THE FISHER FOLK OF NUKUFETAU
by: Louis Becke (1855-1913)
The following story is reprinted from By Rock and Pool on an Austral
Shore and Other Stories. Louis Becke. London: T. Fisher Unwin, 1901.
Early one morning, about a week after I had settled down on Nukufetau as
a trader, I opened my chest of fishing-gear and began to overhaul it. In a few
minutes I was surrounded by an eager and interested group of natives, who
examined everything with the greatest curiosity.
Now for the preceding twelve months I had been living on the little
island of Nanomaga, a day's sail from Nukufetau; and between Nanomaga and
Nukufetau there was a great bitterness of long standing—the Nanomagans claimed
to be the most daring canoe-men and expert fishermen in all the eight isles of
the Ellice Group, and the people of Nukufetau resented the claim strongly. The
feeling had been accentuated by my good friend the Samoan teacher on Nanomaga,
himself an ardent fisherman, writing to his brother minister on Nukufetau and
informing him that although I was not a high-class Christian I was all right in
all other respects, and a good fisherman—"all that he did not know we have
taught him, therefore," he added slyly, "let your young men watch him
so that they may learn how to fish in deep and rough water, such as ours."
These remarks were of course duly made public, and caused much indignation,
neither the minister nor his flock liking the gibe about the deep, rough water;
also the insinuation that anything about fishing was to be learnt from the new
white man was annoying and uncalled for.
I must here mention that the natives of De Peyster's Island (Nukufetau)
caught all the fish they wanted in the smooth and spacious waters of the
lagoon, and were not fond of venturing outside the barrier reef, except during
the bonito season, or when the sea was very calm at night, to catch
flying-fish. Then, too, the currents outside the reef were swift and dangerous,
and the canoes had either to be carried a long distance over the coral or
paddled a couple of miles across the lagoon to the ship passage before the open
sea was gained. Hudson's Island (Nanomaga)—a tiny spot less than four miles in
circumference—had no lagoon, and all fishing was done in the deep water of the
ocean. The natives were used to launching their canoes, year in and year out,
to face the wildest surf, and were, in consequence, wonderfully expert, and in
the history of the island there is only one instance of a man having been
drowned. The De Peyster people, by reason of the advantage of their placid
lagoon, had no reason to risk their lives in the surf in this manner, and so,
naturally enough, they were not nearly as skilful in the management of their
frail canoes when they had to face a sweeping sea on the outer or ocean reef.
Just as I was placing some coils of heavy, deep-sea lines upon the matted
floor, Marèko the native teacher, fat, jovial, and bubbling-voiced, entered in
a great hurry, and hardly giving himself time to shake hands with me, announced
in a tone of triumph, that a body of atuli (baby bonito) had just entered the
passage and were making their way up the lagoon.
In less than ten seconds every man, woman, and child on the island,
except the teacher and myself, were agog with excitement and bawling and
shouting as they rushed to the beach to launch and man the canoes, the advent
of the atuli having been expected for some days. In nearly all the equatorial
islands of the Pacific these beautiful little fish make their appearance every
year almost to a day, with unvarying regularity. They remain in the smooth
waters of lagoons for about two weeks, swimming about in incredible numbers,
and apparently so terrified of their many enemies in their own element, and the
savage, keen-eyed frigate birds which constantly assail them from above, that
they sometimes crowd into small pools on the inner reef, and when the tide is
low, seek to hide themselves by lying in thick masses under the overhanging
ledges of coral rock. Simultaneously—or at least within a day or two at
most—the swarming millions of atuli are followed into the lagoons by the gatala
—a large black and grey rock-cod (much esteemed by the natives for the delicacy
of its flavour) and great numbers of enormous eels. At other times of the year
both the gatala and the eels are never or but rarely seen inside the lagoons,
but are occasionally caught outside the reef at a good depth—forty to sixty
fathoms. As soon, however, as the young bonito appear, both eels and rock-cod
change their normal habits, and entering the lagoons through the passages
thereto, they take up their quarters in the deeper parts—places which are
fringed by a labyrinthine border of coral forest, and are at most ten fathoms
deep. Here, when the atuli are covering the surface above, the eels and
rock-cod actually rise to the surface and play havoc among them, especially
during moonlight nights, and in the daytime both rock-cod and eels may be seen
pursuing their hapless prey in the very shallowest water, amidst the little
pools and runnels of the coral reef. It is at this time that the natives of
Nukufetau and some other islands have some glorious sport, for in addition to
the huge eels and rock-cod many other deep-sea fish flock into the shallower
lagoon waters—all in pursuit of the atuli —and all eager to take the hook.
