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Working on the Edge: Surviving In the World's Most Dangerous Profession: King Crab Fishing on Alaska's High Seas
Working on the Edge: Surviving In the World's Most Dangerous Profession: King Crab Fishing on Alaska's High Seas
Working on the Edge: Surviving In the World's Most Dangerous Profession: King Crab Fishing on Alaska's High Seas
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Working on the Edge: Surviving In the World's Most Dangerous Profession: King Crab Fishing on Alaska's High Seas

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

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In a breathtaking, action-packed account that combines his personal story with the stories of survivors of the industry's most harrowing disasters, Spike Walker's Working on the Edge re-creates the boom years of Alaskan crab fishing and the crash that followed.

No profession pits man against nature more brutally than king crab fishing in the frigid, unpredictable waters of the Bering Sea. The yearly death toll is staggering (forty-two men in 1988 alone); the conditions are beyond most imaginations (90-mph Arctic winds, 25-foot seas, and super-human stretches of on-deck labor); but the payback, if one survives can be tens of thousands of dollars for a month-long season. Walker rivetingly depicts the modern-day gold rush that drew hundreds of fortune-and adventure-hunters to Alaska's dangerous waters.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateMar 15, 1993
ISBN9781466809338
Working on the Edge: Surviving In the World's Most Dangerous Profession: King Crab Fishing on Alaska's High Seas
Author

Spike Walker

Spike Walker spent nine seasons as a crewman aboard some of the most successful crab boats in the Alaskan fleet. While "working on the edge," the crewmen's term for laboring in the brutal outer reaches of the Bering Sea, Spike encountered 110-mph winds, rode out one of the worst storms in Alaska's history, worked nonstop for seventy-four hours without sleep, participated in record catches of king crab, saw ships sink, helped rescue their crews, and had close friends die at sea.  In addition to his crab-fishing experience, Spike Walker has worked in the offshore oilfields of Louisiana and Texas; along the Mississippi River as a certified, commercial deep-sea diver; and in Washington, Oregon, Idaho, and Alaska as a logger. He is the author of several works of nonfiction, including Working on the Edge, Nights of Ice, and Coming Back Alive.

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Rating: 3.7258064451612904 out of 5 stars
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  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    To maximize the sensation of coldness and wetness while reading Spike Walker's Working on the Edge you should really listen to Ralph Vaughn-Williams Antarctic Symphony. It captures the loneliness, hard work and intense cold of the crab industry off Alaska's Bering Strait shores. Walker's book is about the meteoric rise and precipitous fall of an industry which has an occupational mortality rate 20 times that of the coal mining industry. Working conditions were frightful. Crewmen had to muscle 750 lb. crab pots over icy decks in 40 – 80 knot winds with seas often running over 30 feet. They were constantly drenched with frigid water for periods of up to 40 hours with no rest. The rewards, however, were extraordinary. During the late 70's the king crab population simply exploded. In the peak year of 1980 the 130,000,000 lb. quota was filled in 29 days by some 230 crab boats (a record high.) A regular crewman pulling the standard full share of 7% of the boat's take might top $50,000 for those 29 days. He (or she) could then go on to fish for tanner crab and pull in additional enormous sums.

    Walker was lucky. He had been working in the timber industry, got tired and heard they were hiring up in Alaska. He was a strong worker and despite a predilection for seasickness Learned to love the hard work. In fact, when back in the "lower 48" for a visit he was disgusted to find people whose only desire was to get out of work. He couldn't wait to get back to Alaska and its raw living on the edge. Raw living it was. Bar house brawls were common, and the vast amounts of cash attracted enormous amounts of cocaine. By the 1981 season, however, only 28,000,000 lbs. were taken, and in 1983 the season was totally closed. It was determined that crabs had succumbed to a disease that was making the majority of females sterile.

