St George

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stoweaway Two days ago we arrived at St. George, an island populated by 108 people and a heck of a lot of fur seals and birds such as the Red- Leg Kittywake and Thick-Billed Murre. Imagine cliffs teeming with birds and their offspring, gulls squawking overhead and the grunts of fur seals and surf pounding the shore.
We arrived in the afternoon, after a morning where Stoweaway found the "Nausicalm" didn't. Even more ignominious, we were only in five foot swells.
After awhile, I fell into the sleep I hadn't had much of the night before. When I woke up it was afternoon and there was this sound like marbles the size of giant satelite dishes tumbling out of a closet. Holy s, had we hit something?
I staggered to the foredeck to find Ruurd, the super-blond, super-organic-food-educator, was ringing a bell. "What's that noise?" "We're dropping anchor".
Oh.
Ruurd calls to Penney, who is turning a giant winch. "Is that five yet?" "Four." Ruurd pulls the bellcord again and Penney turnes the winch and the "marbles" roll, link after link, into the ocean until Cap'n Pete, standing outside the bridge? calls "Stopping" and the sun comes out rather cooperatively and things began to look slightly less bleak.

Blessed George, whose blog you may be reading, appears at that moment , takes one look at moi and knows just what to say. "I threw up before lunch." "Thank you, George," I say, hugging him. Willem, who has captained Greenpeace boats, can't repress a slight smirk. Strangely, this is equally comforting, a relief to get even a hint of the ribbing I've expected, a kind of challenge. Ha, Stoweaway will toughen up!
Rumour goes around of a zodiac going into town shortly. But I signed up to clean the mess after breakfast, and Kelly said she'd do it instead when I was down for the count, but she had to whale watch, so Ruurd was going to, but now I've taken over from him, and..."Just go!" everyone says. I'm beginning to see how things work around here. Ta, mates!
Next comes the Cirque de Soleil aspect of life on the Espy. The swells are certainly higher than five feet now. The zodiac rises up near the wet room door, where we're waiting to climb on, then abruptly drops down, oh, looks like six or seven feet. Up and down, up and down. "You have to step very surely." Yeah, right. Or end up in the drink. But hey, we all make it okay and off we zoom.
The harbour is shrouded in fog, and circuitous, a snaky route in created by mound of boulders the residents of St. George have piled up all around the shore. A sign warns "No Rat Infested Ships", and in case you don't read English, there's a handy-dandy picture of a rat with the red "no" circle around and through it. Irresistibly, jokes about who on board this zodiac constitutes a "rat" ensue.
A small boy runs along the shore. "George!" he shouts. "George!" He trips over a rope, falls, picks himself up and keeps running towards us. George waves and the kid's face breaks into a huge grin. A smaller toddler eyes sea urchins by the dock with his mother. After we strip off our lifejackets and climb into a pickup truck with the two boys and Mum, the older one says, "Hey! I want that sea urchin for my crab trap!" and I get an intimation of the life of these islanders, who have subsisted on seal, sea urchin and other native foodstuffs for centuries.
George points out the house where he grew up, and the Russian Orthodox church where he was the island's parish priest for two years, and then we tramp through long, wet grass and wildflowers to a fur-seal viewing blind that warns visitors to assume their presence is disturbing the animals and leave immediately if they see: head-raising, increased agression, etc. If visitors don't leave after seeing these things, mothers and pups may get hurt, the sign warns. Hmn. Just like humans. The seals are brown and golden and some are fighting and one...a parent?...responds to a young one's cries with what looks like a kiss on the mouth. We'd like to stay longer but are cold and wet and happy to get back to the boat and dinner...broth and a bit of rice for Stoweaway. The boat was really swaying, seen from the shore, just how big are the swells now? "Oh, ten feet," says Cap'n Pete. Ten feet, and I'm in the mess, eating? I want to give him a high five, even more so when he says the sea should be like glass the next three days coming up.
Next time, a much more serious side of our voyage: "Is our culture ending?" A young St. George boy asks us to help save his people's way of life.

Comments (1)

  • Permalink themontag on August 21, 2007
    Eating in the mess during ten foot swells! You must have found your sea legs!
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About Me

stoweaway
USA

Hi, I'm Barbara, aka "Stoweaway", because my last name is Stowe and you get the rest. My last name wasn't always Stowe though. My father changed it from "Strasmich" (our ancestry is Russian) when I was five. I remember coming home from pre-school and hearing: "I've changed our family name" and me spittting back, "How dare you!" My father did a lot of things that pissed me off. In 1971, when our house was the (only) Greenpeace office in the world, and our home number was the only number, and I was fourteen years old, he tried to get me to go on Greenpeace's first boat, the Phyllis Cormack, which was sailing to Amchitka Island. That's because he couldn't. His eardrums were wrecked flying a tiny plane with the Civil Air Patrol in World War II, looking for German subs, and being on a boat made him violently ill. As getting a ship to Amchitka was his raison d'etre in life in '71 (our spiritual guru and alround wiseman, Bob Hunter, was grumbling "How can we go without our leader?) he was determined that one Stowe would get onboard. Family honour was as stake. "You should get on that boat," he'd mutter. "It's going to make history." Yeah, right. Like I'd jump on an eighty-foot fishing boat with eleven men and sail up to Alaska to try to stop a nuclear bomb test. Not. Furthermore, the captain wouldn't even let a female on board. He said they were bad luck. (Yeah, we've come a long way, and we're not babies). But a part of me that wasn't full of fear ached to try. After all, I'd been selling Greenpeace buttons, making Greenpeace T-shirts, and passing petitions around in school for a year trying to raise money for the voyage. The word "Amchitka" had a hell of a lot of resonance for me. So when Captain Pete and the Espy crew came to dinner at our house a few months ago and he said "We're going to Amchitka", I knew I had to go. For family honour. For my Greenpeace aunts and uncles, Bob and Zoe Hunter and the Bohlens and Bill Darnell and all the other sages who taught me so much and who never got to Amchitka, because neither the Phyllis Cormack nor the other boat we ended up sending ever made it. I'm a ghost from Greenpeace past, the first of that original wave who will finally sail into the Amchitka harbour on a Greenpeace boat. But I also represent Greenpeace present, the generation my father and the others were fighting for, who didn't want their children to grow up in a nuclear world. And now at age fifty I feel like a Greenpeace aunt to all the amazing new generations of Greenpeace who are changing the world. And for that I have my father, who had the confidence in me to believe I could get on that boat, to thank. Not to mention my mother...but you'll hear about her, and a lot of other people, in my blog.


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