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found difficulty in getting to work. The end result was that not one of the Kalk Bay
fishermen who moved out of Kalk Bay ever had a son coming back to work at Kalk
Bay. The children were living in a different environment which they themselves then
joined as adults.
References
Biden, C. L. (1930) Sea angling fishes of the Cape, London.
Colbeck, W. R. (1891) Fish and Fishing in Cape Waters, The Cape Illustrated
Magazine, vol. II, No.2, October 1891.
Bisset, R. A. (1976) Hout Bay: a developmental strategy. Unpublished MURP thesis,
UCT.
De Jong, J. G. (1974) Die Ontwikkeling van die Seevisserye aan die Kaapkolonie
1890-1910, Unpublished Honours Dissertation,UCT.
Grant, D. (1986) Bokkoms, Boycott, and the Bo Kaap: The Decline of the Rogge Bay
Fishing Industry between 1890-1920. Unpublished Honours Dissertation, UCT.
Kilian, D. (1994) Change, Conflict and Sense of Place: A Case Study of the Inshore
Fishing Community in the Victoria and Alfred Waterfront, MA Dissertation, Dept.
Environmental and Geographical Science, UCT.
Kirkaldy, A. (1988) “The sea is in our blood” – Community and Craft in Kalk Bay,
c. 1880-1939. Unpublished MA Thesis, Dept. of History, UCT.
Navid, H. (1944) A sociological survey of a South African fishing village.
Unpublished MA thesis, UCT.