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Japan’s usho keep alive the ancient art of fishing with cormorants

In the pitch-black night, fires burn alongside a river in Gifu, in western Japan, as a handful of men prepare for a ritual that dates back more than 1,300 years: fishing with cormorants.

Dressed in traditional clothes, they look like they come from another time. They wield their cormorants, tied together with strings, like puppeteers.

Their profession, known as ukai in Japan, was once common in waterside villages and towns throughout Asia and other parts of the world. It has been on the gradual decline for centuries, and now lives on in Japan as a tourist attraction and a carefully protected part of the country’s national heritage.

At 46, Shuji Sugiyama is the youngest of the cormorant masters, or usho, in Gifu. He is one of just nine people to hold an imperial license for the practice. He sits quietly on a rock by the inky water of the Nagara River, apparently undisturbed by the chatter of his fellow fishermen.

“It’s because we live together, the man and the cormorants, that ukai fishing is possible,” he said.

Centuries ago, the profession flourished, but by the time the palace began issuing imperial licenses to usho in 1890, the art was already on the decline. Now, there are only a few dozen usho throughout Japan, and just nine of them held imperial licenses at the end of 2018, turning over eight catches a year to the palace and receiving a symbolic salary of 8,000 yen (U.S. $71) a month.

The method is hardly a commercial enterprise, and the usho rely on subsidies from local authorities that have turned the profession into a tourist draw and hope to one day see ukai make the UNESCO World Heritage list.

“Cormorant fishing is the biggest tourist draw we have in Gifu city,” local tourism division chief Kazuhiro Tada said. “More than 100,000 people a year come to see it, and their numbers are growing.”

Sugiyama inherited the job from his father, fishing alongside him until he obtained official usho status in 2002.

MAJOR TOURIST DRAW

Five generations of his family have practiced the unusual fishing technique, which once existed in Europe and elsewhere but now continues mostly in China and Japan.

The job requires a tolerance for unusual hours — fishing takes place after sundown, with the usho using flaming lamps hung on their boats to attract fish below the surface. While the fishing season only runs from May until October, each fisherman’s cormorants require daily care all year round.

New birds arrive each autumn, after being captured during their migration across Ibaraki province north of Tokyo and must be trained — a process that takes about three years.

“I usually take about 10 birds fishing, and I integrate the new ones with the group, so they will imitate the older ones and learn how to fish,” Sugiyama said.

HOPES FOR THE FUTURE

The fishermen wear traditional outfits: a blue shirt and matching bulbous hat to protect against the ashes of the lamps, long straw skirts to keep out water and cold, and truncated sandals that leave the heels exposed to prevent slipping.

They hang flaming torches on the boats to attract the small trout known as ayu, and a draw determines the order the boats will move out in.

The cormorants are tied together with ropes, and the fishermen tie string around each bird’s throat to prevent them from eating the catch. The loops leave the birds enough space to eat smaller fish and are removed when the night’s catch is complete.

The birds are expert fishers and instantly kill their prey with their razor-sharp beaks.

When one surfaces with a fish, his usho pries it from the bird’s gullet, then sends the bird back into the water.

At the peak of the catch, the air is full with the sound of squawking birds, shouting fisherman and the rhythmic tapping produced by boatmen banging sticks on the sides of the vessel. Tourists on separate boats float around the fishermen, snapping photos.

At the end of the season, Sugiyama will be able to relax a little, but he doesn’t expect to take a holiday anytime soon. “I have a son who is still in primary school. I have the feeling that he has started to be interested in my work,” he said. “He sees me every day with the cormorants, and I hope that one day he’ll take my place.”  Agence France-Presse

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