TPW TV – The Shrimping Life
This is Passport to Texas
When it comes to seafood, shrimp is king. And the Stringo Family—from Port O’Connor—are king-makers, having shrimped Texas Bays for decades.
I was born here. That’s all I’ve ever done—you know. Matagorda Bay, mainly.
That’s Anthony Stringo. He and his 75 year old father, Jesse, appear next week on a segment of the Texas Parks and Wildlife TV series on PBS. Anthony says his dad’s been shrimping the bays most of his life.
Fifty years I’d say. Yeah. Probably one of the oldest left out here. There might be one or two more his age left.
Texas Parks and WildlifeFisheries Biologist, Mark Fisher, also on the show, says shrimping’s changed since the Stringo family started working the bays.
Shrimping in the nineteen fifties was a very good decade. A price of shrimp was very high, fuel, fuel was cheap, labor was abundant; there was almost no government regulation back then. If you could work hard and handle it, it was all for the taking.
Anthony says shrimping’s not as freewheeling or as lucrative today.
These are the big shrimp, we ought to be getting four dollars a pound for them shrimp right there. But the markets not there because [consumers] get so much from overseas, [including] the farm raised shrimp.
Last of the Stringos airs on next week’s Texas Parks and Wildlife TV series on PBS. Check your local listings.
The Sport Fish Restoration program supports our series.
For Texas Parks and Wildlife…I’m Cecilia Nasti.