The slaves of the sea

Thirteen years after the « moratorium » which prevented people from fishing cod in Newfoundland, the flotilla of trawlers fit for -fishing has almost completely disappeared. « Grande Hermine », a 65-meter long trawler began her career in St Pierre and Miquelon on big shoals around 20 years ago. It was the ultimate chapter of an adventure which lasted for over three centuries. The whole history of fishing in Normandy, Brittany, the Basque Country and of course Saint Pierre et Miquelon was built around trawler fishing and their departures for the Newfoundland shoals. The seamen have known for a long time that they are the last representatives of a profession which is doomed. They usually go fishing above the polar circle, in the Barents where the Norwegian coast guards keep them under strict control. There they are fishing, from 12 to 18 hours a day, 7 days a week, spending two to three months on some of the most hostile seas in the world, attracted by the « white gold » but above all passionate about a job that most of them have been doing since they were teenagers.

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©Teddy Seguin / LIGHTMEDIATION


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