Horseback-fished Brown Shrimp, Slow Food, 2015, From the collection of: Slow Food Foundation for Biodiversity - Ark of Taste
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Horseback-fished Brown Shrimp, Slow Food, 2015, From the collection of: Slow Food Foundation for Biodiversity - Ark of Taste
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Oostduinkerke, along Belgium’s west coast on the North Sea, is the only place in Europe where the trade of horseback fishing for shrimp is still practiced.

The brown shrimp (Crangon crangon), or crevette grise or grijze garnaal as they are known in French and Flemish respectively, have a sandy, grayish-brown color and are found in shallow waters. They are tpically 30-50 mm long, although individuals up to 90 mm have been recorded. The shrimp feed nocturnally, and during the day, they remain buried in the sand to escape predatory birds and fish, with only their antennae protruding.

Horseback-fished Brown Shrimp, Slow Food, 2015, From the collection of: Slow Food Foundation for Biodiversity - Ark of Taste
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The shrimp are fished for two to three hours a day, during low tide, usually between the months of March and May and again in September. During the spring and a short period in the fall, the horses tread the sea at the height of the Schipgatduinen (a precious but fragile natural reserve of 45 hectares) and near Groenendijk. Fishermen ride the horses on wooden saddles that are attached to large nets that drag behind the horses.

Horseback-fished Brown Shrimp, Slow Food, 2015, From the collection of: Slow Food Foundation for Biodiversity - Ark of Taste
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The net is kept open horizontally by two side shelves (kites), so that the bottom of the net is dragged on the sand while its upper part floats above. This method is the same that has been used for generations, though today nets are usually eight meters wide, compared to four meters in the past, and made with more durable nylon.

Horseback-fished Brown Shrimp, Slow Food, 2015, From the collection of: Slow Food Foundation for Biodiversity - Ark of Taste
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The large, strong horses (Brabant draft horses) continue until the water reaches the top of their legs. Every now and then, the fishermen and their horses will return to the shore to empty their nets and deposit their catch in the baskets hung from each side of the horses.

Horseback-fished Brown Shrimp, Slow Food, 2015, From the collection of: Slow Food Foundation for Biodiversity - Ark of Taste
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In December 2013, UNESCO added shrimp fishing on horseback in Oostduinkerke to their list of Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity. Shrimp caught by fishermen on horseback are exceptionally fresh and are a true delicacy when cooked, and brown shrimp enjoys great popularity in Belgium and its neighboring countries.

Horseback-fished Brown Shrimp, Slow Food, 2015, From the collection of: Slow Food Foundation for Biodiversity - Ark of Taste
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It is the basis of the dish tomate-crevette, where the shrimp are mixed with mayonnaise and served in a hollowed-out uncooked tomato. The shrimp croquette is another Belgian specialty; the shrimp are in the interior of the battered croquette along with melted cheese. Fresh unpeeled brown shrimp are often served as a snack accompanying beer, typically a sour ale or Flemish red such as Rodenbach.

Horseback-fished Brown Shrimp, Slow Food, 2015, From the collection of: Slow Food Foundation for Biodiversity - Ark of Taste
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In earlier times, this trade was scattered along the entire North Sea, where the gently sloping beach allowed this. Archives in Bruges dating back to 1510 report that horseback shrimp fishing was done already in these times following the seynevissen technique: seynevissen was fishing with a seine net drawn by two horses.

In the abbey Ter Duinen, founded by the order of the Cistercensi in the municipality of Koksijde, the accountant of the abbey recorded in his management book in 1564 expenses on seynen (nets) and related articles. This order only occasionally replaced seafood with meat dishes, on fixed holidays. So, even though this order did not preform horseback shrimp fishing, it supported the local practice.

Still today, during the last weekend of June, the tradition of horseback shrimp fishing is highlighted during the local Shrimp Festival. The annual Shrimp Festival is an ode to the sea and to shrimp, and focuses on the fishermen on horseback.

Horseback-fished Brown Shrimp, Slow Food, 2015, From the collection of: Slow Food Foundation for Biodiversity - Ark of Taste
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However, by 2014 there were only twelve active horseback shrimp fishers still active.Their numbers have fluctuated throughout the years. In 1785 there were 27 horseback fishermen in the contemporary area of Koksijde. In 1905 there were fifteen registered horseback fishermen, after 1918 the number went back to twenty and around the 1940s reached 40. Without younger generations to continue this tradition, this fishing method and a local supply of brown shrimp may be lost.

Credits: Story

Photos and videos—Francesco Weber

Credits: All media
The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.
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