    In between descriptions of how one baits a crab pot and the relative merits of various crew mates, Walker peppers his book with vivid descriptions of calamities and near deaths at sea. He interviewed many of these survivors for the book, and his retelling is spell-binding. From September 1982 through September I983, 68 vessels sank in Alaskan waters with 46 crewmen killed. Storms were ubiquitous and particularly vicious. You gotta be nuts. Great account for us Walter Mittys.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Walker's book provides a first-hand insight into the Alaskan crab fishing industry in the late 1970s and early 1980s, long before "The Deadliest Catch" Discovery documentary series. Personal tales are mixed with survival stories from fellow fisherman who crewed other boats during the crabbing seasons. Walker is very likeable and his writing comes across as authentic. Walker doesn't glorify the industry, nor does he exaggerate the heoric stories - he doesn't need to. I'll read more of his books in the future.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Working on the Edge is a true tale written by a commercial fisherman who worked his way up through the ranks, during the epic King crab seasons of the 1980’s off the Aleutians in the Bering Sea. We all know that you shouldn’t judge a book by its cover, or certainly the author by his picture. From the picture of the rough-looking, mountain-of-a-man author, I admit that I expected simplistic sentences, heavy on action and minimal on character. It was an unfounded bias, as I enjoyed his vivid descriptions of the people, the feelings, the unbelievable weather and of course, the spirited adventures that he endured.However, there are some books that become even larger than they are because of the moment in time you receive the book, who gave it to you, even the circumstances that surround the physical book itself. Having recently toured Southeastern Alaska, on a boat chartered from two commercial fishermen, I happened to meet another transplanted Alaskan fisherman as a patient in the hospital where I work. He said, “If you love Alaska and are interested in the commercial fishing trade, you’ll love this book. I’m even mentioned in it! I know all those guys!” I sought out the book, and though I couldn’t clearly identify my new friend in it, I found it to be a well-written book about a wild time in our recent past. Over the years, I kept in touch with my friend and his family, and was sorry to hear recently that he ultimately succumbed to his illness. My copy of this book, passed around my coworkers, with his kind inscription to me inside the cover, has grown new meaning and has earned a precious spot on my bookshelf.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Now that we are in the era of "Deadliest Catch", this is one mans account of the king crab rush of the '80's. An inside look at the trials and tribulations of "Working on the Edge", in the most dangerous situations.

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Working on the Edge - Spike Walker

PROLOGUE

Packing a moderate load of crab-pot gear secured to her back deck, and following a week of fishing near Icy Bay, the crab boat Master Carl was en route back to its home port of Cordova and was closing on the famous outcropping of rock known as Cape St. Elias when things began to come apart.

A parted weld in the hull, a malfunctioning pump system, a leaking hatch cover—no one would ever be able to tell exactly what went wrong, but somewhere off Prince William Sound’s Montague Island, at about midnight on April 28, 1976, the ship began taking on water. At the first sign of a list, seasoned skipper Tom Miller of Cordova, Alaska, turned his ship to starboard and began running in the same direction as the swelling seas on a westward course into Alaska’s Prince William Sound. He then ordered his crew to dump their load of crab pots stacked on the back deck. John Magoteaux, then of Othello, Washington, and Tom Davidson and Donny Channel, both from Westport, Washington, raced to complete the task.

The forecast had called for seas to thirty feet, recalls John Magoteaux. But the seas were worse than that. And the wind was howling! Just smoking!

With his ship sinking steadily beneath him, Tom Miller raced across the back deck of the crab boat. The deck was slippery with water draining away from the last monstrous wave. He checked the stern hatch cover. It seemed secure. Then he sprinted back toward the safety of the bow-mounted wheelhouse. Just as he reached the door to the galley, another thirty-foot breaker crashed over the entire ship. The wave drenched him with spray and flooded the deck, pinning the galley door shut.

In an effort to escape the rising water, Miller scrambled up the superstructure of the wheelhouse and entered through the back door. Yet even after he had reached the temporary safety of the ship’s bridge, he realized his reckless climb had been in vain—for his ship was still taking on water somewhere near the stern. Standing inside the wheelhouse, Miller and his three-man crew could only watch as the stern deck of the seventy-five-foot crab boat settled deeper into the churning black sea.

Then without warning, the main engine died, the steering system went out, and immediately the huge seas threw the ship sideways. Tossed by the waves and adrift in the spray-filled darkness, the ship continued to settle. Soon the storm waves pummeling the boat began breaking over its entire length and water began pouring in through the vent pipes and engine-room stacks mounted on top of the wheelhouse.

Wave after wave threatened to bury the vessel. Inside, in the gyrating space of the ship’s galley, the freezer broke loose and sailed across the room. Below, in the engine room, tools and equipment and spare batteries tumbled pell-mell through the darkness.

