Family Crawfish Boil April 2020 |
Crawfish always bring back a lot of memories... Each and every year growing up, we had crawfish boils where we lined a table with newspaper and poured hot spicy crawfish on top. We would encircle the table like vultures, elbow to elbow, peel and eat while laughing and visiting with family, friends, and neighbors. A true social, back yard party that went on every year across the state. In springtime you could just smell the spices wafting through the air when neighbors boiled crawfish. The roar of the propane, festive music playing, and the anticipation of crawfish, corn, and potatoes about to be poured on the table. Allons Manger! (Come on, let's eat!)
Crawfish |
A sack or 35 pounds of fresh caught crawfish |
In the early 1980's, my grandfather hoped to instill in me an entrepreneurial spirit. He had a welder in Eunice, Louisiana weld an aluminum boat for me. He also purchased a number of sacks of 'seed' crawfish and we stocked a 24 acre pond (not far from the pond I explained in the paragraph above) with crawfish. He also purchased a number of crawfish traps for me.
The boat was powered by hard-work, determination, and desire. I would pull the boat and my brother, my sister, and friends would pick up the traps, dump the catch into the sorting tray, re-bait the trap with cut up fish, and fill onion sacks with crawfish we caught. We would sell them to people in the community wishing to have crawfish boils. This was several years before crawfish farming turned into the burgeoning industry that it is today. My brother, to this day, never fails to bring up his grievances to me regarding this business venture. He says that I was running a sweat shop and that he never was paid for his labor.
I must have pulled him around that 24 acre pond hundreds of times, catching thousands of pounds of crawfish. Sometimes the traps contained snakes, too. That'll always give you a scare when you pick up a trap with a big, fat water moccasin in it. It was fun, but it was honest work, too. It was also smelly work! Prior to crawfishing, I would chop up catfish heads, buffalo (carp), and other trash fish to use as bait. The hot sun and sweltering heat would quickly make the tub of cut up fish and fish guts ferment. The stench permeated the air. It also was next to impossible to remove the scent from your hands. I finally cut up lemons and washed my hands with them and that worked to some extent.
Twenty something years later, my crawfish pond would expand to be 124 acres big and my boat was powered by a Honda engine instead of pulling it manually. Crawfish farming was a fun way to make a living. It is one of those times where you enjoy immediate gratification seeing the sacks of crawfish pile up in the bottom of your boat. You would always want to catch as much as you could before Good Friday as that is when the price usually falls. It always gave me a sense of pride, knowing I was providing the main ingredient to more than a meal, but an experience that everyone looked so forward to.
Although I no longer crawfish for a living, it remains a fond memory of my childhood that extends into my adult life.
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