American Angler in Australia (1937) (7 page)

BOOK: American Angler in Australia (1937)
10.65Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

"Hey there!" pealed out Ed, happily. "I got him! I got him! I licked th
e
son-of-a-gun. Thanks for telling me what to do. Never would have licke
d
him. Gee! but wasn't it a fight. I'm crippled. I'm dying!!! I think I'
m
dead..
. W
hat kind of a shark is it?"

"Blowed if I know," I replied, "But he's a handsome brute, big as al
l
outdoors, and a real catch. Congratulations."

This shark was indeed an important catch for us. It was a whaler an
d
weighed over six hundred pounds.

On the following day, about sixteen miles offshore, out in a warm curren
t
that registered seventy-three degrees, I saw an enormous ghost-like shar
k
that made my heart leap to my throat. He was twenty feet long and ver
y
deep, and he certainly was not afraid of the boat or its occupants. I le
t
my bait out to him. It appeared to me that he not only ignored th
e
offering, but was contemptuous of such a small bait. His eye was big
,
black, and gleaming with all the cold cruelty of nature. I knew that h
e
saw me and would have taken me had I fallen out of that boat. For an hou
r
after he faded away I was in a trance. I recovered after a time, but I
w
ill never cease to long to hook and whip and kill such a grand an
d
terrible shark. Opinions on my boat differed. He was a tiger, or a hug
e
whaler. But for me he was one of those monsters of the South Seas--th
e
white death shark.

On the third clear morning, with a warm sun and a light north-east breeze
,
I felt sure that we would have luck. Peter said fish ought to be in. W
e
found bait plentiful and hungry. While fishing around Black Rock I saw
a
Marlin jump. We got teasers and bait overboard in a hurry, and I trolle
d
there for an hour, without raising him.

Meanwhile Bowen and his crew had run outside four or five miles. When I
f
inally ran up to them they had a swordfish tied up to the boat. It ha
d
been caught by Mr. Stewart, a guest of Bowen's that day, and was hi
s
first one after many attempts. He appeared to be mute in his delight, bu
t
Bowen was gay and volatile enough.

"Say," he shouted, "you should have seen this Marlin commit suicide. Why
,
nothing could lose him! The reel overran a dozen times and never tangled.

Get a load of that, will you? He ran under the boat. The leader caught i
n
the propeller and the fish came up on the other side. All our backs wer
e
turned. He tried to get aboard. When we gaffed him the hook fell out. Ca
n
you beat that for luck?"

No, I could not, and after congratulating Mr. Stewart I trolled on
,
marveling at the queer angles of this game. Late in the afternoon w
e
turned to go in. The golden lights were shining over the ranges, th
e
purple Toll Gates loomed grandly against the background. The day appeare
d
to be about over.

"There's a fin!" yelled Bill, suddenly. He was up on deck. "Far ahead an
d
going fast."

"Chase it," I ordered. "Hook her up, Pete."

We ran down current like the wind, everybody searching the big swells an
d
white seas. We ran nearly half a mile before Bill sighted the fin again.

Still ahead! We ran on, lost it again. Then Emil saw it on our left an
d
we sped in that direction. We ran past the other boat. They yelled to u
s
and pointed back to the right and we had to turn again. Peter saw hi
m
again and that encouraged us. He opened up the engine full ahead and w
e
roared over the swells, leaving a white wake behind us.

"There he is!" shouted Peter, pointing. "Going like one thing!"

"Don't run him down, Peter," I said, as I caught my first glimpse of th
e
big gleaming tail fin. "It's a black Marlin."

Peter slowed down. But we had to go at least at a ten-knot speed in orde
r
to come up with the fish. His tail went under, came up again, flashe
d
opal and gold, vanished, to show once more.

Suddenly I saw that tail give a peculiar twitch--an action I had see
n
many times. I flashed my gaze back to my bait.

"He saw it! Look out!"

I venture to say that that fish traveled as fast as my sight. Becaus
e
instantly there he was back of my bait. He snatched it and sheered off t
o
the races. He ran four hundred yards on that strike, and when I hooke
d
him he took off at least two hundred more. That was a long way off. Th
e
line was so tight I had to release the drag. We ran after him and it wa
s
quite awhile before I recovered a foot of line. He broke water twice, bu
t
did not leap.

Eventually we gained on him. In perhaps a quarter of an hour I recovere
d
most of the line. Then he sounded. From that period I fought him an hou
r
and ten minutes to fetch him to the surface.

He proved to be a short, broad, beautifully built black Marlin, dee
p
purple in color, and remarkable for the shortest spear I ever saw on on
e
of these fish. It was less than a foot in length and a perfect weapon.

This black Marlin weighed around four hundred pounds, and was I glad t
o
take him in to Bateman Bay?

Chapter
VI

One of my strong reasons for coming to Bateman Bay, if not the strongest
,
was the fact that this big shallow body of water was infested wit
h
sharks. Salmon, bonito, yellowtail, taylor, mullet, which are the ver
y
best bait for any and all salt-water fish, inhabit this bay; and I a
m
sure have a great deal to do with the presence of sharks.

