Fishing the Okie way
When I was growing up, there were four fishing fleets in Southern
California. Three were made up of distinct ethnic groups.
There was the Portuguese fishing fleet in San Diego. There was the
Yugoslav fishing fleet in San Pedro. There was the Japanese fishing
fleet in Fish Harbor on Terminal Island. And there was the Newport
Beach fishing fleet, a polyglot group without any distinctive ethnic
identity.
It’s a little hard to identify as an ethnic group fishermen with
names such as McMillen, Hales, Shafer, Mill, Dyson, Dixon, Johnson,
Sharps and Anich. Late in the game, a fifth was added, the Okie
Fishing Fleet.
Newport Beach had a fishing fleet from the very beginning, an
integral part of the local economy. As a Balboan, I was only vaguely
aware of it, and then only because in the early hours of the morning
we could hear the Newport fishermen going to work.
In those days, before the harbor was dredged, what is now Newport
Harbor was a maze of mud flats, sand bars, sand islands and swamp. A
narrow channel ran from the Rhine, where the fishing fleet made its
home, to the Newport Harbor Yacht Club, hugging the bay side of the
peninsula.
At the yacht club, it turned left around Bay Island, then went
between mud flats to a channel that Joe Beek had dredged through the
Bay Island mud flat so his ferry could cross. They then followed a
narrow channel next to the peninsula up to the Point, where the
always hazardous harbor mouth awaited. Beyond that was the ocean and
fish.
The exception to this was the dory fisherman, who rowed their
dories out through the surf and then several miles out into the ocean
to do their fishing. They rowed for the simple reason that mankind
had not as yet invented a retractable propeller for boats. If you
came into the beach with a propeller-driven craft, as soon as you hit
the sand, you lost your propeller.
An ingenious local dory fisherman named Shorty Guenther thought he
had the answer. Shorty equipped his boat with an airplane engine on a
stand, attached a propeller to it and, voila, he was off to the
fishing grounds without having to row a stroke. It was a grand idea.
Shorty started out just fine. The engine made a lot of noise, the
propeller whirled, and the boat entered the water.
When the first wave hit the boat, the boat stopped, but the
airplane engine, the propeller and Shorty didn’t. They just kept
going. After that, dory fishermen continued to row.
Then came the Great Depression, and the so-called Okies began to
escape the dust bowl by coming to California. Most of them went to
the Central Valley and were immortalized by John Steinbeck in the
“The Grapes of Wrath.” Some didn’t get as far as Fresno. Some only
got as far as Newport Beach.
There, dirt farmers though they were, they decided to become
fishermen. Of course, they didn’t know diddly about fishing.
For example, about this time, scoop fishing for mackerel became
popular. The traditional way for fishing for mackerel was with jigs.
However, someone discovered that by holding a light over the water at
night, the curious mackerel would come up to look at the light, and
you could simply scoop them aboard.
The Okies were thrilled at this way to catch fish, so thrilled
that a good many of them scooped so many mackerel aboard that they
swamped their boats. That’s when Marco Anich, son of pioneer
fisherman Pete Anich, christened them the Okie Fishing Fleet.
Unfortunately, all these fishermen, plus the live bait boats, plus
sport fishing from every yacht in the harbor, finally caught all the
fish in the Catalina channel. The canneries closed, and our fishing
fleet, as well as the Okie Fishing Fleet, disappeared.
* ROBERT GARDNER is a Corona del Mar resident and a former judge.
His column runs Tuesdays.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.