Fishing crews rest at the harbourside on Wednesday. Crew members earn about Dh1,000 per month, about 25 per cent of what they earned 10 years ago. Fishmongers running stalls in the souk make about Dh2,000 to Dh3,000
Boat crews dock in Ajman's main harbour on Wednesday. Catches are dwindling due to depleted stocks and years of overfishing. All photos by Antonie Robertson
Crews sort through a catch to be sent to the nearby souq for sale. Crews mostly haul aboard sheri and safi
Most boats are crews by Indians from Gujarat, India's most western state, which has a long seafaring tradition. Boat owners and captains are all Emirati
'Never believe anyone who goes to the sea and says he is making money,' veteran Emirati boat owner Abdulla Ghanam says.
'Whatever I get from the co-op, I’ll put back in fishing'
Traditional fishing boats dock on Wednesday with the high rise buildings of Ajman city in the background
A fishmonger inspects the catch before customers arrive
Souq traders struggle with competition from big supermarkets, which offer convenience and import huge quantities of fish from abroad
While many fishermen oppose stricter regulations, some are favour of government intervention to replenish fish stocks, which Abu Dhabi saw recent success with
Ajman has about 400 fishing boats, a smaller fleet than 15 years ago. Stronger patrolling of borders and obstructions such as oil rigs and underwater cables make some areas off limits
'[In the past] we’d put in a net and take it out the next day [full of fish]. Now they need to leave it for three or four days [to catch anything], says Saif Al Shamsi, a poet and retired Emirati fishermen
Fishing crews rest at the harbourside on Wednesday. Crew members earn about Dh1,000 per month, about 25 per cent of what they earned 10 years ago. Fishmongers running stalls in the souk make about Dh2,000 to Dh3,000
Boat crews dock in Ajman's main harbour on Wednesday. Catches are dwindling due to depleted stocks and years of overfishing. All photos by Antonie Robertson
Crews sort through a catch to be sent to the nearby souq for sale. Crews mostly haul aboard sheri and safi
Most boats are crews by Indians from Gujarat, India's most western state, which has a long seafaring tradition. Boat owners and captains are all Emirati
'Never believe anyone who goes to the sea and says he is making money,' veteran Emirati boat owner Abdulla Ghanam says.
'Whatever I get from the co-op, I’ll put back in fishing'
Traditional fishing boats dock on Wednesday with the high rise buildings of Ajman city in the background
A fishmonger inspects the catch before customers arrive
Souq traders struggle with competition from big supermarkets, which offer convenience and import huge quantities of fish from abroad
While many fishermen oppose stricter regulations, some are favour of government intervention to replenish fish stocks, which Abu Dhabi saw recent success with
Ajman has about 400 fishing boats, a smaller fleet than 15 years ago. Stronger patrolling of borders and obstructions such as oil rigs and underwater cables make some areas off limits
'[In the past] we’d put in a net and take it out the next day [full of fish]. Now they need to leave it for three or four days [to catch anything], says Saif Al Shamsi, a poet and retired Emirati fishermen
Fishing crews rest at the harbourside on Wednesday. Crew members earn about Dh1,000 per month, about 25 per cent of what they earned 10 years ago. Fishmongers running stalls in the souk make about Dh2,000 to Dh3,000