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"They took pressure off the levees, and that was important," Ribardi said. "If the levee broke in Baton Rouge, we'd still be in trouble." Each year, near the beginning of high-water season, the corps mails approximately 1,000 notices about the possible use of the spillway to known property owners and others with interests in the area, corps spokesman Ricky Boyette said. This year, a second notice went out May 6, as the likelihood of the spillway's opening increased. Ribardi, whose 68-foot shrimp boat named Sea Chariot is docked behind his modest, white-frame house, said spring is where the money is for shrimpers. He expects more problems in the summer months. "The fresh water, if it hits slowly, will chase the shrimp and crabs out to sea," Ribardi said. "If it hits too fast, or if they get trapped in someplace, it will kill them." Sterling Fryou harvests crawfish and crabs in the inland wetlands. If the flood doesn't get his house, it could create a bounty by dumping nutrients into the swampy estuaries home to the shellfish. "In the end, we'll see bigger crawfish and crabs because of it. After the
'73 flood, we had three or four really good years," said Fryou, 74. The lanky, energetic man with a hearty laugh and a Cajun accent has been a fisherman for 60 years. Even before the flood threat, nature had not been kind this year. "It was a bad year already because it was so dry," he said. "There was no rain to get the crawfish moving and growing. Now the current is so swift out there they are just holding on so they don't get swept away."
[Associated
Press;
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