* * * * *
As soon as the natives had left the house, Marèko turned to me with a
beaming smile. "Let them go on first and net some atuli for us for
bait," he said, "you and I shall follow in my own canoe and fish for
gatala . It will be a great thing for one of us to catch the first gatala of
the season. Yesterday, when I was over there," pointing to two tiny islets
within the lagoon, "I saw some gatala . The natives laugh at me and say I
am mistaken—that because the atuli had not come there could be no gatala . Now,
I think that the big fish came in some days ago, but the strong wind and
current kept the atuli outside till now. Come."
I needed no pressing. In five minutes I had my basket of lines (of white
American cotton) ready, and joined Marèko. His canoe (the best on the island,
of course) was already in the water and manned by his two sons, boys of eight
and twelve respectively. I sat for'ard, the two youngsters amidships, the
father took the post of honour as tautai or steersman, and with a chuckle of
satisfaction from the boys, off we went in the wake of about thirty other
canoes.
Oh, the delight of urging a light canoe over the glassy water of an
island lagoon, and watching the changing colours and strange, grotesque shapes
of the coral trees and plants of the garden beneath as they vanish swiftly
astern, and the quick chip, chip of the flashing paddles sends the whirling,
noisy eddies to right and left, and frights the lazy, many-hued rock-fish into
the darker depths beneath! On, on, till the half mile or more of shallow water
which covers the inner reef is passed, and then suddenly you shoot over the top
of the submarine wall, into deepest, loveliest blue, full thirty fathoms deep,
and as calm and quiet as an infant sleeping on its mother's bosom, though
perhaps not a quarter of a mile away on either hand the long rollers of the
Pacific are bellowing and thundering on the grim black shelves of the weather
coast.
So it was on this morning, but with added delights and beauties; as
instead of striking straight across the lagoon to our rendezvous we had to
skirt the beaches of a chain of thickly wooded islets, which gave forth a sweet
smell, mingled with the odours of nono blossoms; for during the night rain had
fallen after a long month of dry weather, and Nature was breathing with joy.
High overhead there floated some snow-white tropic birds—those gentle, ethereal
creatures which, to the toil-spent seaman who watches their mysterious poise in
illimitable space, seem to denote the greater Mystery and Rest that lieth
beyond all things; and lower down, and sweeping swiftly to and fro with steady,
outspread wing and long, forked tail, the fierce-eyed, savage frigate birds
scanned the surface of the water in search of prey, and then finding it not,
rose without apparent motion to the cloudless canopy of blue and became as but
tiny black specks—and then, swish ! and the tiny black specks which but a
minute ago were high in heaven are flashing by your cheeks with a weird,
whistling sound like winged spectres. You look for them. They are gone. Already
they are a thousand feet overhead. Five of them. And all five are as motionless
as if they, with their wide, outspread wings, had never moved from their
present position for a thousand years.
"Chip, chip," and "chunk, chunk," go our paddles as
we now head eastward towards the rising sun in whose resplendent rays the
tufted palms of the two islets stand clearly out, silhouetted against the sea
rim beyond. Now and again we hear, as from a long, long distance, the echoes of
the voices of the people in the canoes ahead; a soft white mist began to gather
over and then ascend from the water, and as we drew near the islets the
occasional thunder of the serf on Motuluga Reef we heard awhile ago changed
into a monotonous droning hum.
