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"The one thing I do know: This isn't forever. There'll be an end to this, whether it's a year or two years or three years. My idea is if I just keep working hard and I ignore what's really happening, then I'll get through it." Hebert went to work for Griffin (Mr. Raymond, he calls him) six years ago after toiling as an auto mechanic. He'd fished all his life, got his first boat when he was just 8 years old, and turning his hobby into his profession was a dream come true. Inside Griffin's deserted dining room, beneath walls decorated with fishing rods and photographs of the damage Ike and Katrina wrought, Hebert pulls out a small photo album and flips through pages filled with better times, pictures of him and his many clients showing off their catches with proud grins. "Before on a weekend, you'd have 300 boats fishing out there. Now you don't see nothing but work boats. I miss it. Trawlers shrimping. Crabbers," he says. "There's nothing like coming back on the dock and being with all the guys and telling stories and drinking beer. Money don't describe that." That's what so many of the outsiders flooding here now don't seem to understand, be they BP people or suits from Washington, D.C. The way of life has never really been about the money. Hebert's making enough to get by as a "BP worker." Lots of people are
-- some more than they would have shrimping or crabbing. Says one shrimper who now drives a food boat for Griffin: "This is my first real job, pretty much." David Volion owns Voleo's Seafood Restaurant down the road from Griffin's place. The same contractor paying Griffin and Hebert is paying him and some of the other eateries to make meals a week at a time for all the workers on the water now (the joke is they've expanded Lafitte's population of about 1,800 by at least 500 more). Volion says if he plays his cards right he could make more money in the next two years than in the first 45 of his life. But then what happens when the workers pack up, leaving behind waterways no longer producing the shrimp, crabs and fish that put Lafitte on the map? "You'll have seafood, but not local. And who's gonna want to come to a sterile town where everything's not local? That niche is gone," he says. "What do you do? Become a burger joint? A pizza joint? A steakhouse?" Dorothy Wiseman coordinates activities at the Lafitte Senior Center, which itself has been turned into a command post. A few weeks back, she and her seniors relocated to the brand-new multipurpose center a block over, and they play bingo in the room that was supposed to be a fisheries museum. That project is suspended for now. Wiseman is 70 but has lived in Lafitte since she was a girl. She thinks about the life she and her friends have always known, and the one they endure now, and she grieves the small things that are gone. Sons and husbands bringing home so much shrimp, crab and fish that some elders never had to buy seafood at a grocery store. Holidays spent with family in peace, where this past Father's Day all the talk was about that still-spewing oil and, "What should be done. What can be done. What hasn't been done." With most of the fishermen out laying boom, or picking it up once the oil has soaked through, Wiseman says: "Our men are doing something that's dangerous." "The biggest thing is worry. We're worried about our homes. We're worried about the next storm coming in that could bring all this oil into our area. We're worried about being forced, possibly, to have to move permanently," she says. "The biggest thing that's happening to all of us is that we're very, very worried." She's made it her mission to maintain as much of a normal routine as she can for the seniors, so at least some folks can escape the bad news for a while. Line dancing is still every Wednesday afternoon. Duck carving follows. And, until further notice, the bingo games start at 10:30 a.m. Fridays
-- inside the museum that might not be finished any time soon. --- At home in Marrero, Brandy Hebert thinks of contingencies just in case her husband's job suddenly ends, fishing doesn't come back and the money starts to run out. She's 25 and wonders about things like: Do they really need their home telephone? She explains to Bryce about the oil, and the boy knows that Daddy has, as he calls it, "a new work." She videotapes special occasions such as Bryce's graduation, and she calls her husband when something amazing happens, like Gracey saying "Da Da." They've put off their daughter's christening. Says Brandy: "You just have to learn: one day at a time." Kris Hebert still would rather be on the water than doing anything else, but the water isn't the haven it once was for him. Each day is another expedition to an environmental wasteland. He drives past coils of boom corralling marshland blotched brown. He takes officials to passes blocked by gigantic barges to stop the creeping oil. Wilkinson Canal has become a floating warehouse, with barges parked along the shoreline stacked with plastic bags full of boom. And yet there are glimpses, too, of what was: Waterside stores peddling live cocahoes, a favorite bait for redfish. Locals sitting on porch swings, waving as the boats go by. Closer to Lafitte, grasslands remain untouched by the crude. For now, it's all a bit of a tease and a daily reminder of what's gone, as are some of the questions Hebert faces from the many guests on his boat. A group of reporters one day. Out-of-state mayors the next. Department of Homeland Security and so on. "How long have you been in the fishing business?" a Florida mayor asks one recent trip. "All my life," Hebert replies, as he always does. "How old are you?" the mayor asks, and Capt. Kris tells him: 28. He uses the idle chitchat as an opportunity to encourage out-of-towners to not let anyone forget about what's happening down here, or about the help the Gulf Coast will need for some time. "We can't let it get out of the people's minds." It angers him, all that's happened. But he tries to make the best of it. He had fun that day he drove the mayors around, despite the strange scenes flying by, devastation and paradise side by side. On the way back to Lafitte, he turned the radio on, slid the volume up and started dancing in place and singing along, not noticing how poignant the song lyrics were: "These are the moments I thank God that I'm alive." It was a pretty good day. And the following afternoon, Hebert got off earlier than usual and was home at 6, in time to run A-B-C flashcards with Bryce, read him a book and play outside. Later that night, when BP and the Coast Guard were holding an open house in the Lafitte high school gym, Hebert was home, saying goodnight to his kids. What do you do when you lose everything you know and love? You march on, sure. You find distractions. You adapt. Your way of life becomes something a little different. A little worse? Maybe. But when those moments of happiness do come, you relish them. They mean more now.
[Associated
Press;
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