NACHO DOCE and SILVIO CASTELLANOS, of Reuters, meet the shellfisherwomen of the Noia estuary…
Noia, Spain
Reuters
Just before dawn breaks over the Noia estuary in Spain’s Galicia region, hundreds of women descend by torchlight into the waist-deep waters to gather cockles and clams from the river-bed using techniques that have been passed down through generations.
Wearing windproof jackets over their wetsuits, they dredge up shellfish from the nutrient-rich silt of Galicia’s chilly Atlantic estuaries – known as Rias – using nothing more than long-handled rakes attached to metal baskets.
A shellfisherwoman uses a rake as she collects cockles in the Noia estuary, where more or less 4000 shellfisherwomen work on foot along the inlets of the Spanish region of Galicia, Spain, on 15th November. PICTURE: Reuters/Nacho Doce.
Some 4,000 people, almost all women, work as traditional shell fishers in the inlets that criss-cross the region’s rugged coastline, earning up to €2,000 a month for the six-month season, but for many it is more than a job.
“This work is freedom. You’re like a seagull, you’re free,” said 58-year old Conchita. “It’s always called to me ever since I was a little girl,” she said, recalling how she used to skip school to watch boats unloading on the quay.
“This work is freedom. You’re like a seagull, you’re free. It’s always called to me ever since I was a little girl,” she said, recalling how she used to skip school to watch boats unloading on the quay.”
– Conchita, one of the women who gather cockles in the Noia estuary.
Mari Carmen Rosende Mayo, 65, who is reluctantly preparing to retire at the end of December after 31 years, feels the same.
“When I walk by the sea I forget all my problems. I relax and I have no cares,” she said.
Under the light of her headtorch she deftly picks out the best cockles from her basket and places them in a bucket floating on a rubber ring tethered to her by a short cord.
To ensure the sustainability of shellfish stocks, only licensed fisherwomen can participate and the season is limited to October-March.
The practice is strictly regulated by a European Union- funded project which promotes sustainable management of cockles in six Atlantic coastal communities, including Galicia.
At the end of the day each woman’s catch, which cannot exceed a three kilogram quota of clams or 16 kilograms of cockles, is weighed and processed before being shipped off.
Mayo has seen perceptions of her work change over time.
“They used to say, ‘What’s your job? Are you a fisherwoman? Yuck!’…Now many would like to be shell fishers.”
Shellfisherwomen carry cockles in buckets and clams in net sacks before weighing them in the Noia estuary, where more or less 4000 shellfisherwomen work on foot along the inlets of the Spanish region of Galicia, Spain, November 16, 2021. REUTERS/Nacho Doce
Alida Elena, 35, is one of a new generation of women learning the ropes.
“Working at sea infatuates you. As soon as the day is over I can’t wait for the next day to come,” she said.
Back on shore, Mayo gives her tips about areas to avoid and reminisces about having to be rescued once from a nearby estuary when the tide began to rise suddenly.
“Apart from that, my experience has been very good, very, very good. It’s beautiful.”