In the wheelhouse, the crew was trying to send out a Mayday call for help when the boat rolled onto its side. Seawater soon drowned out the auxiliary engine, and the crew found themselves suspended in darkness, with no power by which to steer, see, or send a message.

With a flashlight in hand, Donny Channel made his way to the engine room, which was filled with chest-deep water. As he waded in, he spotted a can of starter fluid floating by. He grabbed it, gave the auxiliary engine’s intake a shot of ether, and cranked it over. The engine coughed and started.

Then the lights flashed back on and Channel thought, Okay, you guys! Somebody better be sending out a Mayday, because this is it! It better be Mayday time up there in the wheelhouse!

Seconds later, the Master Carl rolled completely on its side and remained there. Once again, the water flooded out the auxiliary engine. Channel knew there was nothing more to be done, and in the liquid darkness, he scrambled back up into the wheelhouse and joined his crewmates in donning their survival suits.

Tom Miller was really the hero of the thing, recalls John Magoteaux. He got things organized and, one by one, got us out of there through the side window on the top of the house. Then we got the raft off over the side and he made sure each one of us got into the raft before him.

Once inside the raft, the crew members found that they were still tied to the sinking vessel. Each time the ship rolled, the keel flashed past them, the raft line came tight, and the shape of their raft contorted. They were in real danger of being pulled under, but no one could find a knife. Finally, in blind desperation, Magoteaux began chewing on the line in an effort to sever it with his teeth before the boat sank and dragged them all down with it.

Then Tom remembered he had a pocketknife, recalls Magoteaux. But he had to take his suit halfway down to get at it. The waves were crashing in on us, and with his suit still half down, we held on to him as he leaned out one end of the raft. Though he got repeatedly drenched, Tom managed to cut the line, or that would have been it for us! He got soaked, and with his suit half full of water, he never did get warmed up after that.

No sooner had they cut themselves free of their sinking ship than the typhoon-force winds whipped them off into the spray and darkness. Lifted and tossed by the heaving waves, and with the storm winds roaring constantly across the roof of the dome-covered raft, they could only drift and wait for daylight, then some seven hours away.

Most frightening of all, however, was the roar of unseen storm waves breaking as they approached from off in the darkness. Some waves collapsed directly down over them, flattening the raft and its occupants and tossing both about with an incomprehensible power and fury. Other waves passed beneath them, and then the crew of the Master Carl could feel themselves rising steeply, and falling sharply. It was like being blindfolded on a never-ending roller-coaster ride. The worst part was not being able to tell which monstrous breaker had your name on it, recalls Magoteaux.

The night was only half gone when one incredible wave sent their raft tumbling down its face, pitch-poling, end over end. When the wave finally passed on, the crew found themselves standing on the raft’s roof, submerged to their necks in the icy thirty-nine-degree Gulf of Alaska water.

Moments later, Donny Channel and John Magoteaux dived out from under the inverted raft. It was the only thing we could do, recalls Magoteaux. Somehow, we had to get that raft turned upright. You couldn’t think about what it was like out there in the water in the darkness. We knew we had to get that raft upright if we were going to survive.

Channel and Magoteaux grabbed the outside of the raft and screamed instructions for those inside. They were to disperse their weight on the downwind side of the raft while Channel and Magoteaux lifted an edge of the raft in the hope that by exposing the surface to the fierce gusts of wind, the raft would be blown back over. The plan worked perfectly, for when the wind struck the uplifted edge, it instantly flipped the raft back upright.

But just as quickly, those outside the raft found themselves bucked off the life-preserving form of their raft, which, propelled by the fierce winds, was streaking away from them and off into the night. In that instant, the terror and hopelessness of the moment struck them, and they faced the fact that they were caught in a fierce open-sea storm tens of miles from any shore, and that their raft had just taken off! It was moving far too fast. There was no way to catch it.

Then a length of line, the same line that once had held them to their sinking ship, came streaming past them. Channel and Magoteaux groped blindly in the darkness and somehow managed to grab it. Terrified, they pulled themselves back through the seas to the drifting raft and crawled inside through one end.

