LB2017.19.14969

From collection Kosti Ruohomaa Collection

LB2017.19.14969

A horse drawn wagon moves across mudflats on a bay as the sun rises or sets beyond. They follow a line of stakes in the sand. During the summer of 1949 Life Magazine sent Ruohomaa to document the singular and dangerous work of the shad fishery in the Bay of Fundy. Although later described to his editor as "a grand adventure", the assignment entailed following fisherman Edmund Brine and his team of horses and equipment out three miles of tidal flats at low tide to set up a thousand-foot long system of nets on the first few days, and return, twice every 24 hours, to harvest the shad, day and night, racing the rapid, 28-foot rising tide back to the safety of dry land. The vast setting of sand, water and sky, a work schedule determined by time of tide and other natural conditions, and the frantic pace of the high stakes work provided the conditions for a dramatic set of narrative images. Ruohomaa was drawn to such scenes depicting disappearing ways of life and work on the land. He follows the brine crew out onto the vast tidal flats to document their shad fishery. Part of the task was to clear the gillnets of shad twice a day at low tide, regardless of the time of day or conditions. In the end, "Life" ran six of the photographs in a pictorial essay titled "Life Goes to a Shad Harvest" in its May 21, 1951 issue.

Details

LB2017.19.14969
1949
Region-3 Body of Water:
Bay of Fundy 
Country:
Canada