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About Coast river business journal. (Astoria, OR) 2006-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 17, 2022)
BUSINESS COMMENT 2 COAST RIVER BUSINESS JOURNAL Publisher’s Notebook Matt Winters • August 2022 Tuna stand for abundance on the North Coast ‘T he towns that salmon built” would be a good motto for the com- munities of the Columbia River estuary. Salmon’s central importance extends back into the distant reaches of time, to when hardy people fi rst arrived here thousands of years ago while glaciers still ruled the north. Much more recently in the mid-1800s, white settlers were astounded by the abundance they found, with diff erent salmon runs arriving in waves — more species in far greater numbers than we can imagine. For these immigrants newly arrived from the East Coast and abroad, salmon were one of the primary pillars of Pacifi c Northwest life, the others being log- ging and farming. August, when the coho run begins, is especially exciting this year. Albacore tuna are particularly abundant and close to shore. Although salmon still have totemic signifi cance, albacore started becoming the more important commercial fi shery 85 years ago. “The fall 1937 salmon season began with a price of 3 1/2 cents per pound for salmon. Local fi shermen noticed that albacore was bringing twice the price of salmon. … The attractive price encouraged fi shermen to gear up for tuna, and they searched for the feathered hooks, long poles and heavier lines needed for the new fi shery. Reports even began coming in about bantam roosters suddenly disappearing from local poultry pens as desperate fi shermen searched for the colorful feathers needed to hook the tuna,” author Irene Martin reported in “The Flight of the Bumble Bee,” a history of the formerly Astoria-based Columbia River Packers Associa- tion, which later became Bumble Bee Seafoods Co. Tuna quickly grew into a big factor in the local economy, fi lling a gap in the schedule for the packing houses that then lined the Astoria waterfront. “In 1937 CRPA was able to employ more than 100 women to pack tuna for a long period after the salmon packing was over for the year,” Martin wrote. Tuna processing became incredibly empowering for local women. “The hours were regular and the pay was good when compared to other women’s working wages then prevailing. CRPA/Bumble Bee pro- R OLA S E F R E T E RY BAT O L A R N! H S W I T L L AT I O TA INS vided benefi ts, including two coff ee breaks featuring fresh baked pastries, each day. CRPA President John McGowan recalled: “They were just great women and you know, they just did a heck of a job and they had a social time doing it as well as a work time... Coff ee time was really a social hour where those gals gathered around and ... talked about their kids and what they were doing at home ... as the labor force was made up principally of Finnish, Norwegian, Swedish, Danish women ... they were just the highest quality labor force you could fi nd anywhere. They were wonderful, wonderful people.” Time and the fi shery changed, and Bumble Bee packed its last Astoria tuna in 1980, signalling the end an era many still fondly remember. But as we report in this month’s edition, the 2022 albacore season is shaping up to be a great one, perhaps making up for a lousy 2021. Once again, steamy local kitchens will be the scene of cottage canning operations as local fam- ilies put up delicious tuna for the months ahead. It remains good to live in a place of such abundance. Precision Heating customers in Washington Never fear blackouts again because of solar batteries Did you know?... “If ever w y a ou solar, 2 nted the ye 0 a 22 is r!” -Stan the Solar Ma n Stanley Tussing and Charles Waddell installing solar on Marsh’s Free Museum CALL (360)642-4272 SOL SAL AR E! You can use Solar power in the day, battery power in the night, never fear a power outage again. Battery prices have dropped 45% and the huge rebates are going away this year. PRECISION HEATING & Indoor Air Quality 360-642-4272 stan.tussing@gmail.com www.usa-heating.com