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Captain John Salter


A chat with Captain John Buster Salter,
Atlantic, NC,
Fishing Vessel Miss June


Buster Salter on his boat Whats your family background? I'm from right here in Atlantic. Atlantic used to be called Hunting Quarter, and its Indian name was Koranine. My great-grandfather was James Mason, who owned property on northern Core Banks through a King's grant. The property was sold to a hunt club called Pilentary, named after the thorny bushes that grow on the banks." Buster's grandfather worked as a caretaker, and was inside the clubhouse with Buste''s father (then 11) when it was destroyed and washed into the ocean in the 1933 storm. "They survived but they were stranded on Core Banks for three days!


Why did you become a fisherman? My father, grandfather, and great-grandfather were all fishermen. When I was 5 years old I started going with my uncle on Luther Smith's buy boat. A buy-boat runs out to the fishing vessels of Pamlico and Core Sound to collect the fish; this allows the crew to keep fishing while their catch - spot, croaker, trout, sea mullet, bluefish, and flounder - is carried to market. So I got interested in long-hauling at an early age, and did it ever since.


What is long hauling? Long hauling is the second oldest style of fishing in North Carolina, after oyster harvesting. Over a dozen crews worked out of Atlantic in the 1970s; today there's only two. Two small skiffs holding 1,600 yards of net are towed behind two bigger boats to the fishing grounds. The crew pays out the net and hauls it in a big horseshoe shape for 2 or 3 miles. The two boats head for a shallow shoal where the net is gathered and tightened. Buster gets out of the boat and foots the net, standing on the lead line or the bottom section. Stingrays have stung me several times! The men bail the fish out of the bunt of the seine using a dip net. In the old days they used a basket, Buster notes. The six member crew, including the captain, gets a share or an equal split of the total value of their catch -- even the boat earns a share!


What's on your mind? It"s not looking good for the environment or the fishermen. I think the greatest threat is global warming the burning of fossil fuels is heating up the atmosphere, changing the habitat of the fish. Land ecosystems too! "I'm afraid we'lll see future scarcities in world food supplies. Meanwhile, we're also developing the coast and pollutants pour into the rivers and sounds -- our fisheries are paying the price.
Whatâ's your claim to fame? I came up with an escape panel made of plastic rings that allow small fish to escape the net. The Division of Marine Fisheries liked my design, and now every long haul net is required to be fitted with an escape panel. Buster's invention was featured on the front page of the New Bern Sun Journal! "We don't want to catch the little fish," he explains. They'll grow.


What do you love about fishing? I was born to fish. I grew up into it, and I love the beauty of nature and the outdoors. Working on the water intrigues me -- a different adventure every day, a new problem to solve. Buster likes to bring his two grandsons fishing with him. When he's not fishing he relaxes by reading all about coastal history.


Who'd you name your boat, the Miss June, after? My mother.


Interview / Text: Dr. Barbara Garrity Blake


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