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I've been watching this brilliant doco series on The Discovery Channel entitled The Deadliest Catch.
It's about crab fishing off the coast of Alaska. It's one of the most dangerous industries on earth. Forty-one men had died in the last ten years - many through falling overboard into the freezing cold waters.
But because the money's so good, there's plenty of people willing to do it. They only fish for a few weeks each year, and only the large males are kept for selling. Juveniles and females are thrown back.
In October they fish for King Crabs. Then in January in the freezing winter, they come back to fish for the smaller Opilio Crabs (aka "Opi's").
The King crabs are bloody massive. Check out the pic below. Each boat has many dozens of "pots" which they bait and set. Then when they come back and pull them up, they might find them full of many dozens of crabs. One pot found over 100 large male King Crabs to keep! At US$35 a crab, that's a lot of dosh.
An ordinary deckhand might make US$50,000 or more in a good season. All for only a few week's work a year.
But it's very dangerous work there out on the Bering Strait where it can be very stormy and unpredictable. In one episode, one of the boats got capsized by a freak king wave!
They got it all on film too! Amazing stuff. But the boat luckily rights itself and the crew survives.
Anyway, I'm just loving the series. They've got film crews on about six different boats and are following all the trials and tribulations. This is reality TV on a knife edge on the high seas!
It's about crab fishing off the coast of Alaska. It's one of the most dangerous industries on earth. Forty-one men had died in the last ten years - many through falling overboard into the freezing cold waters.
But because the money's so good, there's plenty of people willing to do it. They only fish for a few weeks each year, and only the large males are kept for selling. Juveniles and females are thrown back.
In October they fish for King Crabs. Then in January in the freezing winter, they come back to fish for the smaller Opilio Crabs (aka "Opi's").
The King crabs are bloody massive. Check out the pic below. Each boat has many dozens of "pots" which they bait and set. Then when they come back and pull them up, they might find them full of many dozens of crabs. One pot found over 100 large male King Crabs to keep! At US$35 a crab, that's a lot of dosh.

An ordinary deckhand might make US$50,000 or more in a good season. All for only a few week's work a year.
But it's very dangerous work there out on the Bering Strait where it can be very stormy and unpredictable. In one episode, one of the boats got capsized by a freak king wave!
They got it all on film too! Amazing stuff. But the boat luckily rights itself and the crew survives.Anyway, I'm just loving the series. They've got film crews on about six different boats and are following all the trials and tribulations. This is reality TV on a knife edge on the high seas!