" Aue !" said Marèko the tautai , with a laugh, as he ceased
paddling and laid his paddle athwartships, "'tis like to be a hot day and
calm. So much the better for our fishing, for the water will be very clear. Boy,
give me a coconut to drink."
"Take some whisky with it, Marèko," I said, taking a flask out
of my basket.
"Isa! Shame upon you! How can you say such a thing to me, a
minister!" And then he added, with a reproachful look, "and my
children here, too." He would have winked, but he dared not do so, for one
of his boys had turned his face aft and was facing him. I, however, made him a
hurried gesture which he quite understood. Good old Marèko! He was an honest,
generous-hearted, broad-minded fellow, but terribly afraid of his tyrannical
deacons, who objected to him smoking even in the seclusion of his own curatage,
and otherwise bullied and worried him into behaving exactly as they thought he
should.
By the time we reached the islets the atuli catching had begun, and more
than a hundred natives were encircling a considerable area of water with
finely-meshed nets and driving the fish shoreward upon a small sandy beach,
where they were scooped up in gleaming masses of shining blue and silver by a
number of women and children, who tumbled over and pushed each other aside
amidst much laughter and merriment.
On the larger of the two islets were a few thatched huts with open sides.
One of these was reserved for the missionary and the white man, and hauling our
canoe up on the beach at the invitation of the people, we sat down under a shed
whilst the women grilled us some of the freshly-caught fish. This took barely
over ten minutes, as fires had already been lighted by the children. The
absence of bread was made up for by the flesh of half-grown coconuts and cooked
puraka —gigantic species of taro which thrives well in the sandy soil of the
Equatorial islands of the Pacific. Just as we had finished eating and were
preparing our lines we heard loud cries from the natives who were still engaged
among the atuli , and three or four of them seizing spears began chasing what
were evidently some large fish. Presently one of them darted his weapon, and
then gave a loud cry of triumph, as he leapt into the water and dragged out a
large salmon-like fish called "utu", which was at once brought ashore
for my inspection. The man who had struck it—an active, wiry old fellow named
Viliamu (William) was panting with excitement. Some large gatala , he said, had
just made their appearance with the utu and were pursuing the small fish;
therefore would we please hurry forward with our preparations. Then the leader
of the entire party stood up and bellowed out in bull-like tones his
instructions. The canoes were all to start together, and when the ground was
reached all lines were to be lowered simultaneously; there was to be no crowding.
The white man and missionary, however, if they wished, could start first and
make a choice of position.
"No, no," I said, "let us all start fair."
This was greeted with a chorus of approval, and then leaving the women
and children to attend to the camp, we hurried back to the canoes. Just as we
were leaving the hut I had a look at the utu —a fish I had never before seen.
It was about three feet in length, and only for its head (which was coarse and
clumsy) much like a heavy salmon. The back was covered with light green scales,
the sides and belly a pure silver, and the fins and tail tipped with yellow. It
weighed about 20 lbs., and presented a very handsome appearance.
The fishing-ground to which we were now paddling was not half a mile from
the islets, and lay between them and the outer reef which formed its northern
boundary. It consisted of a series of deep channels or connected pools running
or situated amidst a network of minor reefs, the surfaces of which were, for
the most part, bare at low water. Generally the depth was from eight to ten
fathoms; in places, however, it was much deeper, and I subsequently found that
there were spots whereon I could stand (on the coral ledge) and drop my line
into chasms of thirty-two or thirty-three fathoms. Here the water was almost as
blue to the eye as the ocean, and here the very largest fish resorted—such as
the pura , a species of rock-cod, and a blue-scaled groper, the native name of
which I cannot now recall.