After seeing a small specimen of wobbegong, or carpet shark, I was ver
y
keen to catch one. This fellow is about the most curious sea creature t
o
be found. He resembles a long strip of Brussels carpet. He lies fairl
y
flat on the bottom, almost like a flounder or halibut. He looks lik
e
seaweed and is a remarkable example of nature's protective coloration.

But in his case it must be more a matter of hiding from the small fish h
e
preys upon than to be difficult to see for his larger enemies. From th
e
wobbegong's upper lip protrude a number of little colored bits of ski
n
which could easily be taken for seaweed or something else good to eat.

Anyway, this cunning shark lies low, watching, and when small fish com
e
close to nibble at these deceitful lures the wobbegong snaps them up.

This species of shark grows fairly large, and I'd give something unhear
d
of to catch a big one. The most remarkable feature of the wobbegong i
s
his teeth. They are like a nest of curved thorns. When the wobbegong get
s
his teeth in anything they cannot come free. They just bite out the piec
e
they have hold of.

Sometimes when it was windy outside we ran in to fish around the island
s
or along the shoal west shore of the bay. Straight across from camp ther
e
was a high bluff covered with heavy growth of timber. From this a fla
t
rocky reef ran out into the bay. Our man, Bill Lawler, the marke
t
fisherman I had engaged, took us often to this particular spot to fis
h
for sharks. Some of the shark tales he told were incredible. But I
l
earned to credit all of them.

Why a school of gray nurse sharks should hang around that shoal reef wa
s
a mystery to me. It cleared up, however, and seemed as natural as an
y
other thing pertaining to the sea. We went there several times an
d
chummed, (burley, they call this way of attracting sharks by cutting u
p
bait or fish), without getting a single bite. Bill said the cool rain
y
weather accounted for the lack of sharks, and I could well believe him.

One warm still afternoon we hit it just right; and that afternoon must b
e
recorded in my memory and in my fishing notes as one never to forget.

Fishing for sharks is one thing: fishing for man-eating sharks, one o
f
the most ferocious species, is entirely another.

I had seen the two gray nurse sharks in the Aquarium at the Sydney Zoo. I
h
ad watched them for hours. They really had beauty, if line and contou
r
lending speed and savagery, can have such a thing. To my surprise th
e
gray nurse had a longer, sharper nose than even the mako. I made a be
t
with myself that he could move fast in the water. I found out, too. I wa
s
surprised, also, to see that the gray nurse had no gray color in th
e
water. He was a dark greenish tan.

We anchored the Avalon over the ridge, about five hundred yards out fro
m
shore, and began to chum. We had a couple of boxes full of fish that fro
m
its odor should have attracted sharks all the way from Sydney. Our othe
r
boat, the camera outfit, chose a spot half a mile below us, not a ver
y
good place, Bill said.

I put a bait over on my big tackle, and settled myself comfortably t
o
wait. It was very pleasant, and grew more beautiful as the afternoo
n
waned. Two hours passed, during which we chummed all the while, withou
t
having a strike. An oily slick drifted away from our boat for a mile. I
h
ad about decided there were no gray nurse sharks in the bay, when I ha
d
a bite. It was a gentle, slow pull, not at all what I expected from
a
notorious shark.

"It's a gray nurse," avowed Bill.

"Yeah?" I replied, doubtfully. "Okay! We'll hand it to him."

Whereupon I laid back with my heavy tackle for all I was worth. I hooke
d
a fish, all right, and made ready for a run. But this one did not run. H
e
came toward the boat. The men hauled up anchor and started the engine. W
e
drifted while I most curiously applied myself to the task of whippin
g
this shark, if it were one. He was heavy and strong, and quick as
a
flash. But he did not try to go places. He kept around and under th
e
boat.

In due course I hauled him up, and what was my surprise when I saw a lon
g
symmetrical silver-gray shark shape. He looked about eight feet long an
d
fairly thick. Presently I had a good look at his head and then his eyes.

I have had fish see me from the water, but this fellow's gaze wa
s
different. Pure cold, murderous cruelty shone in that black eye. It mad
e
me shiver. I did not fool any longer with him.

Peter gaffed the gray nurse and held him while Bill slipped a rope ove
r
his tail. For his size, about three hundred pounds, he surely made
a
commotion in the water. After a bit Peter untied my leader from my lin
e
and let it hang. The shark hung head down, rolling and jerking.

"Pete, if these gray nurse sharks don't run away after being hooked, thi
s
tackle is too heavy," I said.

"Right-o. I was figuring that. The Cox nine and thirty thread line ough
t
to do."

BOOK: American Angler in Australia (1937)
10.65Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Baby Is Three by Theodore Sturgeon
Path of the Warrior by Gav Thorpe
Dancing in the Moonlight by Bradshaw, Rita
Hounacier (Valducan Book 2) by Seth Skorkowsky
Cartboy Goes to Camp by L. A. Campbell
Codex Born by Jim C. Hines
Love on the Air by Sierra Donovan
The Ground She Walks Upon by Meagan McKinney