The return Pamela Rose
Andrew Edwards
Pamela Rose spends her summer nights working on the chill waters
beyond Newport Harbor.
For 19 years, Pamela Rose has helped the Newport Bait Co. keep
anglers supplied with bait used to catch fish in the waters around
Newport Beach. But last summer, the 58-foot bait craft was kept out
of action. On Mother’s Day 2004, Pamela Rose ran aground at Cameo
Shores Beach, and the mishap kept the craft out of commission for
almost a year.
On April 1, Pamela Rose returned.
Newport Bait Co. owner Steve Greyshock said he recruited the
boat’s builder, Mike Acevez, to help return the old girl to
seaworthiness. Repairs were handled at the Newport Harbor Shipyards.
Greyshock recalled putting Pamela Rose through tough work to fix
and update the boat.
“I was working on it, welding and cutting steel,” Greyshock said.
He and Acevez -- who has since traveled to Guadalajara, Mexico,
and was not available to talk about the boat -- reshaped the bottom
of the Pamela Rose’s hull and increased the size of its storage
tanks. The revamped Pamela Rose has room for seven tons of sardines,
anchovies and other fish snacks destined for the hook.
PLENTY OF FISH
While Pamela Rose was out of commission, Greyshock and crew used a
substitute boat. Norris Tapp, general manager at Davey’s Locker
Sportfishing in Balboa Village, said his company didn’t have problems
keeping fishing enthusiasts supplied with bait after Pamela Rose ran
aground.
This year, Tapp said, anglers have been pleased with the amount of
anchovies -- good eating for bigger fish -- brought in by Pamela
Rose’s crew.
“For whatever reason, the Pamela Rose has been able to find
anchovies, and it’s been a world of difference,” Tapp said.
Pamela Rose’s crew drags her net as far south as San Onofre and
all the way up to Marina del Rey in search of bait. But Greyshock’s
crew catches most of its quarry in the waters near Newport. He said
bait fish are attracted to the underwater canyons, which make nearby
waters one of the best places along California’s shores to find bait.
“One thing about Newport, it’s a bait hauler’s paradise,”
Greyshock said.
On mornings after a bait run, Pamela Rose’s crew takes the boat to
the Newport Bait Co.’s barge, which floats between the jetties at the
entrance to Newport Harbor.
After June 17, when the summer fishing season is in full swing,
Pamela Rose is taken out to sea every night until Sept. 1. During
those weeks, the company maintains 24-hour bait service. Mike
Greyshock, Steve Greyshock’s son, said he doesn’t mind spending
nights on the green-trimmed bait barge -- as long as anchovies and
sardines are in demand.
“If there’s people out there, it’s OK, but it can get lonely out
there,” he said.
Taking a look at the waterfront real estate on either side of the
barge, Mike Greyshock noted that spending time in the middle of
Newport Harbor has its advantages.
“It’s a nice place to be. Nice property,” he said. “Most people
pay a million dollars for this.”
A SALTY BUNCH
Working on Pamela Rose and the bait barge seems to come naturally
for Mike Greyshock, who said working with his father in the fishing
business has been a lifelong venture.
In a similar vein, some members of Pamela Rose’s crew said they
have spent many years around the water, but the refurbished craft
picked up some new hands when it returned to the water.
One of the recent additions to the Pamela Rose’s crew is Tony
Guigliano. A former chef who enjoys fishing, Guigliano transformed
his hobby into a living.
“I’ve been going out on boats almost weekly for 20 years,”
Guigliano said. “I love the elements of the ocean, and I thought I’d
try this career change. So far I really love it.”
Just finished with his fifth trip aboard Pamela Rose, Guigliano
said he was still learning the tricks of the trade and that his
duties included a little bit of everything.
Corby Jackson, another newcomer, joined the crew around April, and
has about two decades worth of experience on the water.
“I’ve been working in Newport since I was 11,” Jackson said. “I
was running sports boats since I was 19.”
Before joining Pamela Rose, Jackson spent about eight years
fishing professionally on squid boats, experience that could come in
handy this winter.
During that part of the year, the Pamela Rose’s crew switches its
quarry from bait to squid, Steve Greyshock said. Squid are exported
to the Chinese market, and during the cold months, work on Pamela
Rose is as full-time as it gets.
“When we fish bait, we go out at about midnight and come back at
seven in the morning,” said Steve Greyshock, who has endured the long
hours of fishing for 27 years, with the Pamela Rose being his third
bait boat. “When we fish commercially in the wintertime, we live on
the boat.”
Greyshock’s deck boss, Marco de los Barrios, has worked aboard the
Newport bait boat since 1992.
The deck boss’ years aboard the Pamela Rose have given him enough
confidence to proclaim: “I know everything.”
“I need to pay attention to everything. Watch all the guys,” de
los Barrios said.
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