It must have been nearly ten o'clock when the canoes were all in
position, and the word was given to let go lines. The particular spot in which
we were congregated was about three acres in extent and about seven fathoms in
depth, with water as clear as crystal; and even the dullest eye could discern
the smallest pebble or piece of broken coral lying upon the bottom, which was
generally composed of patches of coarse sand surrounded by an interlacing
fringe of growing coral, or white, blue, or yellow boulders. A glance over the
side showed us that the gatala had arrived; we could see numbers of them
swimming lazily to and fro beneath, awaiting the flowing tide which would soon
cover the lagoon from one shore to the other with swarms of young bonito, as
they swam about in search of such places as that in which we were now about to
begin fishing.
Each man had baited his hook with the third of an atuli —at this stage of
their life about four inches long and exactly the colour and shape of a young
mackerel—and within five minutes after "" Tu'u tau kafa !"
("Let go lines!") had been called out several of the canoes around
our own began to pull up fish—four to six pounders. I was fishing with a white
cotton line, with two hooks, and Marèko with the usual native gear—a hand-made
line of hibiscus bark with a barbless hook made from a long wire nail, with its
point ground fine and well-curved inwards. We both struck fish at the same
moment, and I knew by the zigzag pull that I had two. Up they came
together—three spotted beauties about eighteen inches in length and weighing
over 5 lbs. each. Then I found the advantage of the native style of hook;
Marèko simply put his left thumb and forefinger into the fish's eye, had his
hook free in a moment, had baited, lowered again and was pulling up another
before I had succeeded in freeing even my first hook which was firmly fixed in
the fish's gullet, out of sight. I soon put myself on a more even footing by
cutting off the small one and a half inch hooks I had been using and bending on
two thick and long-shanked four inchers. These answered beautifully, as
although the barbs caused me some trouble, their stout shanks afforded a good
grip and leverage when extracting them from the hard and keen-toothed jaws of
the struggling fish. Then, too, I had another advantage over my companions; I
was wearing a pair of seaboots which effectually protected my feet from either
the terrible fins or the teeth of the fish in the bottom of the canoe.
I had caught my eighth fish, when an outcry came from a canoe near us, as
a young man who was seated on the for'ard thwart rose to his feet and began
hauling in his line, which was standing straight up and down, taut as an iron
bar, the canoe meanwhile spinning round and round although the steersman used
all his efforts to keep her steady.
"What is it, Tuluia?" called out fifty voices at once. "A
shark?"
"My mother's bones!" said old Viliamu with a laugh of contempt.
"'Tis an eel, and Tuluia, who was asleep, has let it twist its tail around
a piece of coral. May he lose it for his stupidity."
We all ceased fishing to watch, and half a dozen men began jeering at the
lad, who was too excited to heed them. Old Viliamu, who was in the next canoe,
looked down, and then cried out that he could see the eel, which had taken
several turns of its body around a thick branch of growing coral.
"His head is up," he called out to the youth, "but you
cannot move him, he has too many turns in and out among the coral." Then
paddling up alongside he again looked at the struggling creature, then felt the
line which was vibrating with the tension. Stepping out of his own craft into
that of the young man, the line was placed in his hands without an inch of it
being payed out, for once one of these giant eels can get his head down he will
so quickly twine the line in and out among the rugged coral that it is soon
chafed through, if of ordinary thickness. But the ancient knew his work well,
as we were soon to see. Taking a turn of the line well up on his forearm and
grasping it with his right a yard lower down, he waited for a second or two,
then suddenly bent his body till his face nearly touched the water, then he
sprang erect and with lightning-like rapidity began to haul in hand under hand
amid loud cries of approval as the wriggling body of the eel was seen ascending
clear of the coral. The moment it reached the surface, a second native, with
unerring aim sent a spear through it and then a blow or two upon the head with
a club carried for the purpose took all further fight out of the creature,
which was then lifted out of the water and dropped into the canoe. Here the end
of its tail was quickly split open and we saw no more of him for the time
being.
