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VIEWPOINT
By
Ken Knutsen
Commercial
fishing is a rather chancy business as perhaps many of you
know, making it alluring to those independent spirits who
make a living this way. According to a recent study, commercial
fishing was ranked as the most dangerous. But what a boring
world it would be if everything were predictable!
When
I started fishing commercially over 30 years ago, I had
never gone to sea; I didnt even know what a tide-rip
was really! Early on, I asked a tough old Norwegian
curmudgeon for advice. Scornfully, he replied set
across the tides and dont piss into the wind.
Good advice as far as it goes, I suppose.
Even
with experience, unforseen events often plague net fishers
weather, breakdowns, dogfish, hake, logs, kelp beds
and tide-rips, to name a few. Tide-rips, erratic, swirling
tidal currents, can be particularly troublesome as the following
tale will illustrate: A near disaster became an almost comical
farce while fishing Hood Canal, oh so many years ago now.
It
was a typical fall evening rather foreboding, low
clouds, dank and gloomy. The sea was choppy but not rough.
I had set my net at the entrance about a half-mile from
Foul Weather Bluff.
Some
time passed; the tides were fast and furious. Soon a rip-tide
encompassed my boat, swirling me over the cork line several
times. I had not heard it coming because of the noisy chop.
I saw that I was moving to the shoals at Foul Weather, so
I hurried to reel in the net. To my surprise and chagrin,
my net had filled with tons of jellyfish. The gear belts
were squealing and soon the reel stalled.
Sweating
profusely, I grabbed a butcher knife, leaned over the stern
and slashed away at the web. Sweat poured into my eyes,
almost blinding me. Up to my armpits, I hand-emptied the
net; poisons from the jellies infiltrated my body and the
stinging was pretty bad.
Somehow,
I managed to clear the net, although I lost perhaps 20 fathoms
of gear. Then my eyeglasses fell overboard; gads, I didnt
have another pair aboard!
What
to do now? It was pitch dark but I could see the fuzzy lights
on shore. I remembered there was a small harbor just inside
Foul Weather; somehow I had to get there.
I steered
by boat from a mental picture in my mind and cautiously
anchored up. I then spent hours cleaning up and soothing
the stinging rash over much of my body. Then to bed.
I awoke
near dawn. I heard voices nearby, presumably from a seiner.
Oh, hell be okay when the tide comes in
one crewman said. Whats going on here? I leapt from
my bunk and hurried up to the deck. All around me was dry
land. I had anchored in a little pool just deep enough to
float my boat!
I reflect:
tough luck old chap that I lost some gear and fishing time.
But it sure could have been worse; fate was kind to me,and
I smile.
I made
sure to have a spare pair of spectacles aboard thereafter!
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