
of Point Roberts.
A trap was v-shaped, divided into five parts, with the first or
lead part being up to a half mile long. It was made with wire
netting, including a bottom, attached to pilings driven into the
bottom of the sea, leading to a final chamber called the spiller,
made of fish netting which was designed to be opened to remove
the milling fish which were held in the fourth chamber, called
the pot or gathering place. There is a complete model
of a fish trap at the Semiahmoo Museum.
The larger traps included a house, perched in pilings alongside
the trap, for the trap tenders or workers to live in or to stay
in during their shift. These traps caught thousands of salmon
during the season, and were emptied daily, sometimes having more
than 35,000 fish at a time in the trap. The traps were emptied
onto barges or tenders which visited each trap every day and then
delivered the fish to the canneries.
Other fish which would be trapped along with the salmon were thrown
out, as scrap fish. These included true and ling cod, which were
thought at the time to be of no value.
Hannes Westman remembered very well working two seasons, 1928
and 1929, on salmon traps owned by Alaska Packers Association,
offshore from Point Roberts. At that time, APA owned 13 traps
off of Point Roberts, and there were also traps there owned by
other canneries.
The salmon season started the first of June, and ended on Labor
Day, taking the pick of the sockeye run. Hannes worked a trap
on the west side of Point Roberts, right next to where the Tsawwassen
ferry dock is now, on the U.S. side of the border. He lived in
a 16-foot square house on pilings at the trap, which was about
a mile out to his trap where he was the night watchman. There
was a house, about six foot square, with no lights,
heat, or other amenities, on pilings there for him to stay in
during the night.
Each trap was furnished with a rifle and ammunition to shoot the
seals which would follow the salmon into the traps and then couldnt
get out again. A seal could make a big mess in a trap, eating
parts of hundreds of fish as well as causing problems with the
trap itself. (Another use for the rifle or the shotgun, which
was sometimes furnished, was to protect the fish from pirates.)
During the years of 1930-34, Hannes ran a tender which took salmon
from various traps each day to the canneries. He said that a few
traps were opened early, about May 1, to catch King Salmon. He
and his lifting crew would collect these kings, mostly
from traps in the San Juans, ice them down and run them to Seattle
to be sold on the fresh fish market.
One day, going to pick a San Juan trap of kings, he found it full
of sockeye instead and had to call the owners to let them know
he would be taking the fish to a cannery in Anacortes. In those
days, sockeye were for canning, and only kings were used for fresh
fish markets. This was the earliest that sockeye had been found
in that area. He delivered over 20,000 sockeye salmon, which had
been trapped that one night.
Eythor Westman started fishing in the summer of 1932 on the cannery
tender Radio, with his brother Hannes. They got salmon in Puget
Sound, mostly from fish traps, although in the late summer they
did get some salmon from seiners. They worked seven days a week,
24 hours a day, and earned $45 a month, from which they had to
pay board. He also worked tending traps off of Point Roberts.
I have heard colorful stories about fish pirates who
would empty a trap before the tender could get to it, at least
one of whom would later give the trap tender or owner the money
for their share of the fish. This was an honest pirate.
In 1934, fish traps were declared illegal by the legislature,
and were closed down, except for a few which were owned by Indians
and under different jurisdiction. From then on, the commercial
salmon have been caught by purse seiners, gillnetters, and reef
nets in Puget Sound and the Straits of Georgia.
Hannes Westman, the oldest son of Icelandic immigrants John and
Rannveig Westman, was born in Canada in 1910, and emigrated to
the U.S. with his parents about a year later. His family settled
in Point Roberts at that time, and a babysister was born there,
who only lived a few hours.
As there was no cemetery at that time on Point Roberts, she was
buried in the family garden. Two years later, in 1914, a brother,
Eythor, was born, and the family moved to Montana when he was
three months old. The hardest part of leaving Point Roberts for
their mother was leaving the gravesite of her baby girl. (Many
years later, Eythor tried to find the grave to have the body removed
to the cemetery, but it was impossible to find.)
Their sister Doma was born in Montana, before the family moved
on to Saskatchewan. They returned to Blaine 11 years after leaving
Point Roberts, and both Hannes and Eythor worked many years in
the fishing industry. Both are gone now, but their legacy lives
on in their many friends and family who are still here in the
area. Hannes was my uncle, Eythor was my father. They were both
good, honest and hard working men, who are missed by all who knew
them.
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