| .Shrimp
Baiting to Shrimp Festival How a Little Idea Went a
Long Way |
| In
the mid 1980's, a group of shrimpers from Florida came to Yemassee.
These men were using bait to catch shrimp, and kept their main
ingredient a secret from the people in Yemassee. Now, baiting
shrimp was not an unheard practice in Yemassee at Sloaman, were baiting
shrimp at Riverbend. No on knew what they would pull up an empty
net. The bait the Florida shrimpers would use caught a good many
shrimp. A Yemassee man, James Polk, had a connection with the
Florida Shrimpers, and he found out their secret ingredient. It
was dog food. A few of the Yemassee men took the dog food idea and
with the help of a stocking were armed to catch shrimp. When the
men of Yemassee figured shrimping changed forever. If dog food
caught quite a few shrimp, then how much could something higher in
protein catch? They found fish meal. Menhaden Fish meal has
sixty percent protein to the thirty percent found in dog food. The
fish meal is then mixed with clay or mud, to anchor it, and formed into
a patty to keep from rolling. These shrimpers were now catching
thousands of pounds of shrimp a week. They were beginning to rival
the amounts being caught by the Commercial Trawlers. Imagine being
able to catch that much shrimp without any laws that limited what you
could catch. Cane poles were used to mark the place where the bait
had been thrown out. At one time, Harold Harman had three hundred
poles lined down Wimbee Creek. These early shrimp baiters would
carry shotguns in their boats to protect the part of the river they had
baited. The coastal rivers of the Lowcountry in the mid 1980's was
turning into the deserts of the Old West during the Gold rush of the
1880's. As with the Old West, there was chaos building and laws
had to be made to protect the people and the rivers. The General
Assembly was going to outlaw the baiting of shrimp all together.
However, Jack Moore, Kevin P. Egan, Sr., Harold Harmon, Colin Moore,
John B. "Ollie" O'Brian, Stanley Moore, Simon Jinks with the
help of many other recreational shrimpers organized the South Carolina
Recreational Shrimpers Association, now known as Recreational Shrimpers
of South Carolina. This group went to Columbia to fight to keep
shrimp baiting. This group has been working with the South
Carolina Wildlife Department over the past decade to keep shrimp baiting
available for the recreational for the recreational shrimper. The
regulations on shrimp baiting have evolved from limits on catch per
person to licensing people limits on catch per boat. These
regulations have begun to mirror those Recreational Sport Fishing.
In 1993, the members of the Yemassee Community asked then mayor Jack
Moore if Yemassee could have a festival like the other communities in
the area. With the Yemassee community being a key figure in the
evolution of shrimp baiting and its members refining it to become what
it is today, it was only fitting that Yemassee have a shrimp festival.
Yemassee's Shrimp Festival is evolving each year just as its shrimp
baiting has. With both endeavors, Yemassee's community has found
new ways of refining good ideas. If there is one thing that
Yemassee know about, its shrimp. |
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| 101 Town Circle
| Yemassee, SC 29945 |
phone: (843) 589 - 2565 | email
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