Poynter Online
Go


Top Story

Story Behind the Sun-Times' Election Front Page
Most Recent Articles
Most E-mailed
Recent Comments
Recent Tags
Community Activity

Poynter Training
Poynter Seminars
Small, in-person training experiences.
News University
Today's most popular courses on NewsU, Poynter's e-learning site for journalists.
Webinars
Our online classroom is just a click away. Learn more.
All Webinars

PointsSouth: Articles 2007

Home > PointsSouth: Articles 2007
Tools: Text Sizeor, Print, Subscribe via e-mail
Liz Barry
The online publication of Poynter's Summer Program for Recent College Graduates.

PointsSouth - Logo
PointsSouth - Editions
PointsSouth - First Edition
PointsSouth - Second Edition
PointsSouth - Third Edition
PointsSouth - Fourth Edition
PointsSouth - Fourth Edition
PointsSouth - Beats
PointsSouth - Southeast
PointsSouth - East of 34th
PointsSouth - West of 34th
PointsSouth - Gulfport
PointsSouth - Northeast
PointsSouth - Maggiore
PointsSouth - The Point
PointsSouth - The Beach
PointsSouth - Media
PointsSouth - Text
PointsSouth - Photos
PointsSouth - Audio
PointsSouth - Video
PointsSouth - Graphics
PointsSouth
The Program
About the fellowship
PointsSouth
Meet the Team

Southeast
Ashley Mills
Joey Kirk
Shoshana Walter
Eric Chima

East of 34th
Mary Andom
Billy Kulpa
Julia Robinson
Mallary Jean Tenore

West of 34th
LeeAnn Watson
Bill Couch
Chasity Gunn
Liz Barry

Gulfport
Amanda Determan
Tory Hargro
Zack Quaintance
Matthew Pleasant

Northeast
I-Ching Ng
Cynthia Reynaud
Lauren Kuntz
Nick Escobar

Maggiore
Erik Oeverndiek
Erin Cubert
Isabel Ordonez
Kalen Ponche

The Point
Tracy Boyer
Shirley Knowles
Jeremy G. Burton
Marissa Harshman

The Beach
Jenessa Farnsworth
Jason Fritz
Arek Sarkissian
Dwayne Steward
PointsSouth
The Faculty
Program instructors
PointsSouth
Previous Years
See past projects


Catchin' the blues
This time, he lets me try one. He drives the boat, as I stand with the gaff. We approach the buoy. I slide the wooden pole into the water to hook the line. The boat glides by. I miss the rope by a foot.

He circles back around and we try again. Triumphant, I hook the line. That was the easy part.

He helps me pull the trap aboard and now I am face to face with what seems like hundreds of menacing crabs. (It was more like 10.) They snap their claws and glare at me with beady eyes.

I turn the trap on its side and rap it against the side of the boat to dump out the raw bait.  

I'm scared.

***

ADDITIONAL CONTENT
Click here for article "A taste of family."

Click here for article "Day in the life of a crab market."

Click here for Web site "From beach to butter," including photos, trivia and recipes.
I'm a guest on Mike O'Leary's boat. O'Leary, 50, has been crabbing for 30 years. Each morning he sets out just after daybreak to collect the crabs that were lured into his traps the day before. By midafternoon, he delivers his crabs to the Crab Market on 49th Street South in downtown St. Petersburg, Fla.
 
O'Leary doesn't catch crabs. He hunts them.

"Like the old saying goes," he says, "if they called it catching, everyone would be doing it."

O'Leary strategically places his traps along the shores of south Tampa Bay. Buoys mark their locations.

***

To understand crabbing you must know about crab traps.

Each trap, also known as a pot or cage, has four holes for the crabs to get in. These entryways are called funnels. The crabs are lured in by bait -- red herring and raw chicken -- which is stored in a protective wire casing known as the bait holder.

Inside the trap, the crabs pass through the baffle, a layer of metal wiring that divides the trap in two parts. The baffle gets its name from its function -- "baffling" the crabs from escaping. 

***

O'Leary dispenses fisherman's wisdom throughout the journey. You can tell the female blue crabs from the male blue crabs by the red on the tips of their claws. Nail polish, he calls it.

He pulls another crab from the trap.

" 'V' for virgin crab," he says, pointing to the v-shaped abdomen on its white belly. "Put it in a trap and it will attract the males."

He splits open a blue crab for an anatomy lesson. "Devil's lungs," he says, pointing to what look like a pair of soft white pouches.

Why are they called devil's lungs?

"You're a girl from Maryland and you're asking me that," he says with a grin. "You ought to be ashamed, coming from a big crab-eatin' country."

I am ashamed. It's no excuse that Bethesda is a suburb miles from the shores of the Chesapeake Bay. I studied crabs in third grade. The blue crab is Maryland's state crustacean. I should know these things. But devil's lungs?

"If you eat them you get sick," he tells me.

***

I want to ask O'Leary if I can wear his bright red gloves. Maybe the bite will hurt less if I'm wearing those. 

I'm still scared of getting pinched.

Finally, I raise the trap over the wooden box and start to shake it. Nothing happens.

"Shake it some more, girl. Shake it like you're dancing."

I muster all the strength I can and shake the trap harder this time. A few crabs drop into the crate, but some big ones with beady eyes linger at the top, unwilling to let go. I give up.  

O'Leary takes over the trap and with a single jerk of his arms the rest of the crabs fall neatly into the box.

He makes it look so easy.
Posted by Liz Barry 2:49 PM
Tools:
Comment, e-mail, Permalink, Share
Username
Password
New User? Signup Now
Poynter Careers