The ocean treats everybody equal, for those not prepared it shows no mercy. In the years we lived in Gold Beach, along the southern Oregon coast we heard about a number of incidents and a few fatalities out at sea. Two Forest Service co-workers went fishing near the mouth of the Pistol River, south of Gold Beach. One turned his back to the ocean for a minute to discipline his dog. A sneaker wave came in behind him taking him and his dog out to sea. The other co-worker looked on in horror not able to do anything to save them. Their bodies were never found.
North of Gold
Beach along the coast there are hidden coves that were used by smugglers using
small boats or zodiacs to bring in drugs from larger ships out at seas. One night law enforcement got wise to what
was going on. In a panic much of the
cargo, high grade marijuana wrapped in waterproof packages, was dumped into the
ocean and washed ashore near Gold Beach.
The next day the beach was filled with beach combers collecting the
debris and there was much doubt how much of it was turned over to the
authorities.
My boss,
Earl, had a small boat with an outboard engine and would go out over the Rogue
River bar into the ocean where he would fish whenever conditions were right. There was a seasonal Coast Guard station at
the mouth of the Rogue River that would respond to any bar crossing that did not
go well. This bar was notorious for
sediment building up on the south end of the opening between the jetties, and
the only way was to enter on the north end which could be narrow at times. Earl told about one time he was out at sea
fishing and the fog came in, restricting his view of the jetties. He knew to find the buoys and follow a compass
course from each ocean buoy to make it to the river. The
only problem was, would the compass bearing from the last buoy take him over
the south entrance or north entrance?
He put full throttle to the engine and luckily made it through the north
entrance of the bar.
Earl would
invite me to go fishing with him, but I was reluctant hearing all the incidents
with small crafts on the ocean. During
the fall the ocean would settle down and some days looked like a big pond with
no white caps or swells. On one of these days Earl persuaded me to go
with him and off we went with a few beers for enlightenment. Earl was a knowledgeable sailor, had been in
the Navy and his boat was well equipped with all the necessary items in case of
an emergency. He had a CB radio with a base
set at his home where his wife could be called about our whereabouts. We made it over the bar with no problems and
made our way out to some rocky outcrops where there was good bottom fishing for
red snapper and ling cod. These rocks
were covered with sea lions. While
fishing Earl had to make sure the boat did not drift into the rocks, so he
would move it out until it would drift again.
Some of those seas lions looked like they would eat us if we ended up on
the rocks. At the end of the day we
made it home in one piece with all kinds of bottom fish to fill our freezers.
There was
another co-worker that had bought a jet boat, which are intended to be used on
the river, not the ocean. One day he
and some other Forest Service people took it out on the ocean to fish about a
mile south of the mouth of the Rogue River.
They had no problems getting over the bar and the sea was fairly calm. Within a few hours the north wind was
blowing and the swells getting bigger.
They headed back toward the river with full throttle, bouncing over the
swells and at times the suction pump could not take in water due to rise and
fall of the boat. It only took them 20 minutes
or less to get to their fishing spot, but the return trip took two hours as
they fought the wind and swells. Some
on board were tempted to jump ship and try to swim to shore, which was just beyond
the breakers or less than an eighth of a mile.
All stayed with the boat and
eventually made it back. It was
something they never repeated.
When I
worked for the Forest Service at Cottage Grove, I volunteered for a work detail
to the Tongass National Forest in Alaska in September of 1993. We worked out of the Rowan Bay logging camp
on Kuiu Island. There was a Forest
Service boat there we used to access sections of the island where roads had not
been constructed. After work hours we
were allowed to use the boat for fishing as there was not much other
entertainment there and it was a dry camp—no alcohol allowed. One evening after dinner the crew leader
Don and I took the boat out to catch halibut in the channel outside the
bay. We were fishing about an eighth of
mile from shore where some Orca whales were also going after fish. They were not happy with us in their waters
as they bounced against the boat and surfaced under the boat, making us fear
they could overturn us. The thought
raced through me of having to swim to shore and could I make it as 20 minutes
in these waters was about the limit for a human to survive. One of the whales got snagged by Don’s hook
and the fishing line, a small cable was racing off his reel as he was trying to
hold on to the pole in fear of losing it all.
He told me to get my pocket knife out and try to cut the line which I
was able to do. During all this the
whale was actually pulling the boat away from the shore line. We made it back to camp with no fish, but
were content with surviving the ordeal.
Today I feel
lucky to have made it this far, and for me the ocean is there to look at and admire
from a distance, while standing on solid land.
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