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A DANGEROUS SEASON: CRAB FISHING AT A CROSSROADS

October 18, 2003

Wave knocks out Ruff & Reddy's windows

ABOARD THE F/V EXITO, BRISTOL BAY, BERING SEA -- The F/V Ruff & Reddy, a crabber out of Kodiak, became the second casualty of the season late yesterday when a massive wave knocked out the wheelhouse windows and ripped the life raft from the roof. The ship began taking on water and then put out a distress call immediately. The Coast Guard cutter Morgenthau motored to the scene.

How big was the wave? The R&R's wheelhouse windows are 15 feet above the water.

According to radio chatter, the crew was not injured. The Coast Guard was expected to deliver a pump to the boat. With repaired windows and the water drained, the R&R likely will finish the season.

Like the F/V Raven that capsized four days ago, the Ruff & Reddy is a small boat at 86 feet. Smaller boats have more problems in this type of weather, 25 knots from the north with swells to 15 feet.

The F/V Exito's crew is exhausted. Part of that is the hours -- 24 hours at a stretch without sleep -- and part of it is the nature of the job, muscling 650-pound crab cages on and off deck. But equally taxing is the wind. Not only does it sluice icy salt water across the deck and into every opening in a crew member's rain gear, it also is the source of these swells.

"It really takes it out of you," said Jeff Madigan, chief engineer. "This work is hard enough when you are not always fighting for balance."

Quote of the day:

"The forecast is pain followed by cold and wet." -- Michael Keenan, former Exito crew member who now works on the Katie K
Posted by Mike Lewis at October 18, 2003 04:05 PM
Comments

I was dOrdinary Seaman (Deck Hand USMSNorth Star.We sailed in Bering Sea 1953. Skipper took ship into Kodiak the day weather turned bad. Life of a crabber not for me! Whew!

Posted by: Ken Little at October 20, 2003 12:54 PM

I read your article on crabfishing and are impressed.
I do have a favor to ask if you dount mind.
Who,where, and how do I contact for more information on how to get employment on a crab
vessel(not necessereley on the EXITO)
Much appreciated...
Christo.

Posted by: Christo Smit at February 15, 2004 05:11 AM
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  ABOUT OUR TEAM
Lewis Mike Lewis has been a reporter at the Seattle P-I for 3 1/2 years. This was his first trip to Alaska.
Lewis Karen Ducey became a staff photographer at the P-I earlier this year. Before joining the paper, she worked in and photographed Alaska's commercial fishing industry for more than a decade.
 
  ARCHIVES
November 2004
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Monthly archive
· October 2003

Recent Entries
· Pukeless in Seattle
· Bracing for a harrowing flight home
· The story in pictures
· Heading back to Dutch Harbor
· Deckhand dies
· Crab season ends; mood is muted
· The end is in sight
· Wave knocks out Ruff & Reddy's windows
· Grim reminders
· Discovery on the Bering Sea

 
  MORE IN THIS SERIES

Feature articles:
· Crabbing industry faces a sea change
· Before jets, coffee and software, boats brought us windfall
· In high gear on treacherous seas
· Exito's crab catch down, but crew is in one piece
· Alaska's wild, woolly bar scene has calmed in recent years
· Alaska's 'SOB' just may get crab bill passed

Gallery:
Karen Ducey captured the king crab season in pictures.

Complete coverage:
See more in this series.

 

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