Posted by admin | Posted in Fishing Spots | Posted on 09-02-2010


how can i build a cheap fishing raft easy?
ok i have a camp on the pearl river and me and about 7 other people are having a contest to see who can build the cheapest fishing raft that will hold 2 people and gear
HA do I have the ride for you! Go to a local feed store or wherever you can get this for cheap. Get a plastic watering trough big enough for what you need. SIZE WILL VARY.
On the outside of the trough, attach sealed and empty milk jugs or hot oil cans (whatever) until you get the bouyancy right.
I used this “boat” for several summers as a kid and caught a pisload of fish with it.
**The easy way to attached the jugs is to tie a rope very tightly around the outside that goes all the way around the tub. Then just tie the jugs to that rope. Piece of cake.
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Cheap $21.29 Cheap |
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Cheap Wage Labour $143.95 Using the fishing industry in British Columbia as a case study, Alicja Muszynski examines how Marx’s labour theory of value can be applied to a specific industry and the creation of a specific labour force. She reworks Marx’s theory in order to incorporate race and gender as principles that not only created a proletarianized labour force but also legitimized the payment of cheap wages to particular groups.Cheap Wage Labour is the first analysis of shore work and shoreworkers in British Columbia from the 1860s to the mid-1980s. Muszynski provides an interpretation of events that led to the creation of a cheap wage labour force of shoreworkers, their organization within the framework of the fishermen’s union (UFAWU), and, as a consequence, the steady decline of their numbers until today they represent only a small portion of the labour force. She looks at factors contributing to the destruction of First Nations culture and economy, such as the displacement of aboriginal peoples from key fishing sites and work in the salmon canneries, and examines the structure and patterns of Chinese and Japanese immigration and the development of the capitalist class and the white working class. Cheap Wage Labour situates the history of B.C. shoreworkers within the much larger and more complex historical enterprise of industrialization, patriarchy, and colonialism and provides keen insights into the current fisheries crisis on the West Coast. |
