Your Front Yard: Traditional fishing methods and the enu basket
By Taito Fale Tuilagi, James Gurr, P.Craig, NPS 

Enu fishing in Olosega [courtesy photo]
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Modern fishing gear has replaced most traditional fishing practices in American Samoa. Fish are now caught by rod & reel, metal spears propelled by elastic bands, and monofilament gillnets and thrownets.  But a few traditional practices persist.  Two of these are used for catching or fishing for atule and palolo and have often been described and seen. A third method, also used and often seen on our local reefs, is called ‘gleaning’ (figota)— involving the age-old practice of hand-picking the reefs at low tide for edible invertebrates like octopus (fe’e), giant clams (faisua), and turban snails (alili).

Another traditional fishing method, still practiced in Manu’a, is catching i’asina (small goatfish) in a hand-woven funnel trap called enu. I’asina are small fish (about 3.5 inches) that have just completed their pelagic existence as eggs and larvae in offshore waters and are now returning to the reefs to live for the remainder of their lives. 

Thousands of i’asina (Mulloidichthys flavolineatus) may appear along sandy shorelines during the months of October - April. There is little biological concern in harvesting them for human consumption, because their numbers are massive and most will be consumed by predatory fish.

The enu basket is constructed with ‘ie’ie vines that are first buried in a beach pit to soak in seawater for a week, after which the vines are cleaned and hung to dry. The coconut sennit (afa) used to tie the ‘ie’ie vines together is obtained from the husks of the niusami coconut. The husks are soaked in the sand pit for two weeks and then pounded to separate the fibers. Over 100 feet of braided fibers are needed to build the basket.

The local custom is that the enu must be completed before the fish start running or it cannot be used that year. 

To catch the fish, the trap is buried half way in shallow water along a sandy shoreline. The traps are baited with hermit crabs (uga) that have been pounded and mixed with sand.

I’asina are eaten fresh or deep fried, or they can be frozen.

I’asina are also caught on Tutuila, but by different methods.

In Leone, launiu (coconut fronds) are used to herd the fish over a net laid on the bottom of a shallow pool. Other villages catch the small fish with fine-meshed thrownets or wire traps. Note also that Fagasa’s enu basket is constructed differently and is used to harvest atule fish.

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Comments to this story (1)
The Same way as 100 years ago  wrote:
07 Feb 2010 10:00 AM
These are the ways taught by grandfathers and the only way to sustain a village-- it takes a village to fish for a day as a group, so that all can eat. It takes one Governor to screw things up so bad in less than 10 years. go figure! This is how we catch fish in the same traditional method taught by our ancestors to the next generation, we should never change.
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