Hi everyone. I am still looking for
Saanich Inlet fishing stories and history of its fishing to put an e-book
together while we still have many of the people around who made the history.
You can send them to dcreid@catchsalmonbc.com
or to Mike Rose: mike-rose@shaw.ca.
Please come forward. And, yes, Jack James, I will catch up with you. I have
just been slow.
Here is a story of mine:
The
SS Guppy II
My parents used to live on Coles Bay
across the water from Jimmy Gilbert’s house. I came into use of my
brother-in-law’s ‘whaling dory’ for fishing. It had a faded 2.5 HP Evinrude
that was far more reliable than it looked.
The ‘vessel’ was designed well, but he
had scaled it down so the boat was squished shorter to 9’2”, a tub far too
buoyant for mere water. It floated on air. He had to mix and add two bags of
cement to the inside so it would draw a few inches of water. In other respects,
it was properly built with a sandwich core of fibreglass matt on wooden ribs,
then glassed on top, both inside and out. Nothing could sink it, and on the
plus side it couldn’t be stolen either, as it weighed at least 250 pounds.
In my crumby, rubber, hip waders, I dragged
it down to the water, launched it and climbed aboard. There was one rule: the
engine had to be brought up from the beach every time I used it. The
unstealable SS Guppy II could be left on the beach because no one strong enough
to steal it would be dumb enough to want it. A ‘sleek’ white hull with
Mediterranean blue gunwhales, oar locks, a mid-ship seat and a helmsman bench.
Arrgh Billy.
I cut my fishing teeth in this ‘craft’,
learning the buoy off the Dyer Rocks, fishing the gully across the Bay, down
past Gilbert’s house, to the Yellow House, known so because it was, well,
yellow. In between was a hotspot I called ‘The Gas Station’ because it had a
raised deck and cherry picker and looked like a gas station, though it was just
a boat house.
One day, trolling along the Gilbert
side, I bagged a nice ling cod, a chinook of five pounds, and with frost all
over me and the seat, putted past several fellows in a big warm boat, who had,
thus far, caught nothing. And, of course, just then, I got a big bite on the
strip on the other side of a two pound lead ball.
I didn’t have a net (and still don’t
really use one much) and the fish war far too big to get in the boat. So I
towed the fish on the surface for half a mile trying to catch up to the
Cadillac of sporting fellows, and called for their net.
My other rod still fishing, and their
several tips on my side, I manoeuvred in, took the net, and pulled out to net
the fish, though they offered, noting my decidedly challenged boat, the frost
on my nose, and my rod with electrician taped guides. To them I looked a poor
cousin, a Grapes of Wrath relative.
When I finally scooped the fish, it was
far too big for the net, and with its head in the mesh, and the rest of it
hanging out the back end, I lifted it, as heavy as the boat itself, and once in
the boat chased it around with a rock trying to bean it a good one.
My Evinrude at max knots, I hunted down
the boat full of sports, weaved in among the rod tips, handed off the net,
pulled out to run alongside and say thanks. I lifted up my first big spring, one
hand in each of the gill openings, and strained it high for good viewing. The
mouths of all the sports dropped several inches, and it just added to the smile
on my face. I casually asked how they had been doing and was told not a sniff.
So I held up the cod and five pounder,
and offered it to them. They politely declined. I was as chuffed as the
Michelin Tire man, and putted off across the bay, to land my first big fish –
24 pounds, in April no less. I was some impressed. But more so with my success
in a boat of so little worth no one would steal it, and on the other hand, the
million dollars of high-tech stuff and zero fish.
The SS Guppy II served me well for the
next few years, as I got to know the Ardmore cliff, and the spine of rock that
runs north from the buoy to two thirds across Coles Bay toward the Yellow
House. Structure, the thing of chinook, I memorized.
One summer night, on water so calm it
looked like I could have walked out there, I putted out to the spar buoy, and
dropped my 40 gram black (works better than green in Coles Bay) Stingsilda from
my state of the art Daiwa 275, anodyzed aluminium reel into the twinkling
school of just-hatched herring, perhaps 1.5 inches long.
I looked across the water to Bamberton,
that later I was to get to know well, fishing planers and wire line. On the
Malahat ridge was a horizontal white line coming down the wall. A puff of wind
hit my face, and I realized it was a storm blowing in. When the line hit sea
level, several waterspouts disappeared up into the clouds.
At max speed, 3 knots, I knew I was in
serious trouble it I stayed half a mile off shore, and with the waves building
to one foot, following me, then two, then three, my hat blew off into the sea,
I beetled shoreward. By the time I reached Dyer rocks, the waves coming up my
stern exceeded 6 feet tall and the wind had climbed to 40 knots.
In my little boat I was some afraid, so
I watched the waves crash down on me and try to steer straight out of them,
without going through the wave in front of me before my stern was lifted high
and over the wave coming at me, then under me. I turned to look for the beach,
and directly in front, having come from nowhere, was a tugboat, straining to
keep a four hundred yard long boom of logs, presumably lifted from the beach,
from being dragged back onto the beach, and
perhaps the tugboat two.
This was, at that time, the scariest
experience of my limited ocean captain experience. I had no choice but to turn
sideways to the 7 foot seas in my nine foot boat, with 112 inches of freeboard.
I really didn’t think I was going to make it all the way to out run the boom
and tugboat. Each wave was a new introduction to death.
But I did finally out run the tug, and
went flying by him at 3 knots, both of us eyeing one another with the wild
expression of “Where the F#*$%&*@#$ did you come from?” I manoeuvred between
the dock next door and the 20 foot rock on our side, and from seven feet high
was dropped hard on the granite. Waist deep in foam, I yanked the boat the
waves almost deposited on top of me, up on the logs thrown high by a previous
storm. After several expletives, I was able to clip the line from the nose ring
of the bow to the beach rock. Up to my chest in water, 25 pounds of Evinrude
kept me steady, heading to the rock steps and up the bank to safety.
I left my rods, reels, tackle boxes, gas
can, oars and the etceteras in the boat and retired to a night of rain and shrieking Sitka spruce
lining the seawall. In the morning, all the logs had been moved like
toothpicks, and the beach was rearranged. When I got to the boat line – no boat
in sight – I dragged it out of the gravel. There on its end was the ring to the
bow, the screw having been pulled free. But no SS Guppy II.
I never did find the boat, only scraps
of fibreglass. The boat had been pounded into nothing over night from a gargantuan
250 pounds into pieces too small to find. My tackle box had been thrown high
into the cliff bushes. My rods, reels, the contents of my tackle box had
disappeared, along with the oars and gas can. I found one metal dodger sticking
out of the beach but that was all. Arrgh Billy.
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