SAILOR is born, not made. And by "sailor" is meant, not the average
inefficient and hopeless creature who is found to-day in the forecastles of
deepwater ships, but the man who will take a fabric compounded of wood and iron
and rope and canvas and compel it to obey his will on the surface of the sea.
Barring captains and mates of big ships, the small-boat sailor is the real
sailor. He knows—he must know—how to make the wind carry his craft from
one given point to another given point. He must know about tides and rips and
eddies, bar and channel markings, and day and night signals; he must be wise in
weather-lore; and he must be sympathetically familiar with the peculiar
qualities of his boat which differentiate it from every other boat that was
ever built and rigged. He must know how to gentle her about, as one instance of
a myriad, and to fill her on the other tack without deadening her way or
allowing her to fall off too far.
The deepwater sailor of to-day needs know none of
these things. And he doesn't. He pulls and hauls as he is ordered, swabs decks,
washes paint, and chips iron-rust. He knows nothing, and cares less. Put him in
a small boat and he is helpless. He will cut an even better figure on the
hurricane deck of a horse.
I shall never forget my child-astonishment when I
first encountered one of these strange beings. He was a runaway English sailor.
I was a lad of twelve, with a decked-over, fourteen-foot, centre-board skiff
which I had taught myself to sail. I sat at his feet as at the feet of a god,
while he discoursed of strange lands and peoples, deeds of violence, and
hair-raising gales at sea. Then, one day, I took him for a sail. With all the
trepidation of the veriest little amateur, I hoisted sail and got under way.
Here was a man, looking on critically, I was sure, who knew more in one second
about boats and the water than I could ever know. After an interval, in which I
exceeded myself, he took the tiller and the sheet. I sat on the little thwart
amidships, open-mouthed, prepared to learn what real sailing was. My mouth
remained open, for I learned what a real sailor was in a small boat. He
couldn't trim the sheet to save himself, he nearly capsized several times in
squalls, and, once again, by blunderingly jibing over; he didn't know what a
centre-board was for, nor did he know that in running a boat before the wind
one must sit in the middle instead of on the side; and finally, when we came
back to the wharf, he ran the skiff in full tilt, shattering her nose and
carrying away the mast-step. And yet he was a really truly sailor fresh from
the vasty deep.
Which points my moral. A man can sail in the
forecastles of big ships all his life and never know what real sailing is. From
the time I was twelve, I listened to the lure of the sea. When I was fifteen I
was the captain and owner of an oyster-pirate sloop. By the time I was sixteen
I was sailing in scow-schooners, fishing salmon with the Greeks up the
Sacramento River, and serving as sailor on the Fish Patrol. And I was a good
sailor, too, though all my cruising had been on San Francisco Bay and the
rivers tributary to it. I had never been on the ocean in my life.
Then, the month I was seventeen, I signed before
the mast as an able seaman on a three-topmast schooner bound on a seven-months'
cruise across the Pacific and back again. As my shipmates promptly informed me,
I had had my nerve with me to sign on as able seaman. Yet behold, I was
an able seaman. I had graduated from the right school. It took no more than
minutes to learn the names and uses of the new ropes. It was simple. I did not
do things blindly. As a small-boat sailor I had learned to reason out and know
the why of everything. It is true, I had to learn how to steer by
compass, which took maybe half a minute; but when it came to steering
"full-and-by" and "close-and-by," I could beat the average
of my shipmates, because that was the very way I had always sailed. Inside
fifteen minutes I could box the compass around and back again. And there was
little else to learn during that seven-months' cruise, except fancy
rope-sailorizing, such as the more complicated lanyard knots and the making of
various kinds of sennit and rope-mats. The point of all of which is that it is
by means of small-boat sailing that the real sailor is best schooled.
And if a man is a born sailor, and has gone to
the school of the sea, never in all his life can he get away from the sea
again. The salt of it is in his bones as well as his nostrils, and the sea will
call to him until he dies. Of late years, I have found easier ways of earning a
living, but always I come back to the sea. In my case it is usually San
Francisco Bay, than which no lustier, tougher sheet of water can be found for
small-boat sailing.
It really blows on San Francisco Bay. During the
winter, which is the best cruising season, we have southeasters, southwesters,
and occasional howling northers. Throughout the summer we have what we call the
"sea-breeze," an unfailing wind off the Pacific that on most
afternoons in the week blows what the Atlantic Coast yachtsmen would name a
gale. They are always surprised by the small spread of canvas our yachts carry.
