This is a template, not a recipe, as some of the ingredients are hard to come by.
This is a template, not a recipe, as some of the ingredients are hard to come by.
Choose a father who lobstered both as a profession and a pastime. Don’t worry about the sand between your toes as you dangle your legs off the bench seat on your way to the boat.
Watch for the first few years, then with someone holding your belt buckle start leaning the better part of your body over the side of the boat to retrieve the buoys.
As time passes, begin to haul in the traps; you’ll be able to haul all 10 in gradually. Assume wrongly that the next logical step is to learn how to drive the boat. Father doesn’t own boat. Wait patiently to learn how to drive boat. Never under any circumstances wear a life jacket or sunscreen during your childhood. Retain a healthy fear of being bitten by a lobster after being bitten by a lobster at the age of six. Retain this fear always.
Stop playing baseball competitively after Little League. Go to college. Drop out of college and live in van. Go to a different college. Drop out of different college and live in teepee.
Continue to lobster with your dad.
In your early 20s have enough friends to organize a weekly pickup softball game in the summer. Play at dusk because it’s too hot during the day. Turn on the lights when it gets dark. Do not let the lights distract you from the task at hand even though its always fun to watch them cough and sputter on.
Remember the vacant lot next to your mom’s house you named Ebbets Field where your brother shagged flies with rocks denting your favorite bat. Appreciate the apple trees you dodged in your dad’s yard as he stroked ball after ball in your direction with one hand. Try not to cry when thinking about Robert Redford rounding the bases after his towering shot at the end of The Natural. Cry anyway.
Invite your dad to play one night. Watch the sand kick up behind his heels like a racehorse as he rounds first following his towering pinch hit marvel while also considering that human limitations are possibly, most likely, self imposed. Try your best to calculate how high up on the Green Monster the ball would have struck and the size of its dent. Know that under the right circumstances, with the right breeze to the left, that softball would have cleared the monster.
Lift with your legs, just as when you haul your traps, when helping your father up from the ground as he limps to his car. Apply a cold beer to the back of his ankle. The following day learn to drive the boat while he elevates his cast.
Learn depth of pond.
Go to cooking school. Carve carrots into jumping fish, receive a B+ and give teacher benefit of doubt they didn’t see the miniature scales and gills.
Drop out. Eat out. Enjoy meal. Ask owner for job. Start following day. Work hard. Work when sick. Work when tired. Come home to watch mom die. Go back to work the next day. Bury grief by working more. Work until sick. Work until tired.
Get your own boat.
Go to Menemsha. Find someone wearing waders and waterproof boots that is walking with a slight limp and inquire about where to get lobster bait. Wear gloves when retrieving bait or else your one-year-old child will be repulsed by you.
Get up at dawn, ideally without an alarm as not to wake your slumbering wife — when the sunrise is the color of a peach and soft like one.
Hold your breath when retrieving your bait, especially as you work your way deeper and deeper into the barrel. One poorly timed inhale can stay with you for the rest of the day.
Assure your wife every few days that the bait barrels will be picked up soon and the smell will dissipate with a little hose down. Change subject.
Reassure neighbors that the foul smell is hard to pinpoint. Could be a deer carcass in the brush or more likely just low tide. Tell neighbors that on the next trip you will bring them a few lobsters.
Reassure your wife you haven’t forgotten about the deadline to get rid of the bait. You know how the Island is this time of year after all.
Start an informal IOU system for number of neighbors you have promised lobster to. Research if a lobster’s claw shows mark from rubber band if removed. Find out if any Island fish markets are running specials on lobster.
Remind your wife that lobster tastes so much better out of the ocean than from some tank in the back of a fish market.
Learn the proper knots and use them to secure your buoys to your traps. Choose a color scheme that brings you joy when painting your buoys.
Go lobstering. As you exit Stonewall Pond the rocks tell you to slow down. Navigating under Quitsa bridge requires slowing down. The man sailing alone tells you to slow down. The kid on the dock tells you to slow down. The harbor master tells you to slow down. The bell buoy is telling you to slow down. Someone is trying to tell you something.
Drop your traps off at the brickyard. Most people have an order to their buoy alignment. It is not mandatory. Don’t be discouraged when your battery dies, you hit a rock on your way out, your fuel lines clog or kink, your hat flies off in the wind, it’s too choppy to go any faster than three knots and don’t worry about how fast a knot is. Don’t get down on yourself when you get skunked, smell like a skunk or can’t remember which pots you have hauled and which you have not.
When the line from one of your traps wraps around the propeller of the boat and you are alone bobbing near shore, lift the engine up and climb out on top of the small engine on your small boat until it feels like the next inch you move further will put you in the water (not dissimilar to your early days retrieving buoys).
Count how many pots you have hauled as you go and try to keep a mental tally knowing you may forget, and forgiving yourself for it.
Bring your dad out and talk or not.
Don’t ever count how many keepers you have amassed until you are back on shore because it doesn’t matter. Bring about three inches of water made to taste like seawater to a boil in a large pot. Cook lobsters for approximately 10 minutes over a high flame. Remove from heat and allow to cool and cook through for another 15 minutes (this may be the most important step).
Serve one lobster per person. If you find yourself with a few extra, cook them anyway as lobster salad is a nice way make people happy.
Reassure your wife the bait barrels will be gone by the weekend.
Chris Fischer lives in Chilmark.

Comments
How lucky are we? Love you.
Albert Fischer West TisburyHow lucky are we? Love you.
Very lucky indeed!
Jonathan Coe Snyder NYVery lucky indeed!
Thanks Chris. Wonderful!
Wendy ChilmarkThanks Chris. Wonderful! Write more!
Really lovely. We readers
Judy Ashley Ontario, CanadaReally lovely. We readers are transported in the small vessel rocking on the water. And I will attempt..thank you
GREAT article!!!
