![]() |
Lobster at Florida Key Largo’s John Pennekamp Park’s welcome center
saltwater aquarium about the only way I trust my current
“underwater” camera to
take photos.
|
“Ya Mon.
We go get some lobsta,” the Rum Cay locals we befriended told us (click
here to read about them). Resourceful folks.
They were the inspiration for the conch fritter potluck dinner using
their locally caught conch. One of
their friends taught a friend of ours to catch land crabs, and somewhat to our
relief was not successful in catching the “tasty” lemon shark he was angling
with reel (he was more used to fishing with a hand line).
“Isn’t lobster season over?” Wayne asked. (Lobster season in the Bahamas ends
March 30th; our conversation took place a week or so into April)
Our friend looked puzzled. “Lobster season?” he replied. But the lobsters are still there!”
Of course one wouldn’t expect lobsters to know
when the season’s over.
Or do they?
Fast forward about three weeks. We were snorkeling at lovely Lighthouse
Beach in Eleuthera. Our cruising
friend and proficient lobster hunter Andy from Andante flagged Ann of Krazy Lady
and me. The lobster he
spotted could feed a small village.
Ohhh, he looked luscious and our trio loves lobster (Wayne can take it
or leave it).
But it seemed too risky to nab him outside
lobster season. We swear he
must’ve known; he came toward us and practically danced a little cha-cha. “Neee-ner neee-ner you can’t get me!”
we sure he was saying in lobster-speak.
Maybe next year it will be different; maybe
not. At least we did capture some
conch and catch some mahi mahi. We
know better than presuming we can count on our hunting skills for provisioning,
in or out of lobster season. “As
Tightwads on the Loose” author Wendy Hinman quips, “We caught more fish by
being nice [gifts from others who caught fish].”
Location
Location
4 June 2014, BAHAMAS retrospective from April
2014 Rum Cay and Eleuthera. We are
currently at JAX Naval Base Mulberry Marina (N30.12.980 W81.40.234) planning to
soon drydock our boat for hurricane season in Green Cove Springs, FL. There is no shortage of unpublished
photos and adventure stories to fill the gap between now and cruising season, though
some are awaiting a long overdue iPhoto technical transfusion.
No comments:
Post a Comment