“My dad, Robert Hisler, was born in Pelly Oil Field, Baytown,” said Bill Hisler. “When he began working, he ran crew boats for the oil field in the bay. His dad, my grandfather, George W. Hisler, was a fisherman, but just to supplement the family income. He would catch shrimp for bait, back then, people didn’t eat shrimp that much, it was mostly used for bait. When they started eating it, people said unbelievably, ‘you eat that?’ He answered, yes, it’s better than the fish,” laughed Bill. “My grandad died when my dad was twelve years old,” added Bill somberly. “I’d have to say my dad got started full time in the fishing business about 1970. I had three uncles on my dad’s side that fished for a living also, so we made frequent trips to Chambers County, before we moved here. I remember when my Uncle Billy Gene Hisler built a shrimp boat in his front yard in Oak Island when I was about ten years old.” Besides being a fisherman, Billy was also a tugboat captain.
“Before we moved here, I remember coming in the sixties and spending three months gill netting down on Bolivar Island for speckled trout and red fish. We did that a couple of years in a row, we just camped out on the beach for two to three months. They outlawed gill netting on the beach about 1969-70. They still did a little gill netting in the bay and they still do, but it’s mostly all trot lining now. A gill net was about two football fields long.” “You’d have to stretch them out,” added George, “and the size of the mesh was about 3-4 inches, whatever size fish you were catching. They call it a gill net because their gills would get caught on the net and they couldn’t get away.” “I remember seine fishing,” interjected Susan Bollich. “Same thing,” said Bill, “The net would be about 900-feet-long with corks on the top and weights on the bottom. It would be piled ten feet high on the back of the boat It was just a long net, and you’d string it out and wrap the fish up then pull it onto the shore. Whoever’s around and wants to lean on the net, just start pulling on it, and puling on it, and pulling on it,” laughed Bill. “Nobody wanted the farthest post,” laughed Susan, ”but we loved doing it.” “You would also get in a boat and get behind them and make noise, banging on the side of the boat, to keep them from going back in that direction,” added Bill, “You’d just keep pushing them towards the shore When my dad moved here in 1970, he began peddling shrimp and oysters. He bought a little boat he named The Sweep. It was an old wooden hull boat 45-feet-long, and really narrow. I saw it years later and thought, man we were on that!” he said with a chuckle. When I was in high school dad bought a Menhaden pogie boat out of Louisiana and it wasn’t but about 40-foot long.” “Pogie boats were smaller boats put out by the 150-foot-long larger vessel to circle the schools of fish with nets,” added George. “The nets would then be pulled to the larger boat where a hose would be lowered to suck the fish into the boat. They were a really oily fish and the oil would be used to make things like WD40, make-up, dietary supplements, etc.,” he explained. “Dad restructured the pogie boat with decking and cabin and re-fitted it for shrimping. He called it the Captain Bob.” said Bill. “I was probably in the tenth grade at the time and dad had it in the front yard of our place on 563, near where the bait shop is now. I welded and worked on that boat, built the fuel tanks, whatever he’d let me do after school, and I say “let me do” cause I enjoyed working. Once it was ready, we worked it up and down the coast from Louisiana to Matagorda and Corpus Christi, oystering and shrimping, wherever the money was being made.”