Port Parham, a small seaside resort is on the eastern side of the Yorke Peninsula in South Australia. For decades it's been the weekend escape for people from the Barossa Valley and other nearby towns.
We were fortunate enough to be invited to stay overnight by friends who have a beach shack.
Port Parham has a tide that recedes several hundred metres from the beach, good fishing and especially, good crabbing opportunities.
Fishermen designed a vehicle called a jinker to tow their boats across the sand to the water and back. Crabs could be gotten with rakes that simply scoop them out of the water and of course there are rules regarding the minimum size permitted and how many can be taken daily. Females with eggs are protected and must be thrown back into the water.
I'm not sure how one determines what a female crab looks like, but those who are real fishermen obviously know.
We didn't go crabbing during our overnight stay, but did enjoy a dinner of crabs and prawns and a lovely bottle of McGuigans cabernat-shiraz.
Here you can see our table of crabs and prawns.
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