Some of them, with schooners they have sailed around the Horn, have looked
proudly at their lofty sticks and huge spreads, then patronizingly and even
pityingly at ours. Then, perchance, they have joined in a club cruise from San
Francisco to Mare Island. They found the morning run up the Bay delightful. In
the afternoon, when the brave west wind ramped across San Pablo Bay and they
faced it on the long beat home, things were somehow different. One by one, like
a flight of swallows, our more meagerly sparred and canvassed yachts went by,
leaving them wallowing and dead and shortening down in what they called a gale
but which we called a dandy sailing breeze. The next time they came out, we
would notice their sticks cut down, their booms shortened, and their
after-leeches nearer the luffs by whole cloths.
As for excitement, there is all the difference in
the world between a ship in trouble at sea, and a small boat in trouble on
land-locked water. Yet for genuine excitement and thrill, give me the small
boat. Things happen so quickly, and there are always so few to do the work—and
hard, too, as the small-boat sailor knows. I have toiled all night, both
watches on deck, in a typhoon off the coast of Japan, and been less exhausted
than by two hours' work at reefing down a thirty-foot sloop and heaving up two
anchors on a lee shore in a screaming southeaster.
Hard work and excitement! Let the wind baffle and
drop in a heavy tide-way just as you are sailing your little sloop through a
narrow drawbridge. Behold your sails, upon which you are depending, flap with
sudden emptiness, and then see the impish wind, with a haul of eight points,
fill your jib aback with a gusty puff. Around she goes, and sweeps, not through
the open draw, but broadside on against the solid piles. Hear the roar of the
tide, sucking through the trestle. And hear and see your pretty, freshly
painted boat crash against the piles. Feel her stout little hull give to the
impact. See the rail actually pinch in. Hear your canvas tearing, and see the
black, square-ended timbers thrusting holes through it. Smash! There goes your
topmast stay, and the topmast reels over drunkenly above you. There is a
ripping and crunching. If it continues, your starboard shrouds will be torn
out. Grab a rope—any rope—and take a turn around a pile. But the free end
of the rope is too short.
You can't make it fast, and you hold on and wildly yell for you one
companion to get a turn with another and longer rope. Hold on! You hold on till
you are purple in the face, till it seems your arms are dragging out of their
sockets, till the blood bursts from the ends of your finger. But you hold, and
your partner gets the longer rope and makes it fast. You straighten up and look
at your hands. They are ruined. You can scarcely relax the crooks of the
fingers. The pain is sickening. But there is no time. The skiff, which is
always perverse, is pounding against the barnacles on the piles which threaten
to scrape its gunwale off. It's drop the peak! Down jib! Then you run
lines, and pull and haul and heave, and exchange unpleasant remarks with the
bridge-tender who is always willing to meet you more than half way in such
repartee. And finally, at the end of an hour, with aching back, sweat-socked
shirt, and slaughtered hands, you are through and swinging along on the placid,
beneficent tide between narrow banks where the cattle stand knee-deep and gaze
wonderingly at you. Excitement! Work! Can you beat it in a calm day on the deep
sea?
I've tried it both ways. I remember laboring in a
fourteen days' gale off the coast of New Zealand. We were a tramp collier,
rusty and battered, with six thousand tons of coal in our hold. Life lines were
stretched fore and aft; and on our weather side, attached to smokestack guys
and rigging, were huge rope-nettings, hung there for the purpose of breaking
the force of the seas and so saving our mess-room doors. But the doors were
smashed and the mess-room washed out just the same. And yet, out of it all,
arose but the one feeling, namely, of monotony.
In contrast with the foregoing, about the
liveliest eight days of my life were spent in a small boat on the west coast of
Korea. Never mind why I was thus voyaging up the Yellow Sea during the month of
February in below-zero weather. The point is that I was in an open boat, a
sampan, on a rocky coast where there were no lighthouses and where the
tides ran from thirty to sixty feet. My
crew was Japanese fishermen. We did not speak each other's language. Yet there
was nothing monotonous about that trip. Never shall I forget one particular
cold, bitter dawn, when, in the thick of driving snow, we took in sail and
dropped our small anchor. The wind was howling out of the northwest, and we
were on a lee shore. Ahead and astern, all escape was cut off by rocky
headlands, against whose bases burst the unbroken seas. To windward a short
distance, seen only between the snow-squalls, was a low rocky reef. It was this
that inadequately protected us from the whole Yellow Sea that thundered in upon
us.
