L is for Leech-fishing


If you have just clicked onto this post, welcome, O Brave Soul. Personally, I’d run at the mention of leeches (you may recall they were formerly listed among my “Ten Cultural Practices that Should Stay Buried Forever”), and I’d run even faster if I saw any in person.
Yet in the past, there lived men and women who sought leeches for their livelihood. Since blood-letting with leeches was a common medicinal practice in the nineteenth century, the little creatures were a fairly valuable commodity.
Thus: leech fishing. Often it was a family business and parents and children would stand together in muddy water, waiting for the feel of the leeches’ bites on their legs and ankles. They would then remove the animals, place them in a container, deliver them to doctors or suppliers, and collect their pay. One family reported to having caught over seventeen thousand leeches in only a few months’ time.

I suppose everyone does what they have to in order to support a family...but that's what I call one job that really sucks.

Comments

  1. I've had more than one student write a nonfiction article on the revival of medicinal leech-use. It's good to know that SOME of the blood-letting that went on long ago had SOME value.

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  2. Seriously? That would be the worst occupation ever, although perhaps they thought that getting bitten by leeches was good thing. I would think one would have to think that in order to take up the occupation!

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  3. It brings back memories of Charlie Allnut (played by Humphrey Bogart) in the movie The African Queen. As he pulls his boat forward through the shallow mucky water of the Ulanga River, leeches find him... and he spazzes out. Great scene!

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  4. *shudder* I actually did feel very brave clicking on this link!! :)

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  5. Yuck - made me think of Felicity Merrimen.

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  6. Not that she's a bad thing! But there was a story about her in one of the American Girl magazines...she needed leeches on her arm. Guh-ross!

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  7. Ha ha! I was once sucked on by a leech and it really wasn't so bad. I think I could do this for a career if I had to. ha ha!

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  8. "...really sucks." HA! I don't think I could have imagined those words coming from your mouth - or keyboard - in any other context. ;)

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