This THIS WAS NO BOATING
ACCIDENT
by Jim Austin
* Richard Dreyfus's remark to the coroner upon viewing the
shark-ravaged remains of a swimmer in the movie "Jaws".
When I was transferred to Kavieng in New
Ireland Province from the Highlands of Papua New Guinea, I had
heard nothing one way or the other about its potential for sport
fishing. My first trip to the waterfront market settled the
question quickly and dramatically. A wizened fellow of
indeterminate years was sitting behind a narrow barred Spanish
mackerel of heroic proportions.
Trying to be casual I whizzed over to
his stall and asked in New Guinea Pidgin "yu kisim we?"
(where did you get it) "Long hap" (over there), he
replied cryptically, pointing to the ocean. Armed with this piece
of inside information, I repaired to the Kavieng Club, a beer
joint where lager and hot air were present in vast quantities. By
the bartender, I was told of a consortium of game fishing
enthusiasts who were trolling for an investor to defray expenses
on a new 120 HP Evinrude engine for their boat. We soon met and
before the introductions were over I was readily embraced by the
three piscators and deftly relieved of 2200.00 kina (about
$2400).
My first sight of the
"Mahseer", an 18 foot half cabin fiberglass cruiser,
was disquieting. The Mahseer -- named after the hard fighting
Indian freshwater fish -- was a study in salt water corrosion and
fiberglass fatigue. Its pre-war trailer was a Daliesque rust
sculpture. Fortunately, the boat only had to be towed across the
street to be launched into Kavieng harbor. The jewel in the midst
of all this squalor was a brand new 120 HP Evinrude outboard
bolted to the Mahseer's grotty transom like a Rolex watch on a
bag lady's wrist.
My first fishing trip on the Mahseer
will live in my memory for a very long time (unless I can find a
really good psychotherapist). I had three accomplices: Roland
Allbrook, a secondary school inspector with just enough
overhanging brow and underslung jaw to suggest prize fighting
rather than classroom experience; Alan Jousiffe, a British
expatriate of dubious character; and Tony Meehan, local hotelier,
PNG citizen and self-professed expert on mackerel and wahoo
fishing in New Ireland waters.
The shrieking of ungreased wheel
bearings announced our departure from Roland's yard to our launch
point. I was pleased to see a small group of the local people
smiling, laughing and pointing as the rusty winch cable parted
like a rifle shot and the Mahseer lurched into the green-blue
water of Kavieng harbor. I chose to regard their behavior as some
sort of local ritual, wishing our craft a safe journey and good
fishing. The labored disregard of my associates, apart from a few
barely audible curses, dispelled those naive notions.
I had just found a seat on one of many
empty beer crates when the captain put the hammer down and that
old tub took off like a scalded tomcat. We carved a twisting
course around the harbor markers to the north, passing several
travel poster tropical islands on our way to Albatross Strait and
the west coast of New Ireland. Along the way we whipped by flocks
of birds feasting on baitfish boiled to the surface by schools of
marauding skipjack tuna.
We finally emerged from Albatross Strait
into the Bismarck Sea with Djaul Island a hazy palisade of palm
trees in the distance to our port side. It was then that two Penn
6/0 reels solidly salt-bonded to game rods of different lengths
and make were jammed into homemade PVC rod-holders. Into the
drink went two rubber squid at the end of 45 pound test line and
three feet of wire trace.
My heart raced as my mind's eye observed
a pack of ravenous wahoos darting towards our lures. After about
an hour of trolling at various speeds, the rubber squids had
gotten a good wash and the crew was on the down side of a crate
of South Pacific Lager.
Until I came to Kavieng I wasn't one to
drink alcohol before seven in the morning, but it was de rigeur
on the Mahseer. By our third bottle each we all realized that our
lack of success was all Meehan's fault. After savaging the poor
innkeeper verbally for a few minutes we set about casting for the
skipjack tuna which were feeding in large numbers not far from
the boat. Each of us caught 3 or 4 of these feisty little 3 to 6
pound battlers until we had 12 in the fish box.
It was then that inspiration chanced
upon Roland. "Lets go over to Stephan Strait and catch a
shark", he boomed enthusiastically. On the way over to the
strait Roland explained that a hemorrhaging tuna rigged through
the eyes with a large stainless steel hook tied to 6 feet of 100
pound braided trace fomented great interest among the sinister
carnivores in gray trenchcoats. This sounded like exciting stuff,
fishing for whaler sharks in darkest New Guinea. Actually it was
off the coast of New Guinea and it wasn't the least bit dark -
but you know what I mean.