To capture an eel so soon was looked upon as a lucky omen, to have lost
it would have been a presage of ill-fortune for the rest of the day, and the
incident put every one in high good humour. By this time the tide was flowing
over the flatter parts of the reef and young bonito could be seen jumping out
of the water in all directions. Immense bodies were, so I was assured by the
natives, now coming into the lagoon from the sea, and would continue to do so
till the tide turned, when those in the passage, unable to face a six-knot
current, would be carried out again, to make another attempt later on.
By this time every canoe was hauling in large rock-cod almost as quick as
the lines could be baited, and the bottom of our own craft presented a gruesome
sight—a lather of blood and froth and kicking fish, some of which were over 20
lbs. weight. Telling the two boys to cease fishing awhile and stun some of the
liveliest, I unthinkingly began to bale out some of the ensanguined water, when
a score of indignant voices bade me cease. Did I want to bring all the sharks
in the world around us? I was asked; and old Viliamu, who was a sarcastic old gentleman,
made a mock apology for me—
"How should he know any better? The sharks of Tokelau have no teeth,
like the people there, for they too are eaters of fala ."
This evoked a sally of laughter, in which of course I joined. I must
explain that the natives of the Tokelau Group, among whom I had lived, through
constantly chewing the tough drupes of the fruit of the fala (pandanus palm)
wear out their teeth prematurely, and are sometimes termed
"toothless" by other natives of the South Pacific. However, I was to
have my own little joke at Viliamu's expense later on.
Just at this time a sudden squall, accompanied by torrents of rain, came
down upon us from the eastward, and whilst Marèko and his boys kept us head to
wind—none of the canoes were anchored—I took the opportunity of getting ready
two of my own lines, each treble-hooked, for the boys. Their own were old and
rotten, and had parted so often that they were now too short to be of use, and,
besides that, the few remaining hooks of soft wire were too small. As soon as
the squall was over I showed Marèko what I had done. He nodded and smiled, but
said I should try and break off the barbs—his boys did not understand them as
well as native-made hooks. This was quickly accomplished with a heavy knife,
and the youngsters began to haul up fish two and three at a time at such a rate
that the canoe soon became deep in the water outside and very full inside.
"A few more, Marèko," I said, "and then we'll go ashore,
unload, and come back again. I want to tease that old man."
We caught all we could possibly carry in another quarter of an hour, and
I was confident that our take exceeded that of any other canoe. This was
because the natives would carefully watch their stone sinkers descend, and use
every care to keep them from being entangled in the coral, whilst my line,
which had a 12 oz. leaden sinker, would plump quickly to the bottom in the
midst of the hungry fish; consequently, although I lost some hooks by fouling
and now and then dragged up a bunch of coral, I was catching more fish than any
one else. And I was not going to let my reputation suffer for the sake of a few
hooks. So we coiled up our lines on the outrigger platform, and taking up our
paddles headed shoreward, taking care to pass near Viliamu's canoe. He hailed
me and asked me for a pipe of tobacco.
"I shall give it to you when we return," I said.
"When you return! Why, where are you going?" he asked.
"On shore, you silly old woman! I have been showing these boys how
to fish for gatala , and we go because the canoe is sinking. When we return
these two tamariki (infants) shall show you how to fish now that they have
learnt from me."
There was a loud laugh at this, and as the old man took the jest very
good-naturedly I brought up alongside, showed him our take, and gave him a
stick of tobacco. The astonishment of himself and his crew of three at the
quantity of fish we had afforded me much satisfaction, though I could not help
feeling that our luck was not due to my own skill alone.
Returning to the islets we were just in time to escape two fierce
squalls, which lasted half an hour and raised such a sea that the remaining
canoes began to follow us, as they were unable to keep on the ground. During
our absence the women and children had been most industrious; the weather-worn,
dilapidated huts had been made habitable with freshly-plaited kapaus —coarse
mats of green coconut leaves, the floors covered with clean white pebbles,
sleeping mats in readiness, and heaps of young drinking nuts piled up in every
corner, whilst outside smoke was arising from a score of ground ovens in which
taro and puraka were being cooked, together with bundles of atuli wrapped in
leaves.
