Turning the tide through the written word Fisherpoet tells tales of his life as a fisherman BY RAY GARCIA Toby Sullivan became a commercial fisherman at 19 years old and has worked in the industry for 45 years. Native to South Windsor, Connecticut, Sullivan left the East Coast seeking adven- ture. After hitchhiking across the U.S, he ran out of money in Kodiak, Alaska; a place he and his family have called home ever since. At the time of Sullivan’s arrival, the Kodiak King Crab Fishery was experienc- ing a boom, creating a surplus of jobs and drawing in fishermen, far and wide. With empty pockets and a strong work ethic, Sul- livan joined the crab fishing business and became a deckhand on a boat named The Gladys. “I was really young and real green, I didn’t know what I was doing,” he said. With each fishing trip lasting between three or four months during winter, Sulli- van found himself face-to-face with one of the most unpredictable environments in the world: the Bering Sea. Due to sub- zero temperatures and, on average, 40-foot tall waves, fishermen had to always be sit- uationally aware, even during periods of sleep, Sullivan said. In the early ‘80s, Sullivan bought a salmon permit hoping to swap between crab fishing in the winter and salmon set-netting in the summer. On his first salmon fishing trip, accompanied by his younger brother and a friend, Sullivan trekked to Uganik Bay on the western shores of Kodiak Island. “The salmon fishing, to us, that sum- mer was like we died and gone to heaven,” he said. “The contrast between the Ber- ing Sea in the winter and Uganik Bay in the summer was pretty amazing. There’s a real difference.” Sullivan still goes salmon fishing but has stopped crabbing — though that hasn’t stopped him from writing nonfiction stories and poems adapted from his experiences out at sea. Sullivan received a bachelor’s degree in English from the University of Alaska Anchorage and a master’s degree in cre- ative writing from Antioch University in Los Angeles. His academic background further advanced his writing craft and See Page 7 Toby Sullivan’s ‘When Crab Was King’ portrait. ENTER TO WIN! If someone went into cardiac arrest, would you be prepared? During Heart Month, February 2021, CMH will help two organizations purchase an Automated External Defibrillator (AED). Learn How>> columbiamemorial.org/aed-2021/ 2111 Exchange St., Astoria, Oregon • www.columbiamemorial.org 6 // COASTWEEKEND.COM Sullivan and his son, Abraham, sail across Uganik Bay in 1996.