Ramanathapuram: The day starts as early as 6 am for women like Nambu in her sixties from Chinnapalam and along with her neighbours, she heads to the sea.
Spread in 10,500 square kilometres, Gulf of Mannar is a rich marine national park which is home for 3600 more marine flora and fauna species. There are also more than seven tiny islets in this part of the sea around which these women collect the seaweed.
Seafaring and fishing are conventionally kept as men's bastion as the coastal communities are sort of rigid to keep the women confined to the shores.
But there are women who have decided to eke out a living from the sea they are kept away from and the women along the coastal villages of Ramanathapuram are one such sect. For decades, these women have found that seaweed available in these waters fetch a price through which they can fend for them and their families as alcoholism weans away the earnings of their seafaring men.
"I have been collecting seaweeds for last 52 years", quipped Nambu as she gets busy adjusting the plastic sack behind her back and the scuba glass in her head. In a second, she disappears into the shallow waters to scour the seaweed, quickly bagging it in her backpack before disappearing again into the blue waters.
Her colleague, Mari, who is also in her sixties, has been collecting seaweeds since she was seven years old. "The availability of seaweed depends on the season. We collect in the southern part of the islands for six months and shift to northern part for the rest of six months", says the elderly woman.
After collecting two bags full, they float their collection using a buoy, before venturing further into the sea. They wind up around 2 pm and head towards drying their catch. Depending on the catch, these women make anywhere from 300 to 600 rupees.