Captain Refuses to Step Down Despite Health Warnings on Deadliest Catch
“I don’t want anybody knocking me off my throne just yet,” said the sea captain.
The captain of the F/V Northwestern isn’t ready to say goodbye to his seafaring days.
Longtime Deadliest Catch star Sig Hansen recently told PEOPLE that he is well aware of all the chatter surrounding his age and health. But as far as he’s concerned, retirement is still a few years away.
“I keep hearing those rumors myself. The more I hear that, the more I kind of want to rebel and not do that,” Hansen replied when asked if he has plans to step away in the Thursday interview. “I don’t see retiring anytime soon.”
He continued, “Obviously, I want to see my daughter [Captain Mandy Hansen] move in and partake more, but she had her children, our grandchildren, so that didn’t happen right away. My son-in-law Clark [Pederson] has been stepping up more and more, and he’s perfectly capable. But for me, that’s still kind of an ego thing and I don’t want to retire just yet.”
The captain of the F/V Northwestern isn’t ready to say goodbye to his seafaring days.
Longtime Deadliest Catch star Sig Hansen recently told PEOPLE that he is well aware of all the chatter surrounding his age and health. But as far as he’s concerned, retirement is still a few years away.
“I keep hearing those rumors myself. The more I hear that, the more I kind of want to rebel and not do that,” Hansen replied when asked if he has plans to step away in the Thursday interview. “I don’t see retiring anytime soon.”
He continued, “Obviously, I want to see my daughter [Captain Mandy Hansen] move in and partake more, but she had her children, our grandchildren, so that didn’t happen right away. My son-in-law Clark [Pederson] has been stepping up more and more, and he’s perfectly capable. But for me, that’s still kind of an ego thing and I don’t want to retire just yet.”
Hansen added that even when the time does come for him to hand the reins over to someone else, he can’t imagine being wholly disconnected from the job.
“I don’t think I could ever fully retire. Even if someone else was running the boat, your mind is still active,” he said. “You’re thinking about the weather, where they’re at. You can never turn it off. I don’t think I’d respect myself if I could just walk away from it completely.”
Hansen has previously gone back and forth on the subject of his eventual retirement, often hinting that it is quite a while away, while on other occasions, admitting to giving it some serious thought. Just last year, Hansen told PEOPLE that fear of death had been weighing on his choice.
“I think I’ve got a few more years left in me. I think about it all the time, and when I do think about ‘retiring,’ it’s only because I’ve lost so many people, and I’m more fearful every time we go out on the water,” he admitted. “Part of it is just, you think about your own mortality, and I’m fearful.”
He added, “I don’t have the same mentality I did as before, where you look at everything as a challenge. And it’s still challenging, but it’s not the same.”
The current season of Deadliest Catch is grappling with a particularly heartbreaking story: the death of crew member Todd Meadows, the 25-year-old deckhand who fell overboard the fishing vessel Aleutian Lady on Feb. 25. He was recovered by his fellow crew members, who attempted to resuscitate him, but he remained unresponsive. He died of “probably hypothermia” after being submerged in the freezing waters.
The premiere episode of season 22 paid tribute to Meadows, who has also remained present throughout the season via footage captured prior to the accident.