Back aboard the raft, they worried. They knew that the next time the raft flipped and failed to right itself, the chances of surviving were slim. They decided that the best possible way to stabilize the raft was to flood its floor with seawater. The low center of gravity produced by nearly a foot of water in the raft worked perfectly, and the equally vicious waves that followed failed to flip them.

Now, the four crewmen fought depression, seasickness, and defeatist attitudes. They tried to talk about positive things. They figured they’d hit Kayak Island, and if they missed its rocky shores, they knew they’d be blown into Prince William Sound. Maybe they’d end up on Montague Island, or be intercepted as they drifted along the way. There was no way to know whether anyone had heard their brief Mayday message, but since no one had acknowledged the call and no coordinates had been exchanged, those in the raft held out little hope.

The storm was one that fishermen from Kodiak to Cordova often would recall over the next decade. Late that night, the searing one-hundred-knot winds peaked, easing to about forty knots, but the waves remained huge.

With daybreak came the first sighting of land. Miserable with cold, those inside the raft could hear the building roar of the pounding surf. It was too misty and the seas were still far too rough to allow a clear sighting, but they could see the hazy gray form of an island. At the base of it, they spied what they believed was the flash of surf waves spending themselves on the beach. What they didn’t know was that they had spotted a white strip of cruel breakers exploding across a rock reef, a reef that stood between them and the beach.

Completely at the mercy of the wind and seas, they were blown closer to shore, where the seas began to stand up on them. Their raft rose steeply and fell sharply, and as they drifted, they moved through sparse fields of kelp, and heard the curious cries of sea gulls circling overhead. Then immense breakers began to power past them.

Screaming to be heard, the crew of the Master Carl soon agreed that it would be suicidal to go in through the surf inside such a contraption. One by one, then, they crawled outside the raft, clutched the nylon cord that rimmed it, and held on tight as the windblown raft streaked toward whatever lay ahead.

The sound of the breakers crashing on the reef grew proportionately louder as they drew closer. One of the crewmen didn’t know how to swim, and the building roar of the surf terrified him.

Sensing something behind him, Magoteaux whirled in the water. A huge breaker loomed directly overhead. Oh, my God! he gasped. He had his arms double-wrapped in a death-lock around the raft’s cord when that wave collapsed upon him. It drove the raft and myself straight down, he remembers. "It tore me off and just sent me shooting through the water, straight down, probably fifteen or twenty feet. I couldn’t tell which way was up. I was almost out of air when I forced myself to relax.

"Not knowing which way to swim, I let the buoyancy of my suit carry me back toward the surface. Once I saw which way I was drifting through the water, I started swimming in that direction for all I was worth—kicking, pulling, stroking.

The water had been dark green below, and as I neared the surface, the water started getting lighter. Then I could see the surface. I popped up and looked around, but without my glasses I couldn’t see too well.

Donny Channel didn’t think anybody would make it. The size of the waves astonished him, but there was no turning back. They were committed.

That first wave caught everyone by surprise. It smashed Channel under and knocked the wind from him. Submerged and blinded by the foamy froth, he felt himself being dragged into the depths and tossed wildly about by the brutal explosions of collapsing sea. The currents continued to pummel him, and he felt icy rivulets of the Gulf of Alaska water pour in through the rim of his survival suit’s hood.

Driven down several fathoms beneath the surface, Channel covered his nose and mouth, and, holding on to what little air he had left, tried to keep from blacking out. He, too, had decided to wait until his suit floated him back to the surface. He was determined not to inhale the cold ocean water, so he curled up in a protective ball and waited. It seemed like whole minutes passed before he finally bobbed to the surface.

Then he broke into the clear. He spit up water and coughed heavily, and sucked in deep lungfuls of the fresh cold air. He was trying to get his bearings when he turned and froze. For there, far overhead, in the very act of breaking, came the next wave, thirty feet and one hundred tons of sloping green water, roaring and falling in a thunderous, foaming tumult that collapsed down upon him.

Channel felt himself being driven toward the bottom, and although he somehow managed to keep from being crushed on the reef, he was close enough to know the gritty feel of sand between his teeth. He surfaced again, only to find himself pounded repeatedly by two- and three-story waves coming up from behind him. The roar and the limitless power of the storm waves were frightening and incomprehensible. Worse, he had no idea what type of shoreline lay ahead.

