Source Feed: The Globe and Mail
Author: Nathan Rochford
Publication Date: July 10, 2025 - 13:00
PEI lobster fishers are passing tradition down the line
July 10, 2025
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One of Charlie McGeoghegan’s earliest memories of lobster fishing is going out from the Pinette wharf with his father, Mike McGeoghegan.
At that time, his father fished from an open boat, meaning there was no cabin to shelter them from the elements. It was powered by a gas engine from a half-ton truck. For food, they’d wrap bran muffins in tin foil and heat them on the exhaust manifold.
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Like a lot of rural Prince Edward Islanders, Charlie grew up on fishing boats. His father, a former member of the U.S. Navy, started taking him out on the boat at age 5. By the time Charlie was a teenager, his path was set.
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“I liked fishing right off the bat,” says the current chair of Lobster Fishers of PEI. “I knew when I was in school that’s what I was going to be doing when I grew up.”
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Now 51, he is watching his three children, Stephen, Daniel and Courtney, become the third generation of McGeoghegans to make a living fishing.
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Lobster fishing is traditional here, in some cases – such as among the Mi’kmaq, who have two reserves on the island – stretching back thousands of years.
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Multigenerational fishing families are common in Prince Edward Island. Passing the work to younger generations is important in an industry that has a disproportionate number of older workers compared with other maritime industries.
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Allan Coady didn’t follow in his father’s footsteps, but his is a family affair nonetheless. His introduction was through his father-in-law, Jack Myers.
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Allan began fishing after a career as a truck driver, and enjoyed the work so much that when Jack was ready to retire, Allan bought his licence.
From 1991 on, he’s fished out of Covehead Harbour with his daughter, Alyssa, and son, Bryce.
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“We’ve been together a long time,” Allan said. “I love it. It’s a good time together and I look forward to it every season.”
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After decades on the water, both Bryce and Alyssa share a love for the profession.
“We’re fourth generation,” said Bryce. “It’s a passion and you keep making old generations proud.”
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“There’s an element of tradition,” said Ed MacDonald, professor emeritus at the University of Prince Edward Island. “This is something with deep roots.”
According to MacDonald, an Island historian, fishing in PEI initially boomed in the 1870s when canning technology made a commercial fishery possible. Prior to this advancement, fishers primarily had to sell locally.
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During this boom, fishing was an inexpensive way for farmers to supplement their income. They could go fish in the morning and attend to their farming duties in the afternoon and evening.
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The opening of the spring lobster season still honours this tradition.
On Setting Day, the first day of the season, fishers wait in harbour until 6 a.m., both because of federal regulations and as a throwback to the days when fishers divided their days between the water and the farm.
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Other traditions, like the annual blessing of the boats, can involve the whole community.
The ritual can vary by community, but generally includes either a priest or minister praying with fishers on the wharf before offering a blessing for a good season. In Catholic communities such as North Rustico, holy water is splashed over the boats.
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Reverend Roger MacPhee has led the blessing of the boats at Pinette wharf since 1987 and understands the value of the tradition.
“I think it means different things to different people,” said MacPhee. “I think it offers love and protection because it’s a dangerous occupation. Just to know you’re not alone out there.”
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In addition to being physically demanding, the job comes with other challenges. The federal Department of Fisheries and Oceans has imposed conservation measures that include limiting the number of fishing licences available to non-Indigenous islanders.
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First Nations fishers’ treaty rights guarantee the right to earn a “moderate livelihood” through fishing, but the DFO has been unclear on the definition of that term, leading to tensions between Mi’kmaq and non-Indigenous fishers – as well as between the Mi’kmaq and the DFO.
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As part of a recent trade war, China imposed a 25-per-cent tariff on Canadian seafood in April, lowering spring prices. Add to that the constant threat of warming ocean waters and unpredictable weather.
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Still, for the moment, young people, like Charlie’s and Allan’s children, can make a good living without leaving the communities they grew up in. More women, in particular, are taking advantage of these opportunities.
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“I probably will do it forever,” said Courtney. “I just love it.”
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It’s a feeling Alyssa knows well.
“There’s something about the water,” she said. “There’s nowhere else I’d rather be.”
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Tranquility by Frank Ledwell, PEI Poet Laureate 2004-2007
Read by his son, Patrick Ledwell
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bio: Nathan Rochford is a photographer, writer and videographer based in Charlottetown, PEI. He is a former newspaper photographer and editor, and is currently working on a long-term project called The Island, focused on the changing social landscape of PEI. Nathan credits his uncles and cousins, many of whom are lobster fishers, for sparking a lifelong interest in the fishery.
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Photography and story by Nathan Rochford
Photo editing by Melissa Tait
Editing by Lisan Jutras
Digital presentation by Mackenzie Lad
Visuals editing by Solana Cain and Liz Sullivan
Interactive design and development by Christopher Manza
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The wildfires that are flaring up across Canada again are one of the reasons public safety should be added to CBC/Radio-Canada’s mandate, a new report from a research centre at McGill University argues. The report says other public media around the world are incorporating national emergency preparedness and crisis response into their role, and recommends that aspect of the CBC’s mandate be formalized and strengthened.
July 16, 2025 - 11:58 | Anja Karadeglija | The Globe and Mail
Ottawa is cracking down further on imports of foreign steel into Canada to help Canadian mills that have effectively been shut out of the U.S. market by President Donald Trump’s tariffs. Less than a month ago, the federal government announced that countries such as China and Turkey that don’t have free trade agreements with Canada will face tariffs of 50 per cent if they ship into Canada volumes above 2024 levels.
July 16, 2025 - 11:52 | Niall McGee | The Globe and Mail
The Planning and Housing Committee today approved development applications that promise new affordable and below-market rental housing in Barrhaven and Overbrook.
In Barrhaven, the Committee approved a zoning amendment that would facilitate development of 117 affordable housing units, southwest of Jockvale Road and Bending Way. Ottawa Community Housing Corporation plans to build a nine-storey, 99-unit apartment building, as well as a three-storey stacked-townhouse building with another 18 units. This would be the second phase of a larger development, and a wide range of unit sizes...
July 16, 2025 - 11:02 | City of Ottawa - Media Relations / Ville d'Ottawa - Relations avec les médias | City of Ottawa News Releases
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