The Japanese crawled under a communal rice mat
and went to sleep. I joined them, and for several hours we dozed fitfully. Then
a sea deluged us out with icy water, and we found several inches of snow on top
the mat. The reef to windward was disappearing under the rising tide, and
moment by moment the seas broke more strongly over the rocks. The fishermen
studied the shore anxiously. So did I, and with a sailor's eye, though I could
see little chance for a swimmer to gain that surf-hammered line of rocks. I
made signs toward the headlands on either flank. The Japanese shook their
heads. I indicated that dreadful lee shore. Still they shook their heads and
did nothing. My conclusion was that they were paralyzed by the hopelessness of
the situation. Yet our extremity increased with every minute, for the rising
tide was robbing us of the reef that served as a buffer. It soon became a case
of swamping at our anchor. Seas were splashing on board in growing volume, and
we baled constantly. And still my fisherman crew eyed the surf-battered shore
and did nothing.
At last, after many narrow escapes from complete
swamping, the fishermen got into action. All hands tailed on to the anchor and
hove it up. For'ard, as the boat's head paid off, we set a patch of sail about
the size of a flour-sack. And we headed straight for shore. I unlaced my shoes,
unbuttoned my greatcoat and coat, and was ready to make a partial strip a
minute or so before we struck. But we didn't strike, and, as we rushed in, I
saw the beauty of the situation. Before us opened a narrow channel, frilled at
its mouth with breaking seas. Yet, long before, when I had scanned the shore
closely, there had been no such channel. I had forgotten the thirty-foot
tide. And it was for this tide that the Japanese had so precariously
waited. We ran the frill of breakers, curved into a tiny sheltered bay where
the water was scarcely flawed by the gale, and landed on a beach where the salt
sea of the last tide lay frozen in long curving lines. And this was one gale of
three in the course of those eight days in the sampan. Would it have
been beaten on a ship? I fear me the ship would have gone aground on the
outlying reef and that its people would have been incontinently and
monotonously drowned.
There are enough surprises and mishaps in a
three-days' cruise in a small boat to supply a great ship on the ocean for a
full year. I remember, once, taking out on her trial trip, a little
thirty-footer I had just bought. In six days we had two stiff blows, and, in
addition, one proper southwester and one rip-snorting southeaster. The slight
intervals between these blows were dead calms. Also, in the six days, we were
aground three times. Then, too, we tied up to the Sacramento River, and,
grounding by an accident on the steep slope on a falling tide, nearly turned a
side somersault down the bank. In a stark calm and a heavy tide in the
Carquinez Straits, where anchors skate on the channel-scoured bottom, we were
sucked against a big dock and smashed and bumped down a quarter of a mile of
its length before we could get clear. Two hours afterward, on San Pablo Bay,
the wind was piping up and we were reefing down. It is no fun to pick up a
skiff adrift in a heavy sea and gale. That was our next task, for our skiff,
swamping, parted both towing painters we had bent on. Before we recovered it we
had nearly killed ourselves with exhaustion, and we certainly had strained the
sloop in every part from keelson to truck. And to cap it all, coming into our
home port, beating up the narrowest part of the San Antonio Estuary, we had a
shave of inches from collision with a big ship in tow of a tug. I have sailed
the ocean in far larger craft a year at a time, in which period occurred no
such chapter of moving incident.
After all, the mishaps are almost the best part
of small-boat sailing. Looking back, they prove to be punctuations of joy. At
the time they try your mettle and vocabulary, and may make you pessimistic as
to believe that God has a grudge against you—but afterward, ah, afterward,
with what pleasure you remember them and with what gusto do you relate them to
your brother skippers in the fellowhood of small-boat sailing.
A narrow, winding slough; a half tide, exposing
mud surfaced with gangrenous slime; the water itself filthy and discolored by
the waste from the vats of a nearby tannery; the marsh grass on either side
mottled with all the shades of a decaying orchid; a crazy, ramshackle, ancient
wharf; and at the end of the wharf a small, white-painted sloop. Nothing
romantic about it. No hint of adventure. A splendid pictorial argument against
the alleged joys of small-boat sailing. Possibly that is what Cloudesley and I
thought, that sombre, leaden morning, as we turned out to cook breakfast and
wash decks. The latter was my stunt, but one look at the dirty water overside
and another at my fresh painted deck, deterred me. After breakfast, we started
a game of chess. The tide continued to fall, and we felt the sloop begin to
list. We played on until the chessmen began to fall over. The list increased,
and we went on deck. Bow-line and stern-line were drawn taut. As we looked the
boat listed still farther with an abrupt jerk. The lines were now very
taut.
"As soon as her belly touches the bottom she
will stop," I said.
Cloudesley sounded with a boat hook along the
outside.
"Seven feet of water," he announced.
"The bank is almost up and down. The first thing that touches will be her
mast when she turns bottom up."
An ominous, minute snapping noise came from the
stern-line. Even as we looked, we saw a strand fray and part. Then we jumped.