John Magoteaux had lost track of the others. He was clutching the rope encircling the life raft when Donny Channel came popping up out of the water right beside me. He looked pretty bad, too. He’d swallowed a lot of water, and he had seaweed all over his head and shoulders. I grabbed on to him and got him up onto the raft. And together we were swept across the reef and into shore.

They staggered up on the beach and collapsed in the sand. When they could walk again, they began searching for their skipper and the other crewman. It was windy and cold, and they knew it was important that they remain in the warmth of their suits. However, bloated as they were with seawater, walking took an enormous amount of energy and they became exhausted after a short distance.

Magoteaux and Channel made the decision to lighten their loads. Unzipping their suits, they lay on their backs in the sand and raised their feet into the air. The seawater that had seeped into the suits now poured out over them, chilling them instantly. Resuming their search, they walked up and down the beach. Patches of snow lay on the high ground above them just inland from the sand. With a cold and blustery wind whipping constantly over them, the two men became severely chilled. Feeling leaden with fatigue, they soon were forced to give up their search.

Knowing that their own survival depended on finding protection, they pulled their life raft up off the beach, turned the raft upside down, and stuffed grass and wood around its upwind edge. Then, using it for a shelter and windbreak, they crawled underneath the raft and huddled together on the sand, where they immediately dropped off to sleep.

Wake up! Wake up! Magoteaux pleaded in an intense whisper. And listen!

Channel stirred awake. He could hear strange snuffling and grunting sounds coming from outside the raft. Curious, he lifted up one end of the raft and came eye-to-eye with an adult grizzly bear. The animal was so close, Channel could have stuck a five-gallon bucket on its head.

The two crewmen staggered to their feet and threw off the raft. The grizzly moved off about thirty feet and turned and faced them. The bear’s nostrils drew in and out as it repeatedly sniffed the air. Its nose looked as big around as a man’s thigh. Brisk gusts of wind moved in waves through its thick fur pelt.

Grabbing any rock that was within reach, the two men began pelting the unwelcome creature. Get the hell out of here! they shouted.

The grizzly stood on its hind feet then, sniffing the air and clicking its teeth.

At that moment, it struck Donny Channel how he and his crewmate must look to the grizzly. Clad in suits of rubber and neoprene, he thought: We must look just like a couple of sea lions, one of that breed of bear’s favorite meals.

Perhaps the grizzly already had eaten, or perhaps it had never seen sea lions act so strangely, for the bear turned and wandered back up the beach. In spite of the unnerving confrontation, fatigue settled back over the pair, and they crawled back under the raft again and went back to sleep.

That night, the bear returned and began circling the raft, growling and tearing up the turf on all sides. Inside the raft, only inches away, Channel and Magoteaux could only wait and listen. They had one rocket flare ready and waiting to use if absolutely necessary. They planned to pull the pin and discharge the flare into the face of the bear if it actually came for them. But, although it was close enough for them to catch the scent of the creature’s rank smell, not once did the bear touch the life raft itself.

By daybreak, the bear was gone, and the two crewmen abandoned their raft and began hiking down the beach in the direction of the lighthouse at Cape St. Elias. Fearful of being attacked, they reacted to each brown formation of log and rock by asking one another, Hey! What’s that?

As they made their way toward the lighthouse, icy thirty-knot winds whipped constantly over them. John Magoteaux started showing the classic symptoms of hypothermia. I couldn’t figure things out, he recalls. "I ran out of energy. I couldn’t go any farther. My body temperature had gone down to the point where I was almost hallucinating. I could barely walk. I couldn’t think.

Donny took care of me. He found a sheltered spot and took one of the wet hand-held flares and managed, somehow, to get that thing going. He built a fire out of plastic net and buoys he found on the beach. I tried to help but managed to find only two wet sticks of driftwood. I was slowly starting to lose my coherence. I don’t know how Donny did it. I owe him my life.

That afternoon, above the sounds of the pounding surf and blowing wind, the two crewmen heard what they at first thought was a plane making its way across the island. As it drew closer, Channel could tell it was a helicopter.

Immediately, he sprinted over and grabbed the only remaining flare and tried frantically to get hold of the small metal ring that would light it. But his fingers were cold, and as his hands fumbled after the ring, his eyes flashed between the flare (to see if I was doing it right) and the horizon in an effort to spot the helicopter. By the sound of it, the chopper had to appear at any moment.

