Farming on
As Remembered by Mickey Moonin
|
||||||
Around 1910 and into the 1920’s, a fox farm was
established out in “The foxes were raised for pelts which were
sold for forty-four to forty-five dollars each,” reported Mickey Moonin, our
source for this articled. “Some of the people who helped Herbert
were Demetri Moonin, Gabriel Kanaback, Peter Moonin, Gorman Agenia and
sometimes Mike Moonin.” All those who worked for him were taken
out to the island, rowing out early in the mourning and back late that
evening. Help came from both “I guess he had a pretty good dock out
there,” remembered Mickey. Trading boats used to come in there three times a
week and pick up furs. They shipped the furs out to “I believe he paid the people who helped
him after he sold the pelts. John Herbert just made a living selling the
pelts. That was lower hard times, very low times,” related Mickey.
The foxes ate mostly fish and porcupine
which were sold to the owner. Someone had to cook the fox food. A
fifty gallon oil drum was cut in half and used as a pot to cook the fish
trash. The foxes ran loose around the island
until the females were ready to have pups. Then Herbert would pen them up in
little houses they built. If allowed to run loose, the mothers would dig
holes for dens to have pups in. It was dangerous to go near the foxes,
but they knew the owner because he fed them. If a stranger came along, the
mother fox would eat her pups. When it was time to kill the foxes the
men couldn’t shoot them if they wanted to sell the fur. “The way they killed them was with a
pronged stick,” said Mickey. “They pushed there necks down to the ground to
keep them from moving. Then they could pick them up by the back of the head.
Experienced men could squeeze there hearts out of place.” The foxes were skinned with a knife and
the men made sure that they didn’t get any blood on the fur. If they got
blood on the fur it wouldn’t sell very well. The fur of the foxes was made
into coats that were very expensive. After John Herbert retired, a man bought
some live mink and started a mink ranch out on the island. He had the same
helpers to work with him skinning the mink. In November and December the mink were
skinned and readied to sell. In those years the mink pelts were worth about
eight dollars for a poor one and twelve dollars for a pretty good one. The
pelts were graded like Grade A and such. The mink ate fish and seafood like
clams, cockles and bidarkies. Pens about four feet long and two feel
square, were built of wire mesh. There was a little cubbyhole so the mink
could get inside the pen. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Smith were owners of
the mink ranch at one time. Mrs. Smith also taught school in Port Graham and
Mr. Smith worked as Janitor. When the Smiths left, they killed all
the mink and sold all the stuff.
|
||||||
|
Copyright
1983, |
|