2,489,188 views
※ This video is part of the <Extreme Job - Fall Hairtail Catching> broadcast on October 9, 2013. September is the month when you can catch plump and delicious hairtail! It is the busiest time for hairtail fishermen. In Geomundo, hairtail is caught using the pole-line method. This is a traditional fishing method, and from putting bait on 15 to 20 hooks to throwing 50-meter long fishing lines countless times into the sea, nothing is easy. The work is always done at night with the fishing lights on, and as day and night change, the fishermen have to endure the tremendous engine noise while being tired. Meanwhile, work using gill nets is in full swing in Mokpo. Gill nets require the use of the current to spread the net, so the timing and the tide must be right. As they continue to lower and raise the nets, shadows fall on the fishermen's faces... In the hottest part of the sun, the fishermen continue their efforts to catch hairtail. Mokpo hairtail fishermen who have been catching hairtail on their boats for over ten days. An unexpected accident with another boat occurs while they are casting nets. The fishermen try to move busily, but the problem is not easily solved. Countless people get hurt due to unexpected crises, and the fishermen who have lived at sea for over several decades each have unforgettable scars. However, these people do not stop going to sea! In the fall of 2013, when fish consumption sharply decreased due to the issue of radioactive contamination in Japan. The fishermen do not stop working with the hope that consumers will trust the hairtail they caught. ✔ Program name: Extreme Job - Fall Hairtail Catching ✔ Broadcast date: 2013.10.09 #GolladyeonDocumentary #ExtremeJob #Hairtail #SilverHairtail #EatHairtail #Mokpo #Fisherman #Fishing Boat #Ship #Return to Fishing #Return to the Village #On Board #Full Boat #Departure #Fisherman #Jeju Island #Chuja Island #Shrimp #Radiation #Fukushima