Poseidon's Amberjacks
When:
some time ago, in a Mediterranean Sea almost depleted of fish from an
aggressive professional attitude toward fishing. Here, fishing for the
future, are unknown words.
Where:
in a deep reef, VERY far away from coastline, always lashed from a strong
and unpredictable current.
That
day was a magical one. Squalls on the coast were promising unsteady
weather. A dark bar on the western horizon stood in confirmation. But at
the first light of dawn the sea is flat as a table, the wind totally
missing. It seems all still, all locked. At the sea, at the sea. This
strange kind of weather always stirs up my fish-lust. Who knows what are
fish doing when it’s not one of the usual sun-wavelet-no-wind days? At
the sea.
Departure
toward the horizon, route very indirect to mislead any observer (not so
hypothetical, since the curiosity aroused from previous catches of
Amberjacks of “but then they really exist” size). Out of view from the
coast, with nobody around, direct route for the reef. Rain pricks in
showers the table of the sea. Still, no wind at all.
The
submerged reef is edged by the usual fringe of boiling, surging water
stirred up by the current, but today it seems somewhat reduced. I anchor
far from the top, praying that the anchor would not ground, compelling me
to dive in the abyss for recovering it.
I
slowly put on my wetsuit, concentrating on the pre-respiration, on the
relaxation, trying to slow down my heart rate. All those splendid rituals
that make a philosopher of the keen diver.
Now
in the water. First of all concentrate on breathing, slow, slow, pause,
apnea, a new slow, slow breath. Pause, apnea, last expiration, a forced
inhalation. Down!
Underwater,
little bubbles come out from the wetsuit legs, rolling and gurgling. Not a
good bottom time. Every time I have to convince my body that for some time
it has to do without so much oxygen. It knows that later will get used to
it, but it’s always necessary some time to explain.
The
current is weak but it’s definitely there. Good, because without current
Amberjacks are more disturbed. Kicking slowly, breathing often with my
eyes closed, relaxing, I arrive on the first of the four points of the
Reef. The Sun is hidden, the sea hardly rippled but I forget all as soon
as I recognize the signals. A white plateau 25-27 m deep, climbing
suddenly up until 22-23 m and falling down first steeply and then gently
on sand in 40 m. I accelerate the breathing. Partly it is not desired. I
scan the blue, searching for the tiny marks of the Amberjacks: round balls
of bait fish, even the sound of their little multiple tails cracking
together in an attempt to escape the big predator if I’m not viewing
them.
There!
Suddenly clear, first the white pectoral fins, then the whole shape,
stands out against the Grey-blue bottom. She is motionless, against the
current, behind a needle of rock.
I
can’t avoid it. The heart rate is suddenly, maddeningly, quick. The
Amberjack is beautiful. Elegant. Huge.
I
breathe, kicking slowly. She has sight me. She turns, swims past the rock
and stops in the blue water. I’m very far from the perpendicular but now
I’ve no choice. A big breath and I dive. Forcedly, first meters are very
slow but little by little I become negative and dive without moving at
all. Slow, slow. Oblique. She’s still. And she’s watching me. A stroke
of the big tail and she’s farther and deeper. She stops again. I dive
without moving, without watching her, without aiming my gun. The small
currents around the point make me twirl a little. I continue diving.
She’s still motionless. I descend slowly, like a dead leaf, and I’m
watching her big head. I extend my gun when she’s not watching me, when
it’s aimed straight on her and she cant’s see the movement. Now that
I’m deeper I descend quicker. She’s moving deeper also. I’m
following her, slowly. She’s almost within range. Almost. Wait, she’s
big.
Till
now I had my eyes slit, now I open my right eye and take aim. I’m
all-tight. I shoot! At the end of the gill plate, high, toward down. Good
shoot.
The
heavy spear almost gets completely trough her huge head. As always it seem
to shoot in a block of hard wood. In the moment of the shot I
instinctively straighten myself and start kicking toward the surface. Now
I have five-six seconds before she can recover from the shot. I stop the
reel with my hand and I climb up as swift as I can, towing her, gaining
valuable meters of water. This can’t last, I know. But I’m almost to
the surface when she starts pulling madly. I’m forced to release the
reel. I’ve however towed her till ten-twelve meters. Not bad. I finally
reach the surface. I breathe heavily, blowing in the snorkel, struggling
with the fish that seems resolute to pull me down. I free more line from
the reel, kicking madly my fins. I free line when I’m underwater then I
pull again when I can breathe. It’s strange this kind of angling, all
happening underwater. But by now she can’t go anywhere.
I
can’t avoid it, she tows me around like a piece of flotsam and all I can
do is keep my grip on the line, doggedly.
Ten-twelve
minutes of mad rodeo are passed and by now she has dragged me well far
from the reef. All I see under me are the white dancing shafts of the sun
in the deep blue.
However
she starts to tire. She can’t pull me anymore underwater. I pull the
line slowly, paying attention to not being enveloped in the line itself,
rustling in the water in the more and more narrow circles she’s
describing under my fins. She’s almost within my reach. Now I have to
pay attention to the last trashing of the huge tail. I pull her very close
without touching the spear, then suddenly I grasp and embrace her tightly,
slipping my right hand inside the gill plates and holding fast. She almost
pulls me out of the water but I still weight, alas, more than she does and
she has no escape. Immediately I grab the knife in my belt and stab her in
the skull. Bedlam! Splashes and sprinkles two meters high, the tail slaps
madly the water, rolling me up around her, pulling me underwater, shaking
me around like a doll. Then she stops.
To
my boat, now. Slowly, I tow her for the long return way. There I catch her
by the gill plates and with a shout that’s all together joy, effort,
and, finally, a full-throttle Vs slow-danced movement, I pull her aboard.
And at last I permit myself to really watch her. She’s bright, smooth. I
touch the dorsal fin that vanishes inside the body, the hard keel on the
tail. She’s a wonderful swimming machine. And she’s BIG. Now that I
see her in the boat I realize her true dimension. The scale will stop at
42 kg.
And
in that magical day she’ll not be the only one. Other two big solitary
Amberjacks will come aboard before the sunset. Not so big: one of 34 kg
and another one of 20 kg. The total weight was one quintal (for the
maximum precision, 97 kg – there’s is always to doubt in a too round
figure).
And
three days later, in a bedlam of unrestrained sea, three more fish, always
on the Amberjacks Reef, always big and solitaire. Not weighting so much
but almost.
Next
day, after a unilateral agreement with Poseidon, I left ashore my gun and
took only pictures of the big Amberjacks. Still swimming freely in my
personal Amberjacks Reef.
Then I
left.
Riccardo
A. Andreoli