JUDGE GARDNER -- The Verdict
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Back in the 1950s, Joe Collins, Bill Silzle and I were into what we
called skin diving -- what is now called free diving, diving without
scuba. Our gear was rather primitive, but the diving conditions made up
for any defect in our gear. A great kelp patch ran from Corona del Mar to
San Diego. The kelp was so thick that when you dove at low tide you
carefully picked an open spot in which to surface. Otherwise, you could
drown a few inches from the surface, entangled in kelp.
And so it was that on one occasion we were diving in the kelp patch
off Little Corona when I ran into a rather large whale, which had come
into the kelp to brush off whatever marine growth on its body was
bothersome. As it swam by, I gave it a whack with my abalone iron, which
didn’t seem to bother it a bit.
I surfaced and told Bill and Joe about the big whale in the kelp.
Since Joe had a camera and Bill had a boat, we conceived of the brilliant
idea of forcing the whale to the surface, then taking a picture of it for
an outdoor magazine, something like Field and Stream.
They got their equipment, and I went down and poked at the whale until
I finally persuaded it to surface.
They pulled me in the boat, Joe sat in the bow and Bill took the
wheel, and the great chase ensued. The whale would surface, blow, then
submerge. We would try to figure out where it was going to surface, head
that way and wait, but it was a very contrary beast. Over and over again
it would surface in the wrong place, according to our calculations.
We were persistent, however, and finally the whale surfaced right in
front of the boat. It was so close, in fact, that Joe could have reached
out and touched it. He snapped the picture, and we had visions of
publication -- a feature, at least, maybe even a cover.
As I said, we got close to the whale, too close, in fact. Have you
ever seen a photograph of a piece of sandpaper close up? That’s what our
picture looked like. It was so bad that we not only couldn’t make Field
and Stream, we couldn’t even keep the picture for a scrapbook.
So much for amateur photographers.
* ROBERT GARDNER is a Corona del Mar resident and a former judge. His
column runs Tuesdays.
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