Fishermen in the Classroom
The Fisherman in the Classroom program invites commercial fishermen from Greater Farallones National Marine Sanctuary into the classroom to help students understand how they are connected to the ocean. Watch our video to learn more! #EarthIsBlue
Transcript
It’s... Nobody ever gets to meet a fisherman,
a commercial fisherman, and it’s a treasure
for them.
My name is Mike Hudson, and I’m
a commercial salmon troller and I want to
welcome you to what we used to consider a
beautiful sunny day in San Francisco. I’m
involved with this program that is called
the Fisherman in the Classroom with the Sanctuary,
and I get to talk with a lot of school kids
about what it is that we are doing out there,
and I find that’s very important to do.
“You have a question, I know it. I can see
it. I can see it!”. I got approached by
the people from the sanctuary, they said,
“we’ve got this program here, fisherman
in the classroom, would you be interested
in coming to the schools with us?” And I
said, “that sounds like a good idea, lets
give it a try and see what happens.”
“This
is Pete Winch. He’s the one who works at
the sanctuaries, and this is Mike Hudson.”
In the classroom Pete always starts the presentation
out with a talk of the sanctuary out here.
“We call it the Greater Farallones National
Marine Sanctuary. There is a lot of things
you can’t do that makes it protected, but
you can fish.”
He hands it over to me. I
tell them a little bit about fishing, after
I talk about fishing and about the life cycle
of the fish Pete will talk about the hatcheries.
We talk to the kids about how everything in
this world is kind of connected, you know?
How salmon are so important for everything
that lives inland.
We are out there to protect
these fish. The sanctuary is out there to
protect the fish, the ocean, and everything
that lives in it. “...very important because
we want to make sure that we don’t have
any impact on these species that we don’t
want to catch.”
These kids, they listen,
you know? When I ask the kids, “Who here
has ever gone fishing?” “Alright, five?
Cool, that’s more than in most classes.”
A couple of hands come up. A couple, three
hands in every class, and I just think it’s
really not enough, you know? The way that
the kids eyes light up sometimes when I tell
a story, its pretty great. They take some
of what I say home with them.