Scarcely had we bent another line between the stern and the wharf, when the
original line parted. As we bent another line for'ard, the original one there
cracked and parted. After that, it was an inferno of work and excitement. We
ran more and more lines, and more and more lines continued to part, and more
and more the pretty boat went over on her side. We bent all our spare lines; we
unrove sheets and halyards; we used our two-inch hawser; we fastened lines part
way up the mast, half way up, and everywhere else. We toiled and sweated and
enounced our mutual and sincere conviction that God's grudge still held against
us. Country yokels came down on the wharf and sniggered at us. When Cloudesley
let a coil of rope slip down the inclined deck into the vile slime and fished
it out with seasick countenance, the yokels sniggered louder, and it was all I
could do to prevent him from climbing up on the wharf and committing
murder.
By the time the sloop's deck was perpendicular,
we had unbent the boom-lift from below, made it fast to the wharf, and, with
the other end fast nearly to the mast head, heaved it taut with block and
tackle. The lift was of steel wire. We were confident that it could stand the
strain, but we doubted the holding-power of the stays that held the mast.
The tide had two more hours to ebb (and it was
the big run-out), which meant that five hours must elapse ere the returning
tide would give us a chance to learn whether or not the sloop would rise to it
and right herself. The bank was almost up and down, and at the bottom, directly
beneath us, the fast-ebbing tide left a pit of the vilest, illest-smelling,
illest-appearing muck to be seen in many day's ride. Said Cloudesley to me,
gazing down into it:
"I love you as a brother. I'd fight fore
you. I'd face roaring lions, and sudden death by field and flood. But just the
same, don't you fall into that." He shuddered nauseously. "For if you
do, I haven't the grit to pull you out. I simply couldn't. You'd be awful. The
best I could do would be to take a boat-hook and shove you down out of
sight."
We sat on the upper side-wall of the cabin,
dangling our legs down the top of the cabin, leaned our backs against the deck,
and played chess until the rising tide and the block and tackle on the
boom-lift enabled us to get hr on a respectable keel again. Years afterward,
down in the South Seas, on the island of Ysabel, I was caught in a similar
predicament. In order to clean her copper, I had careened the Snark
broadside on to the beach and outward. When the tide rose, she refused to rise.
The water crept in through the scuppers, mounted over the rail, and the level
of the ocean slowly crawled up the slant of the deck. We battened down the
engine room hatch, and the sea rose to it and over it and climbed perilously
near to the cabin companionway and skylight. We were all sick with fever, but
we turned out in the blazing tropic sun and toiled madly for several hours. We
carried our heaviest lines ashore from our mast-heads and heave with our
heaviest purchases until everything crackled including ourselves. We would
spell off and lie down like dead men, then get up and heave and crackle again.
And in the end, our lower rail five feet under water and the wavelets lapping
the companionway combing, the sturdy little craft shivered and shook herself
and pointed her masts once more to the zenith.
There is never lack of exercise in small-boat
sailing, and the hard work is not only part of the fun of it, but it beats the
doctors. San Francisco Bay is no mill pond. It is a large and draughty and
variegated piece of water. I remember, one winter evening, trying to enter the
mouth of the Sacramento. There was a freshet on the river, the flood tide from
the bay had been beaten back into a strong ebb, and the lusty west wind died
down with the sun. It was just sunset, and with a fair to middling breeze, dead
aft, we stood still in the rapid current. We were squarely in the mouth of the
river; but there was no anchorage and we drifted backward, faster and faster,
and dropped anchor outside as the last breath of wind left us. The night came
on, beautiful and warm and starry. My one companion cooked supper, while on
deck I put everything in shape Bristol fashion. When we turned in at nine
o'clock the weather-promise was excellent. (If I had carried a barometer I'd
have known better.) By two in the morning our shrouds were thrumming in a
piping breeze, and I got up and gave her more scope on her hawser. Inside
another hour there was no doubt that we were in for a southeaster.
It is not nice to leave a warm bed and get out of
a bad anchorage in a black, blowy night, but we arose to the occasion, put in
two reefs, and started to heave up. The winch was old, and the strain of the
jumping head sea was too much for it. With the winch out of commission, it was
impossible to heave up by hand. We knew, because we tried it and slaughtered
our hands. Now a sailor hates to lose an anchor. It is a matter of pride. Of
course, we could have buoyed ours and slipped it. Instead, however, I gave her
still more hawser, veered her, and dropped the second anchor.
There was little sleep after that, for first one
and then the other of us would be rolled out of his bunk. The increasing size
of the seas told us we were dragging, and when we struck the scoured channel we
could tell by the feel of it that our two anchors were fairly skating across.