Upon arrival I was presented with
"The Shark Rod", which appeared to be an ancient Penn
12/0 reel with about twenty miles of 80 pound test line mounted
on a barge pole with 6 roller guides which hadn't rolled since
World War II. The sacrificial tuna was eyeballed and lowered into
the swirling water at the edge of the drop-off. It took all of 3
minutes of drifting before the elderly Penn started to grate as
the sand in the works announced the arrival of my first whaler
shark. Line began screaming out to sea and I was advised by my
audience to screw the drag on full bore and put my back into it.
This I did and the run stopped as the barge pole bent grudgingly
into a boomerang shape. Feeling some slack, I cranked furiously
and soon had most of the line back on the reel. The trace swivel
appeared next, with my bloodthirsty man-eater lurking beneath the
hull.
"Now what are you going to do with
it", chortled Alan as he and the others sat back guzzling
lagers. I gave the rod another heave. Up from underneath the hull
came a dark blue missile with extended pectorals and a pointed
face about the size of a Soviet Oscar class submarine.
"Funny looking shark", I remarked in a disappointed
manner. I expected more thrashing around and gnashing of teeth.
Roland glanced over the side and promptly sent six ounces of beer
down the wrong tube.
"Mackerel", he wheezed. Alan
and Tony charged over to the edge of the Mahseer which listed at
a frightening angle. This gave the mackerel slack and the hook
drifted out of the ragged hole incised when I screwed the drag on
full bore. The scramble that followed is still just a blur, but
by the time the bite went off we had four mackerel, including two
over 40 pounds and one bloody big barracuda.
By this time it was 9:00 am and Alan
elected to gut our catch. He was merrily flinging mackerel
entrails over the side when the final tuna bait was snarfled by
yet another victim. Alan grabbed the rod and shortly had a small
reef shark circling beside the boat. Roland alertly reached over
the side and grabbed the little fellow by the tail and hauled him
half way into the boat. Alan then leaned over the side and belted
the unfortunate creature over the cartilaginous brain-box with a
length of half inch galvanized plumbing pipe.
Unhappy at the sequence of events thus
far, the enraged selachian catapulted itself off the side of the
boat and, using Roland's grip as a fulcrum, levered itself
straight into Alan's mystified face. Several things happened
then. Roland dropped the shark while the rest of us broke into a
spontaneous Mexican hat dance trying to avoid the evil triangular
can-openers snapping like castanets at our feet. All of us danced
our way to the bow where we paused to assess Alan's face which
had a flap of cheek hanging to jaw level revealing a gory hole
from which had issued a quart or so of Alan's vital bodily
fluids. The bridge of his nose had a similar if less colorful
gash.
"Is it bad?" whimpered
Alan, his eyeballs bugged out like organ stops.
"No big deal", I said as I
fought to suppress my gag reflex.
"Just a scratch" croaked
Roland as he bashed Alan's assailant to sharkburger and
heaved him over the side.
At this juncture Tony began to recall
some first aid lessons he learned in reform school. He pulled a
cleaning rag out of the bilge and jammed it onto Alan's cheek,
thereby ensuring a future case of galloping tetanus. He then
instructed us to give him space and maintain his airways. We gave
him as much space as we could - given that we were in a confined
area in the middle of the ocean - and proceeded to Kavieng at
full throttle.
It was then that I considered asking for
my $2400.00 back, but I sensed the time was not right. Alan's
face was never a prize winner anyway, and I must admit the shark
bite didn't improve it any. Alan has since remarked that if he
hadn't bothered to get his cheek stitched he could have had his
teeth fixed without opening his mouth. He has fully recovered
from his ordeal and has cadged many drinks while embellishing the
story of the shark attack. His wife alone remains skeptical of
the tale despite our combined testimony that the injuries were
honorable.
I never did get around to asking for my
money back and I'm glad. Other than the occasional hangover, our
subsequent adventures didn't require any more emergency medical
attention. Now that I am stateside again I can begin to
appreciate our eccentric brand of angling in those virgin waters.
We were definitely more like the Marx Brothers than Mark Sosin,
but somehow I think Mark might have enjoyed our brand of fishing.
Once.
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