82 Northwest Sportsman AUGUST 2019 | nwsportsmanmag.com
requires passing an exam, so the
expectation is that the licensed
captain knows what he or she is
doing. Jim had been out on the pond
on a number of occasions, so we
thought he was capable. In talking to
him, you could tell he was confident
of his skills out there.
JIM GOT A call from a client who
wanted to catch a halibut. The best
place to do so in our area is called
the Bandon High Spot. This is an
underwater plateau located between
Bandon and Port Orford and about
15 miles west from shore. The
bottom rises from 700 to 800 feet
deep to 400 to 500 feet deep. It is a
hangout for large halibut and a great
spot to fish, if you can get there.
The downside is that it is distant
from any support such as the Coast
Guard or a safe harbor. Unlike on land,
there are no roads, no tow trucks and
no immediate help if things go wrong
at sea. If you capsize out there, it is
unlikely anyone is going to find you
until much later.
The front of the high spot from
the Coos Bay bar is south, 27 miles
distant. It is 15 miles south of Bandon
and about the same distance from
Port Orford. Bandon is not much of
a refuge if things go wrong since it is
difficult to get across the bar most of
the time. Port Orford is OK but there
is no trailer boat launch; you need to
have your boat lifted on and off the
water with a large crane, provided
you have the appropriate straps.
CHECKING THE WEATHER, it looked to
be sunny with a light wind out of
the north when Jim started for the
Bandon High Spot. Waves were
forecast to be 3 to 4 feet, not a bad day
to go fishing. Actually, it was about as
good as it ever gets out there. Another
friend named Leonard was also on
board for this trip as a deckhand. The
rest of this story is based on what
Leonard told me weeks later.
Jim left the Charleston harbor at
daylight and made the 27-mile run
downwind to the High Spot. Since
he was running with the wind and
waves, the trip was comfortable and
made at good speed. They arrived
about an hour and a half later and
there were a few other boats around.
It is good to have a little company
when you are this far from home.
Fishing 500 feet down with a
hand-crank reel is a test of one’s
endurance. To get to the bottom
requires 2 pounds of weight off the
end of a stiff rod. Herring is usually
the bait of choice. Leonard said fishing
was slow that day but they managed
to get their limit of three halibut over
several hours.
By that time the other boats
were gone. As Jim, Leonard and
their client had fished, the wind had
increased and the waves doubled in
size. In nautical slang, “The sheep
was on the water” by the time they
wanted to leave. This means there
were whitecaps on the waves from
the wind. In this case, the wind was
straight out of the north, the waves
from the northwest. Getting back to
Charleston meant heading north into
the seas and wind.
Jim finally shipped the rods and
tackle and told the others to sit tight
for the trip back home. He said it
looked like it might be lumpy and
slow; four to five hours of running
was a possibility. He turned the boat
into the seas, pushed the throttle but
could make very little headway at
displacement speed without shipping
water over the bow. Keep in mind
this boat had an open bow that was
very slow to drain when taking
water. It seems they never make the
bow scuppers large enough in these
boats; I think they were designed for
rain, not waves.
GETTING ON PLANE did not seem like a
possibility and a long trip home was
becoming more realistic. However,
there is a technique in which one
can put the power to the throttle
and get up on top of the waves and
The Bandon High Spot can be reached from Coos Bay,
Bandon and Port Orford, two of which are subject to
summer afternoon northwesterlies. (NOAA)
ROUGH DAYS
AT SEA