The clacking roar grew louder with each passing second. The distinctive white and orange paint and the black bumblebee nose marked it as belonging to the U.S. Coast Guard. It was moving fast along the shoreline just off the beach. Only seconds before, it had flown past their raft without spotting it. It would soon be past them, too, if Channel couldn’t get the single remaining flare ignited in time.

The helicopter was almost overhead when the flare went off. For a moment, Channel thought the rocket was going to strike the chopper’s front windshield. Then the helicopter’s engine growled, its tail rudder dipped, and its black nose rocked skyward. It seemed to Channel that the helicopter pilot stopped in almost no distance at all.

All right! screamed Channel and Magoteaux repeatedly as they stumbled forward.

Once aboard the helicopter, their joy at being rescued was short-lived when, only a short distance up the beach, the copter pilot came upon the bodies of the heroic young skipper Tom Miller and Tom Davidson. They had apparently been killed while coming in through the surf.

PART ONE

THE GREENHORN SEASON: TANNER CRAB FISHING ABOARD THE ROYAL QUARRY

ONE

As I pounded the waterfront of Kodiak’s Cannery Row in search of work, I stretched my black wool cap down over my numb ears and withdrew farther into the warm, protective folds of my Navy pea jacket. Broke and unemployed, with virtually no experience at sea, my stomach felt empty with apprehension. Huddling against the cold, indifferent winds of January, waiting, literally, for my ship to come in, I tried to imagine what Donny Channel and John Magoteaux, as well as the two men who died, Tom Miller and Tom Davidson, had endured.

Several days earlier, a hard-drinking fisherman in the B & B Bar had told me the Master Carl story. For a bar-stool rendition, it was surprisingly accurate, except that he had the grizzlies chasing Magoteaux and Channel for two whole days. And the bears would of got ’em, too, he put in finally, if the Coast Guard wouldn’t have come along and chased ’em off!

I’d arrived in Kodiak with twenty dollars to my name, but I held one ace card. I had the address and phone number of crab-boat skipper Mike Jones. He was said to be a young, heads-up fisherman who owned and ran the seventy-one-foot blue and white steel crab boat, the Royal Quarry. We’d gone to the same college (Oregon State University in Corvallis) together.

I can’t promise you a thing if you come up, Spike, Mike Jones (Jonesy) had told me when I phoned him from Oregon only a week before. "But this I can guarantee you. You’re not going to get a fishing job sitting down there in Portland. This is where the work is. There’s some real money to be made up here. Right now, my men are pocketing about a thousand dollars a week. And that’s fishing tanner crab [a tan-colored spidery crustacean that grows to several feet in width, averages about three pounds in weight, and is marketed as snow crab]. The real money is made during king crab season. You wouldn’t believe how much you can make, provided you get a job on the right boat.

"But it’s tough work. Dangerous work. Dozens of crewmen get killed every year up here. And not just anybody can do it. The crab pots are called ‘seven-bys’ [seven feet tall, by seven feet wide, by a yard deep] and they weigh seven hundred and fifty pounds completely empty. When they arrive on deck, they may weigh a ton if they’re full of crab. You’ve got to be able to control their swing enough to guide them into the rack [pot launcher]. And you need to be able to do it in rough seas. The weather can really get tough up here.

"If the fishing’s good, you might have to work steady for thirty, forty, or fifty hours without sleep, or even a cooked meal. We can teach you enough about knots and navigation to get by, but the one thing that no one can teach you is how to work. You can’t wait to be told what to do. You’ve got to be able to see it, and not be afraid to jump right in and get it done. But you’ve worked as a logger. You probably already know what that’s about."

He paused.

If you’re really serious about coming up, I can find you a place to crash for a few days, he said finally.

Three days later, I flew into the Kodiak Island Airport.

With a one-way ticket in hand, I had caught a flight out of Portland, Oregon. Some fifteen hundred air miles later, my plane had touched down in Anchorage, where I climbed aboard an Alaskan puddle jumper. My journey took me south along Cook Inlet and out across some 270 miles of Gulf of Alaska waters to Kodiak.

