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Wednesday, March 5, 2025

Cheaper fish in demand for Lent

by

734 days ago
20230301

RAD­HI­CA DE SIL­VA

rad­hi­ca.sookraj@guardian.co.tt

 

Un­able to af­ford ex­pen­sive fish, con­sumers in south Trinidad are opt­ing to pur­chase cheap­er and less pop­u­lar va­ri­eties of fish as the Lenten sea­son pro­gress­es. 

At the Ota­heite Fish­ing Bay on Wednes­day, cus­tomers were seen buy­ing her­rings, sar­dines, cat­fish and shark, rather than the usu­al­ly pop­u­lar carite, king­fish and an­cho.

Speak­ing to Guardian Me­dia, fish­er­man Ir­win Gar­raway Al­la­ma said this was not sur­pris­ing.

“Things hard now you know. Cat­fish re­al sell­ing now and racan­do. Long time these were fish that peo­ple used to run from. They nev­er eat it. But now every­body eat­ing it. Woman, man and child eat­ing it be­cause that is all they can af­ford,” Al­la­ma said.

At the Bay her­rings, which sold as cheap as $3 per pound last year, were re­tail­ing at $15 per pound on Wednes­day. Shark sold for $20 per pound while carite sold be­tween $50 to $60 per pound. 

Ex­plain­ing the ex­or­bi­tant prices, boat own­er Ke­ta­ma Hen­ry said the cost of fu­el was af­fect­ing fish prices. 

“We not hold­ing fish in the shal­low. The cost of fu­el to reach quite out in the deep is very ex­pen­sive. Things hard for us too. The cheap­er fish that peo­ple buy­ing is like rakan­do and her­ring. But that and all are get­ting ex­pen­sive be­cause it cost­ing a man $800 and $900 to go out there and some­times not every day you go hold fish,” he said. 

He added: “The price of fish will re­duce when fish­er­men get cheap­er fu­el.”

He called on the gov­ern­ment to pro­vide a fu­el sub­sidy for fish­er­folk.

“Be­fore we used to have reg­u­lar gas but we don’t get that now,” he said. 

Mean­while, fish ven­dor Avinash Bat­too ex­plained why her­rings, sar­dines and oth­er “shal­low wa­ter fish” were get­ting ex­pen­sive.

He said the last oil spill in the Gulf of Paria had af­fect­ed their fish­ing grounds and hatch­eries. 

“We don’t hold fish in the shal­low like we once did. They mash up every­thing with that oil spill so now we have to go fur­ther out to get fish,” Bat­too ex­plained.

He said while they sym­pa­thised with the pub­lic, they were try­ing their best to keep the prices as af­ford­able as pos­si­ble.

“Peo­ple come here every day and they are al­ways short. They can­not buy the ex­pen­sive fish so some­times we have to just give it to them if they don’t have all the mon­ey,” Bat­too ex­plained.

Ever­s­ley Sookram, who works as a fish­er­man said it was be­com­ing even more dif­fi­cult to earn a liveli­hood as a fish­er­man.

“It is bet­ter if you work con­struc­tion be­cause when you go out there to fish and you spend be­tween $800 and $1,000 for fu­el to go out, you not sure that you com­ing back with a catch to cov­er your ex­pens­es,” he said.

The fish­er­men say they ex­pect fish prices to re­main high dur­ing Lent.


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