|
Captain's
log
A
shark tale with a lasting impression
We were bundled up and blowing hot air into our
cupped hands, trying to warm up. It was 0700 on a frigid winter morning
and I was giving my passengers the safety equipment orientation before
casting off and heading to sea. Suddenly my friend, Mike, looked across
the parking lot and began to laugh. We all turned to stare in awe at the
teenage competition swimmers standing around the outdoors Los Baños
del Mar pool in their swimming suits. That certainly put us in our places
and we quit acting like wussies!
Mike had called me to make a special arrangement. Hes a general
contractor Ive known for years. He had visitors in town an
old friend and his wife from Michigan. The friend, Vince, is a butcher
and brought along some of his private reserve beef jerky. Yummy! Mike
asked if I had some work that needed done on my house for a work exchange.
Hey, Im up for that! So we steamed out of port that cold morning
in search of big game with big teeth.
After buying a couple of scoops of live bait from the bait receiver near
the harbor entrance, we jigged up a few lively mackerel. Sharks love those
macks. Then we cranked up my big outboards and dang near flew down coast
to drift inside the area we call the Armpit (Lovely name, eh?). I had
seen some thresher sharks in the area over the past week and figured we
had a good chance. A couple of hours later, my passengers seemed to be
losing confidence. Being a charter captain, I know how much patience can
be required. I kept chumming and kept a live mackerel working on a heavy
rig with 60 pound mono line. We waited.
I spotted it first
the phantom shape of a shark gliding under the
boat. I tried baiting it with mackerel, anchovies and sardines. The shark
was interested but wouldnt commit (male shark, naturally). Finally,
in exasperation, I grabbed the bag of jerky and put some private reserve
on the hook. Ten seconds later we all watched the shark swim up and inhale
the bait. Did the shark find the jerky irresistible, or was it just time
for it to bite? I asked that shark, but he wouldnt say.
It was a big thresher, better than 200 pounds. I spun down the drag to
the right setting and swung hard enough to lift most critters right out
of the water. The shark didnt budge. I handed the rod to the butcher,
grinned at him and said, Hold on, things are about to get interesting!
On queue, the thresher bolted about 75 yards while the reels drag
screamed in protest, Vince stood in wide-eyed astonishment, and I held
the back of his shirt collar to keep him aboard. Then the shark went airborne
repeatedly, putting on a truly magnificent show.
Each of us took turns pulling on that powerful beast and the fight lasted
the better part of an hour. With the shark alongside and all worn out,
it was almost time to bring it aboard
but not quite. I cinched a
loop over the sharks tail and towed it backward to weaken it. Then
I slit the tummy in the water. Finally I decided to bring it aboard. I
sent Vince and his wife up on the bridge. Mike and I opened the transom
door and hauled that heavy load into the cockpit. Thats when the
shark woke up, remembering how mad he was!
I dove on the head and Mike jumped on that long thrashing tail. The shark
was picking us both up and slamming us on the deck repeatedly, while we
roared and hooted and hollered. I had the sharks head pinned down,
so I asked the butcher to come down and cut it off to slow the critter
down. Now Im sure the man is a great butcher back at home in his
shop, but he was a mite excited at this point and his cutting moves were
not exactly smooth and precise. The blade jumped out of the shark and
impaled my index finger (right hand) into the bone. I pulled the knife
out, wrapped a rag around my bloody finger and finished the job myself.
So in the end, the shark didnt hurt me, but I was injured by a much
more dangerous critter
man!
Back at the dock, the guys took off to buy big coolers. We cut the delicious
shark into pieces to fit each cooler. The last I saw of it was a line
of three full coolers with a head lying at one end and the tail at the
other. It was quite a sight. It was quite a day! I love chartering!
Capt. David Bacon
owns and operates WaveWalker Charters. He can be contacted at www.wavewalker.com.
|