May 25, 2016 โ I got to wondering what itโs like these days for commercial fishermen so I drove to the Point Judith docks, walked up to the trawler Elizabeth & Katherine and asked the captain, Steven Arnold, if I could come aboard.
It was at 11 a.m. and heโd already put in a long shift with plenty more to go โ heโd steamed out for squid at 4:30 a.m. He was back because his net tore on rocks while dragging the bottom of Rhode Island Sound so the crew had come in to repair it.
I climbed over the rail and followed Arnold, 52, to the wheelhouse. He wore jeans, boots, a sweatshirt, hadnโt shaved for a few days and seemed to belong there in the captainโs seat.
Squid is his biggest species but that morning, they werenโt there. He mostly had scup when the net came up torn.
You have good days and bad, Arnold said, but he still loves fishing for the same reasons that first drew him to it after a childhood in South County and two years at New England Tech.