It was a sleet-filled night and my plane was late getting in, but Jonesy was there to greet me. He gave me a pickup truck ride into town and left me with one of his crew members, Steve Calhoun, a good-natured young man from northern California. Steve was exhausted from a long day of repair work aboard the Royal Quarry and after only a few minutes of conversation, he turned in.

I was fast asleep in a sleeping bag on his couch when, long before first light, Steve rose and dressed in boots and work clothes. As he walked out the door, he paused. Here’s my key, he said, setting it on the kitchen table. You can stay here while we’re gone. Just be sure and latch the windows and turn everything off and lock up whenever you go out. We should be back in about a week.

With a long green duffel bag in hand, he opened the door to go. It was dark outside. Several inches of fresh powdered snow had blown in across the doorstep. "We’ve got grocery supplies to store away and a few chores to get done on the Quarry this morning before we leave, he continued. So, we shouldn’t be shoving off until afternoon. When you get up, come on down and I’ll show you around the boat."

Thanks a lot, I said, my voice filled with gratitude.

Oh, hell, that’s all right, ah … He groped for my name.

Spike, I offered.

Oh, yah, Spike. Anyway, I don’t have any trouble at all remembering what it was like to be broke and trying to hunt up a job on one of these crab boats. No trouble at all.

Good fishing to you, I replied.

Then, with a short wave of his hand, he lifted his duffel bag and fled out the door. I shuddered as the cold blast of arctic air he had let in rolled across the floor and over me. I thought of the brutal weather, my inexperience at sea, and the sad state of my personal finances, and suddenly a moment of panic and doubt gripped me. I asked myself what could have driven me to take such a risk; to leave family and friends and all the warm familiarities of home to venture into this primitive northern country and compete for a crewman’s berth in such a brutal and deadly trade.

I slept hard and long, and when I rose again, the morning was nearly gone. I chose to skip breakfast, dressed hurriedly but warmly, and headed straight for the waterfront and the B & B Cannery in an effort to catch the Royal Quarry and her crew before she shoved off.

Shelikof Boulevard, a street of mud and gravel, wound its way from the center of town along the waterfront to an area commonly referred to as Cannery Row, a strip of processing plants standing shoulder-to-shoulder at the edge of St. Paul Harbor.

With the season already in full swing, Cannery Row was already alive with activity. Everywhere the thriving capitalistic pulses of movement and noise and commerce prevailed. All along the waterfront, one could hear the shrill tooting of the shift whistles, the deep belching sounds of crab boats as their powerful diesel engines growled to life, the hydraulic groan of straining dock cranes, the hum of electricity, and the metallic click of chain links meshing over conveyer-belt sprockets. And there was the hiss of escaping cooker steam, the revving of motors, and the warning beeps of racing cannery hysters (forklifts), while out in the harbor, sea gulls squabbled over discarded scraps, and dockside, cannery workers joked in Taiwanese and Filipino tongues.

To the nose of the pragmatist visiting Cannery Row drifted grim waves of lung-stopping ammonia, the rotting smell of oozing cannery slime, and the unrelenting odors of iodine, kelp, and decomposing microorganisms. Even though I sported an empty belly, those smells renewed my spirit, filled me with a sense of opportunity and adventure, and sent romantic notions jolting through me.

There was an energy here; a boomtown intoxication that can be found nowhere else on earth. There was a sense of optimism and imminent excitement all around; life had taken on a new meaning in these parts. One could see it in the shuffle of the crab-encumbered ships vying for off-loading space along the waterfront, and in the passing faces, and in the quick, restless, straight-ahead way people moved. I could sense an excitement in the tired but grateful faces of the cannery workers as they shuffled home from another profitable sixteen-hour shift. And in the grocery stores, where rich and hungry crab-boat crews bought up every loaf of bread, gallon of milk, and sirloin steak in town, regardless of the price.

I could see it in the crowded streets, where long bumper-to-bumper rows of work vehicles filled every available space and along which dual-wheeled trucks with precarious loads of 750-pound crab pots balanced on their flatbed trailers raced. They were on their way to be unloaded at the earliest possible moment onto their ships, which were tied to the tall wooden pilings dockside.

