WORKING
Story by Andrew Glazer; photo by Sean Hiller
HE IS ...
An enemy to barnacles.
FROM COWS TO BOATS
Abe Parra, 38, began his long career as a ship repairman at Larson’s
Shipyard in 1980. He had recently arrived from Mexico, leaving behind 18
brothers and sisters, to see how life was in the United States.
“You heard all these stories,” he said, as he scraped the rotted, wooden
hull of a 30-foot, 1940s-era yacht. He was preparing the ship for a race.
“I had to see for myself.”
While Parra grew up on a ranch two hours away from seaside Acapulco in a
200-person village called Santa Barbara, he says he never spent much time
near the ocean.
Now, he is rarely more than 20 yards away from it.
“I didn’t want to work on a ranch my whole life,” he said.
SWABBING DECKS
After meeting Al Larson, owner of the shipyard and perennialdock denizen
who passed away two weeks ago, Parra knew he would be happy spending much
of his life crawling under ships.
Larson put Parra, then 17 years old, to work swabbing decks and sweeping
the floors of the shipyard. But Larson also began sharing his extensive
knowledge of boats -- he helped prepare World War II ships in Long Beach
-- with his young protege.
The two became close friends. Larson helped teach Parra English.
A TRUE TRADESMAN
When Larson retired a few years ago, Parra took what he learned even
further. The shipyard, built in 1947, had never been equipped to hoist
large vessels from the water.
Parra invented and designed a steel cradle for the boats. He and his crew
are now able to lift large boats out of the water, sit them on the cradle
and repair and repaint the hulls.
“He knows almost everything, especially wooden boats,” said Nancy Dixon,
president of the shipyard. “And it’s almost a lost trade. Very few people
are interested in labor jobs anymore, with the popularity of computers.”
HEAVEN AND HULLS
Parra has found a little piece of heaven under the hulls of yachts.
“I don’t like to be at home,” he said. “But I love it out here.”
After work, Parra and his four-man crew -- who affectionately call him
“El Jefe,” Spanish for “the chief” -- sit by the boats and drink beer
together.
“We laugh and joke around and talk about work,” he said.
On some Saturdays, Parra brings one of his four children -- 8-year-old
Dennis -- to the shipyard to pass on his knowledge.
“He really wants to learn,” Parra said.
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