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A voice for New England’s working waterfronts: Dustin Delano

November 21, 2025 — For as long as he can remember, Dustin Delano’s life has been measured by the tides. He was just a small child when he first climbed aboard his father’s lobster boat on Maine’s Midcoast- a kid curled up on the fish tote full of rope while his dad hauled traps.

“He was a young, single father in his early twenties- working hard as a lobsterman while raising a son,” Delano recalled. “I’d help his sternum fill bait bags and band lobsters.”

That early introduction to the scent of salty air, a diesel hum, and determination set the course for Delano’s life. His father showed him what it meant to work for every dollar, and his mother’s foster father, Stephen Lash, taught him the importance of giving back. With their help, Delano pieced together his first set of traps- some used gear from his dad, and a few used traps fronted by Lash until he could afford to pay for them on his own. At just 11 years old, he was hauling by hand from a 17-foot wooden skiff powered by a 25-horse Yamaha.

“I wasn’t allowed to go out alone,” he remembered. “So, I’d wait for my father to get back from a long day of lobstering, and together we’d head back out to haul my traps in the afternoon. I can still hear him saying, ‘Hurry up and pull that trap up- I don’t want to be out here all night!’”

Those early days and long afternoons on the water, with laughter mixed with lessons, shaped Delano’s work ethic. He saved every cent he could and, with the help of family and friends, restored a 34-foot wooden lobster boat called Provider during his senior year of high school. “Every bit of my savings went into getting that boat ready,” he said. “It marked the beginning of my deep and lasting love for the lobster fishery.”

Rooted in the rhythm of Maine’s coast

Today, Delano speaks about the fishery with the same sense of purpose that has driven generations of Maine lobstermen. “The fishery isn’t just a job for me- It’s a foundation of who I am,” he said. “Every sunrise over the bay, every haul of the trap, every conversation at the wharf- it’s part of the rhythm of life that has shaped generations before me and continues to define who we are today.”

That deep sense of place — and of responsibility to it — has always guided Delano’s decisions. He’s quick to note that Maine’s fishing communities are built on more than boats and traps; they’re sustained by neighbors who lend a hand, families who mend gear together, and a shared commitment to stewardship. “Our fishery isn’t just about the catch. It’s about protecting a way of life that connects us to the ocean, to each other, and to something larger than ourselves,” he said. “Preserving it isn’t optional, it’s a responsibility.”

Read the full article at National Fisherman

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