Their thudding tires pounded a track through the rough, muck-filled chuckholes and launched geysers of ash-based mud out both sides, coating the long rows of parked vehicles from hubcap to door handle with a sloppy goo the color of wet cement. Jockeying for position on the docks, these same pot-toting trucks had hardly rolled to a standstill before their crews clambered atop them. The young men who leapt to untie the pots moved with excitement and vigor. And as I watched, I found myself envying them, the positions they held and the lives they lived, for they had become an integral part of something vital and adventurous.

I’d been part of similar scenes before. Though now still several years shy of thirty, I was there when ambitious men, driven by soaring oil prices, rushed to open up new oil fields outside Morgan City, Louisiana; and I was there when soaring lumber prices lured the same kind of men to plunge, axes in hand, into some of the last great stands of prime old-growth timber in the United States, near Forks, Washington, on the Olympic Peninsula.

As I wandered broke and jobless along the waterfront, I tried to remind myself that I had not ventured north completely untrained. While working in the offshore oil fields bordering the Gulf of Mexico, I had served out an apprenticeship as a deep-sea diver; and during that tenure, I had learned to cut and weld underwater, and how to inspect ship hulls, barge hulls, and propellers.

While logging in some of the more remote camps in Washington, Oregon, Idaho, and southeast Alaska, I’d learned how to work around heavy equipment, how to stay out of the bite of a straining line, and a good deal of the common sense of serious labor.

I’d learned that a man could find a niche for himself in life just about anywhere, if he kept his nose clean, his mouth shut, and worked without quarter or need of praise.

Call it impetuousness, or point to the insatiable greed of man, but here in the remote Alaskan outpost of Kodiak, simple American capitalism once again had touched off a modern-day gold rush. Yet this time, the prize was not oil or timber. This time, the nuggets were showing in the tanks of fishing boats returning to port to be off-loaded. During the winter months and into the spring, their cargo came in the form of tanner crab, and during the fall, as spiny red king crab.

Experienced skippers—their giant steel ships ranging from 70 to 170 feet—with the knack for tracking down and boating the milling, wandering, unpredictable bugs were said to be grossing as much as one, and, occasionally, even two million dollars a year! And the crewmen working on those elite boats were earning upward of 7 percent of that gross, or $70,000 to $140,000 per man!

Those who had caught the scent of such vast riches let nothing deter them—not the gamble of a plane ticket north, the cold inconvenience of winter, the fear of the unknown, or harrowing tales of shipwrecks and disaster. Now, hundreds of would-be fishermen were pouring into the port villages of Kodiak in the Gulf of Alaska and Dutch Harbor in the Aleutian Islands on the edge of the Bering Sea. I was no different.

I arrived at the B & B Cannery just in time to wave goodbye to Jonesy as he shoved off from the docks.

Jonesy saw my hurried approach on the dock above him, and poked his head out the wheelhouse window and yelled up at me. We’ll be gone about a week, depending upon the fishing, he called, the white jets of his breath lingering in the cold winter air. Check with Joe at the cannery to see when we’ll be getting back into port. We keep radio contact with them. They’ll know when we’re scheduled to be back in port.

Who? I yelled after him as his ship pulled away.

Jonesy again stuck his head out the side wheelhouse window, pointed to the cannery building behind me, and hollered back, Joe! Hungarian Joe!

Standing on the edge of the cannery dock, I stuffed my hands into the warm wool pockets of my pea jacket and watched the Royal Quarry idle out of the harbor. I was still there when the toylike spectacle of the blue and white ship turned the corner and moved out across the wrinkled gray expanse of Chiniak Bay.

Suddenly, the commotion of the waterfront broke into my thoughts.

Hey, Joe! Where do you want the pallets stacked? a youngster in bright yellow rain-gear pants called from the steamy entrance to the cannery.

I knew it was Hungarian Joe standing behind me even before I’d met him. He’d been part of the Hungarian Revolution of 1956, I’d been told. When several divisions of Russian tanks rolled into his country, he’d escaped into Austria. Dressed in plain greens and browns, he wore a flat-billed baseball cap and answered the rain gear-clad youngster with a heavy, Eastern European accent.

Joe, I interrupted, "I was wondering if you know how often the Royal Quarry reports in?"

He did not seem to hear me. Vee have crab to cook now! he replied. Then he pivoted and hurried back inside the cannery. He wasn’t ready to talk with anyone then. I’d catch him first thing the next

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