May 4, 2020 โ Danny Ross, an Ocean Springs shrimper, has been on a boat for as long as he could walk. He remembers driving the family vessel as a kid, having to climb onto the dashboard to see over the steering wheel. โTwo spokes to the left,โ his dad would direct. He remembers, back on land, getting bad grades in art class because he would only draw one thing.
โIโd draw a pretty good boat too,โ he said. โMe and my brothers were always on the boat. The rigging, the pipes โ that was our jungle gym. And our swimming pool? The boat would be shrimping and weโd be diving off the bow, catching ropes on the outrivers.โ
Ross, 55, recently tied up his boat after a disappointing season that saw fresh water kill 56 percent of Mississippiโs shrimp. The plummeting price of shrimp has made it difficult for Ross to find crew members, and instead heโs gone to work on another captainโs boat. After following five generations of fishermen into the business, heโs worried about the direction the industry is headed in.
โAll these people, they came over here as immigrants, and they built fishing boats. Now, thereโs nobody left to step into my shoes,โ Ross said.