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Nova Scotia town famous for its seafood still reeling from the loss of six fishermen

HALIFAX — As the Nova Scotia RCMP used a helicopter Friday to search for five fishermen whose scallop dragger sank in the Bay of Fundy this week, the mayor of a major fishing port said many residents are still in a state of shock.
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An RCAF Cormorant helicopter flies over the Bay of Fundy in Hillsburn, N.S. in an area where empty life-rafts from a scallop fishing vessel where reported on Tuesday, Dec. 15, 2020. The Nova Scotia RCMP say they plan to use a helicopter today to continue the search for five fishermen whose boat sank in the Bay of Fundy on Tuesday morning. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Andrew Vaughan

HALIFAX — As the Nova Scotia RCMP used a helicopter Friday to search for five fishermen whose scallop dragger sank in the Bay of Fundy this week, the mayor of a major fishing port said many residents are still in a state of shock.

The body of one fisherman was found Tuesday night, but the boat and the other crew members and captain have yet to be found.

“Right now, people are still numb,” said Pam Mood, mayor of Yarmouth, which is famous for its large lobster fishing fleet.

“It’s very, very raw. We are almost getting used to the fact that just when we get used to standing back up, we get punched in the face again.”

Mood said three of the six men aboard the 15-metre Chief William Saulis, which sank near Delaps Cove, N.S., on Tuesday, were originally from the Yarmouth area.

As well, she said residents are reminded at this time of year about another disturbing loss of life that marred Christmas celebrations two years ago. On Nov. 24, 2018, a four-year-old girl died after she fell under a float during Yarmouth’s annual Christmas Parade of Lights.

“Christmas is a raw time for all of us,” Mood said Thursday.

“What is most important for this community right now is to understand that this is not the time to bounce back. We’re not there yet. We need to grieve. We need to cry. We need to be angry, hurt, feel the pain — all those things.”

Mood said she has asked a grief recovery specialist to work with the victims’ families.

Meanwhile, a ground search of the bay’s southern shoreline was kept on hold Friday because the weather conditions were still poor after a snowstorm descended on the region Thursday.

Industry officials say the 56-tonne boat is believed to have capsized in three-metre waves as it was heading to its home port in Digby, N.S., which is renowned for its scallops.

The experienced crew did not issue a mayday distress call via VHF radio before the boat foundered. The Joint Rescue Co-ordination Centre in Halifax was alerted to a problem Tuesday at 5:50 a.m. when it received a signal from the boat’s Emergency Positioning Indicating Radio Beacon, a device that is automatically triggered when submerged.

Matthew Duffy, a safety adviser with the Fisheries Safety Association of Nova Scotia, said scallop fishing comes with its own specific dangers.

The typical scallop dragger uses a type of dredge that is pulled along the ocean floor to scoop up the saltwater mollusks, which can cause stability challenges.

Duffy, however, said the majority of the boats in Nova Scotia’s scallop fishing fleet are built to withstand the worst weather.

“With most fishing vessels … the goal is usually to over-engineer so that it’s stronger than it even really needs to be,” he said.

“Scallop dragging has been done for such a long time that I think they’ve really fine-tuned the methodology behind it.”