Rob NCGREAT article!!!
A truly resonant piece.
Claire Ganz ChilmarkA truly resonant piece.
Thank you.
Lucky the apple that doesn’t
Polly Bassett West TisburyLucky the apple that doesn’t fall too far from the tree...loved it Chris!
Gosh. Living the dream. What
Harriet West TisburyGosh. Living the dream. What a wonderful essay.
Wonderful Chris! Loved your
Joyce Dresser Oak BluffsWonderful Chris! Loved your memories.
Thanks for putting a smile on
Linda Vadasz WTThanks for putting a smile on my face. This is one of the reasons I love living here with my family!
This essay is so wonderful -
Julie Anne VHThis essay is so wonderful - second person is so rare - but it also made me cry a bit. For those of us who have lost dads, yours is a lovely reminder of what is important about fatherhood.
Did it, lived it, now my son
david finkelstein West TisburyDid it, lived it, now my son gets up early dawn
Also loved the quietness of
david finkelstein West TisburyAlso loved the quietness of Chris
What a lovely piece.
Steve F ChilmarkWhat a lovely piece.
This is an absolute gem of an
LynneThis is an absolute gem of an article. Keep up the fantastic writing,Chris!
I had a good cry. You may
Barbara Ward New York upstateI had a good cry. You may have a myriad of talents. Writing is now on your list of musts. Thank you❤️
Beautiful...channeling Billy
Katie PhiladelphiaBeautiful...channeling Billy Collins! Part 2: The kitchen lobster race for the benefit of children’s enjoyment.
This was a fantastic read!
Karen nice one CONNECTICUTThis was a fantastic read! Thank you!
How is it that you make so
Sally cook ChilmarkHow is it that you make so much hard work sound amusing Your life experiences touch the many who have known you and your family. Glad you are back home! Sally
Thanks, love your show with
Tom St PetersburgThanks, love your show with wife & family.
This is beautiful!
Jessica Monroe, WAThis is beautiful!
Wow! Beautiful.
Codie ChicagoWow! Beautiful.
I loved this more than I have
Kiera Denver, COI loved this more than I have the words to describe. Thank you.
A beautiful essay....know
Kathy New YorkA beautiful essay....know your dad and knew your mom.
Love this piece
Betty FloridaLove this piece
Nice piece....Lobster is life
Adam anderson Columbus, OhioNice piece....Lobster is life
Pure beauty and deliciousness
Tina MarylandPure beauty and deliciousness
Love this and love you. You
Lisa Bloom AlbuquerqueLove this and love you. You are a treasure.
Made me laugh and cry at the
Leslie Tulsa, OKMade me laugh and cry at the same time. Thanks, Chris - please write more, about anything.
The. Absolute. Best. Such a
Leslie ChicagoThe. Absolute. Best. Such a fun, sweet and sentimental read. Fresh.
Beautifully written! Keep
Anne TorontoBeautifully written! Keep writing!
Haha loved it!
Heather CanadaHaha loved it!
Your charming words tell an
Clare Anna Borrego State ParkYour charming words tell an important family story. A perfect recipe.ThankYou Chris. Hi Gene&Amy
Thank you for this incredibly
Emily Cherin Medford MAThank you for this incredibly poignant and BEAUTIFUL and totally you piece. I loved it so much and it’s sitting with me and making me feel really peaceful. A feeling I don’t arrive at easily these days. I’m very grateful.
There’s so much here besides
Denise Northeast PAThere’s so much here besides lobster. It made me laugh and cry. A second career?
Enchanting and
Sylvia All places.Enchanting and pulchritudinous.
This is just so beautifully
ErikaThis is just so beautifully written!
Wow, you painted a picture in
Lidia SacramentoWow, you painted a picture in my imagination!
Wow, this is beautiful. I
AileenWow, this is beautiful. I could feel the breeze as you drove the boat too fast.
It’s the simple things which
Stephanie H BurienIt’s the simple things which can be so beautiful.
It’s the simple things which
Stephanie H BurienIt’s the simple things which can be so beautiful.
Beautiful. I could see it all
Hayley TexasBeautiful. I could see it all as I read.
Love this!
Lauren Ft LauderdaleLove this!
Took bike ride with wife on
Michael M ChilmarkTook bike ride with wife on Middle Road. Made coffee and sat on deck in the shade. Read Chris Fischer's essay about lobstering (living). Can't stop thinking about lobsters (mostly eating them). Perfect Chilmark morning.
Beautifully written. I could
Ashley London,ON CanadaBeautifully written. I could read this over and over again.
This was wonderful
Jessica Deutmeyer ColoradoThis was wonderful
As the daughter of a
Maggie MarylandAs the daughter of a fisherman, I feel yours words deeply. What is it about fisherman, lobsterman, boats, the open seas, lighthouses. The smell of of it all. There’s poetry in that kind of life. It’s sweet and raw. Painful yet beautiful. The blood drawn by hooks piercing my finger. Cooking caught lobsters on the boat. The smile on your face as your fisherman father emerges from Miami Beach with lobsters in both hands. The shocked look on my face when he reached into a stone crab’s burrow and pulled one out. I’m lucky to know and feel your words personally. As the daughter of a fisherman, I am forever grateful for the memories and my soul will always yearn for that life. And I agree, KEEP WRITING! Your words are beautiful, Chris.
Love the writing! Keep up the
Marian Gunn Lake Cowichan, Vancouver Island, BC CanadaLove the writing! Keep up the good work! Can’t wait to see your 2nd season with Amy!
That was beautiful, poignant
Melanie SeattleThat was beautiful, poignant and practical. Thank you for putting that into the world.
The simple things of life...
Carolina Martinez Duarte, CaThe simple things of life....loved it!
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