It was a deep channel, the farther edge of it rising steeply like the wall of a
cañon, and when our anchors started up that wall they bit in and held.
Yet, when we fetched up, through the darkness we could hear the seas breaking
on the solid shore astern, and so near was it that we shortened the skiff's
painter.
Daylight showed us that between the stern of the
skiff and destruction was no more than a score of feet. And how it did blow!
There were times, in the gusts, when the wind must have approached a velocity
of seventy or eighty miles an hour. But the anchors held, and so nobly that our
final anxiety was that the for'ard bitts would be jerked clean out of the boat.
All day the sloop alternately ducked her nose under and sat down on her stern;
and it was not till late afternoon that the storm broke in one last and worst
mad gust. For a full five minutes an absolute dead calm prevailed, and then,
with the suddenness of a thunderclap, the west snorted out of the southwest—a
shift of eight points and a boisterous gale. Another night of it was too much
for us, and we hove up by hand in a cross head-sea. It was not stiff work. It
was heartbreaking. And I know we were both near to crying from the hurt and the
exhaustion. And when we did get the first anchor up-and-down we couldn't break
it out. Between seas we snubbed her nose down to it, took plenty of turns, and
stood clear as she jumped. Almost everything smashed and parted except the
anchor-hold. The chocks were jerked out, the rail torn off, and the very
covering-board splintered, and still the anchor held. At last, hoisting the
reefed mainsail and slacking off a few of the hard-won feet of chain, we sailed
the anchor out. It was nip and tuck, though, and there were times when the boat
was knocked down flat. We repeated the manœuver with the remaining
anchor, and in the gathering darkness fled into the shelter of the river's
mouth.
I was born so long ago that I grew up before the
era of gasolene. As a result, I am old-fashioned. I prefer a sail-boat to a
motor-boat, and it is my belief that boat-sailing is a finer, more difficult,
and sturdier art that running a motor. Gasolene engines are becoming fool
proof, and while it is unfair to say that any fool can run an engine, it is
fair to say that almost any one can. Not so, when it comes to sailing a boat.
More skill, more intelligence, and a vast deal more training are necessary. It
is the finest training in the world for boy and youth and man. If the boy is
very small, equip him with a small, comfortable skiff. He will do the rest. He
won't need to be taught. Shortly he will be setting a tiny leg-of-mutton and
steering with an oar. then he will begin to talk keels and centerboards and
want to take his blankets out and stop aboard all night.
But don't be afraid for him. He is bound to run
risks and encounter accidents. Remember, there are accidents in the nursery as
well as out on the water. More boys have died from hothouse culture than have
died on boats large and small; and more boys have been made into strong and
reliant men by boat-sailing than by lawn-croquet and dancing school.
And once a sailor, always a sailor. The savor of
the salt never stales. The sailor never grows so old that he does not care to
go back for one more wrestling bout with wind and wave. I know of it myself. I
have turned rancher, and live beyond sight of the sea. Yet I can stay away from
it only so long. After several months have passed, I begin to grow restless. I
find myself day-dreaming over incidents of the last cruise, or wondering if the
striped bass are running on Wingo Slough, or eagerly reading the newspapers for
reports of the first northern flights of ducks. And then, suddenly, there is a
hurried packing of suit-cases and overhauling of gear, and we are off for
Vallejo where the little Roamer lies, waiting, always waiting, for the
skiff to come alongside, for the lighting of the fire in the galley-stove, for
the pulling off of gaskets, the singing up of the mainsail, and the rat-tat-tat
of the reef-points, for the heaving short and the breaking out, and for the
twirling of the wheel as she fills away and heads up Bay or down.
[EDITOR'S NOTE.—This article is one of a series on "The Joys of Country Life," Which we plan to publish from time to time, and which we hope will express the feeling and spirit of those activities which we usually treat in a more practical fashion. "The Joy of Edged Tools" and "The Fun of a Greenhouse" appeared in our December mid-month issue, 1910; "The Fun of Driving a Motor-Car" in the January mid-month number, 1911; "The Joys of Gardening" in our March 1st issue; "The Joy of Angling" in our May 1st issue; "The Joy of Motor-Boating" in our June 1st issue; "The Joys of Being a Farmer" in our issue of July 1st; "More Joys of Motor-Boating" in our issue of September 1st, "The Sport of Fox Hunting" in our issue of October 15th; "The Exhilaration of Mountaineering" in our issue of May 15, 1912, and "The Joy of Horseback Riding" in our issue of July 1st. "The Joy of Walking," by Anne O'Hagan; "The Joy of House-Building," and others will follow.]
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