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A Dream Come True
A Dream Come True
A Dream Come True
A Dream Come True
A Dream Come True
A Dream Come True
A Dream Come True
A Dream Come True
A Dream Come True

Earl and Oakley Johnson’s most recent venture has proven they are following in their father’s footsteps. In his time, their father was known among the fishermen of Newfoundland as a man who would be one of the first if not the first to embrace new ideas in the fishery. He was one of the first to get a diesel engine and the first one with a hydraulic hauler. Now on a bitter morning in April, his sons await the arrival of a dream of theirs for two years. It’s a catamaran built specifically for the commercial fishery, the first one in Newfoundland.

This was Earl’s idea but he soon sold it to his brother Oakley. They were ready to replace their traditional long liner so Earl started his research. He discovered that fishermen in the North Sea and in the Straits of Tasmania were using catamarans. They found them faster, more stable and safer than single hulled boats. The two brothers with government officials in tow, visited a boatyard in England where Clive Jeffory was building catamarans for the commercial fishery. After hundreds of phone calls and a couple of fishing seasons later, the boat was ready. Clive Jeffory said he was over the moon when he got the order. In Newfoundland alone there are eight thousand boats registered in this size category so the market potential is huge. Jeffory built the Johnson’s boat for cost to get a foothold into this market. The dream some day is to build these boats in Newfoundland.

The first big test was the crab season six months later and Land and Sea joined the brothers and their newly christened boat, the Eastern Point. It usually takes four and a half hours to steam to their fishing grounds, but the Eastern Point did it in half the time, although burning more fuel. After a rough day at sea, the Johnson brothers came home sold on their new investment. They loved the stability of the boat. It rolled with the swells but didn’t pitch and heave like their old built. It felt as if they were fishing in much calmer waters. There was lots of space on deck and a lot of creature comforts below. There was no question they were delighted with their gamble. Time will tell if it pays off better for them than following the traditional route, but even it doesn’t they’ll be happy to be remembered as fishermen who followed their dream and in their father’s footsteps.


Schedule

Sundays,
12:30 p.m. - 1:00 p.m. (AT)
1:00 p.m. - 1:30 p.m. (NT)
on CBC Television

Archive

January 2004

 

Jan. 4: Baltzer's Bog
Jan. 11: It's A Life
Jan. 18: Fiddles on the Tobique
Jan. 25: Their Story

February 2004

 

Feb. 1: Avengers
Feb. 8: A Dream Come True
Feb. 18: Bon Portage Island
Feb. 22: Built from Scratch
Feb. 29: Revolving Light

March 2004

 

Mar. 7: Hanging On
Mar. 14: Harness Racing
Mar. 21: The Twin Cities Seniors
Mar. 28: Poaching

April 2004

 

Apr. 4: A rare breed
Apr. 11: C.B. Miners
Apr. 18: A Story with A Hook
Apr. 25: Pre-empted

May 2004

 

May 2: Wind Power
May 9: Oxen
May 16: The Gift
May 23: P.E.I. Coyotes
May 30: Fish Enough

June 2004

 

June 4: Hanging On
June 11: Let the Bells Ring
June 18: Baltzer's Bog
June 25: It's a Life

July 2004

 

July 6: Pre-empted
July 13: Starving Ocean
July 20: In Love With Gander
July 27: Native Fishery

August 2004

 

Aug. 4: Fiddles on the Tobique
Aug. 11: Their Story
Aug. 15: Pre-empted
Aug. 22: Pre-empted
Aug. 29: Pre-empted

September 2004

 

Sep. 5: Avengers
Sep. 12: A Dream Come True
Sep. 19: Bon Portage Island
Sep. 26: Built from Scratch

October 2004

 

Oct. 3: Revolving Light
Oct. 10: The Twin Cities Seniors
Oct. 17: Old Tractors
Oct. 24: Built With Pride
Oct. 31: Atlantic Beef

November 2004

 

Nov. 7: The Peacemaker
Nov. 14: Shell Disease
Nov. 21: Why They Stayed
Nov. 28: Leatherback Turtles

December 2004

 

Dec. 7: The Split Peas
Dec. 12: C.B. Oysters
Dec. 19: The Grey Island Eider Ducks
Dec. 26: Pre-empted

 

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