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After decades battled with cruel water and risking their lives on the Bering Bering Sea, “Deadly Catch” star Captain Sig Hansen admitted that he is starting to see things differently – especially when it comes to retirement.
For a long time of the Hit Discovery Channel series, Star confessed that fear, loss and family had changed their view, and although the 59 -year -old last year said that he had no plans to call it, he has now rethinked.
“Okay, I’m a fisherman. You remember, you are talking to a professional false here,” Hansen joked in an interview. People“No, I think I have got some more years. I think all the time and when I think about ‘retirement’, it’s only because I have lost so many people, and every time we go out on water, I am more afraid.”
‘Deadlist Catch’ on the challenge of keeping men alive in the hit series
North Western captain Sig Hansen posing on Adak Island (discovery Channel)
Hansen said that it has become difficult to ignore fear as he and his crew have unfortunate 50 -foot seas in a trusted water.
“A part of it is just, you think about your own mortality, and I am afraid,” Hansen said.
Watch: Sig Hansen has shared the experiences of life-threatening, which he is facing on ‘Deadly Catch’
“I do not have the same mindset that I had earlier, where you see everything as a challenge. And it is still challenging, but it’s not the same.”
Hansen continued, “I have gone there, have done this, and now I want to spend more time with my family, my wife, look at all the years and decades that he is waiting for me. It has met in another way, and so you see things differently, it is all.”
The latest season of “Deadlist Catch” was Friday’s premiere. (discovery Channel)
Norwegian-American-American intimidated countless storms and personal health during its time on “Deadly Catch”, including heart attack in 2016 and emotional toll of losing fellow fishermen for years.
While Hansen is not quite ready to hang his shoes, he reported that their priorities may shift, as the call of the house is growing loudly compared to sea calls.
“I will continue to do this,” he says about captaining Northwestern. “But retirement is clear.”
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Sig Hansen of “Deadlist Catch” had earlier told Fox News Digital that it is a challenge to protect his men. (Getty image)
These days, Hansen has a new reason to stay close to the house.
“I have now found four grandchildren,” he continued to share with people. “I used to laugh at all these old-time when they used to brag about their grandparents and talk about how this is their whole world. I am liked, ‘You guys are crazy. Can we not talk about fishing?” And now, I am one of those people.
In season 21, in the premiere of “Deadlist Catch”, which broadcast on Friday, Hansen along with captain Jonathan Hilstrans left both of them in search of a rumored king cob and turned to Edak Island.
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Time bandit co-priest, experienced fishermen closed the gold crowd of a modern day-but the rare crab race took a dangerous turn when anarchy forced Captain Jake Anderson’s crew to leave the ship.
Sig Hansen said that he wanted to focus more on his family. (Getty image)
As the crew pushed into unwanted water to secure attractive dhona, they combined with brutal circumstances and dangerous mechanical failures-transformed into a fight for a fight for crabs.
The “Deadly Catch” broadcasts on the 8PM ET/PT on Discovery Channel on Friday.
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