Etiquette forbade Marèko and myself counting our fish until the rest of
the party returned, although the women had taken them out of the canoe and laid
them on the beach, where the pouring rain soon washed them clean and showed
them in all their shining beauty. Among them were two or three parrot-fish—rich
carmine, striped with bands of bright yellow, boneless fins, and long
protruding teeth in the upper jaw showing out from the thick, fleshy lips; and
one afulu —a species of deep-water sand mullet with purple scales and yellow
fins.
Whilst awaiting the rest of the canoes I drew the teacher into our hut
and pressed him to take some whisky. He was wet, cold, and shivering, but
resolutely declined to take any. "I should like to drink a little,"
he said frankly, "but I must not. I cannot drink it in secret, and yet I
must not set a bad example. Do not ask me, please. But if you like to give some
to the old men do so, but only a very little." I did do so. As soon as the
rest of the party landed I called up four of the oldest men and gave each of
them a stiff nip. They were all nude to the waist, and like all Polynesians who
have been exposed to a cold rain squall, were shivering and miserable. After
each man had taken his nip and emitted a deep sigh of satisfaction I observed
that hundreds of old white men saved their lives by taking a glass of spirits
when they were wet through—they had to do so by the doctor's orders.
"That is true," said one old fellow; "when men grow old,
and the rain falls upon them it does not run off their skins as it would from
the smooth skins of young men. It gets into the wrinkles and stays there. But
when the belly is warmed with grog a man does not feel the cold."
"True," I said gravely, as I poured some whisky out for myself;
"true, quite true, my dear friends. And in these islands it is very bad
for an old man to be exposed to much rain. That is why I am disturbed in my
mind. See, there is Marèko, your minister. He, like you, is old; he is wet and
cold. And he shivers. And he will not take a mouthful of this rom because he
fears scandal. Now if he should become ill and die I should be a disgraced man.
This rom is now not rom; it is medicine. And Marèko should take some even as
you have taken it—to keep away danger."
The four old fellows arose to the occasion. They talked earnestly
together for a minute, and then formed themselves into a committee, requested
me to head them as a deputation with the whisky, and then waited upon their
pastor, who was putting on a dry shirt in another hut. I am glad to say that
under our united protests he at last consented to save his life, and felt much
better.
Presently the women announced that the ovens were ready to be opened. As
soon as the fish were counted, and the rain having ceased, we all gathered
round the canoes and watched each one emptied of its load. As I imagined, our
party had taken the most fish, and not only the most, but the heaviest as well.
Marèko added to my blushing honours by informing the company that as a
fisherman and a knowledgable man generally I justified his brother minister's
opinion and would prove an acquisition to the community. We then inspected the
first eel caught, and a truly huge creature it was, quite nine feet in length,
and in girth at its thickest part, as near as I could guess with a piece of
line, thirty inches. The line with which it was caught was made of new four-stranded
coir-cinnet, as thick as a stout lead pencil, and the hook a piece of 3/6 or
1/2 inch iron with a 6-inch shank, once used as a fish spear, without a barb!
The natives seemed much pleased at the interest displayed, and told me that
sometimes these eels grew to elua gafa ( i.e. , two fathoms), but were seldom
caught, and asked me if I had tackle strong enough for such. Later on I showed
them a 27-stranded American cotton line 100 fathoms long, with a 4-inch hook,
curved in the shank, as thick as a pencil, and "eyed" for a twisted
wire snooding. They had never seen such beautiful tackle before, and were loud
in their expressions of admiration, but thought the line too thin for a very
heavy fish. I told them that at Nanomaga I had caught palu (a nocturnal feeding
fish of great size) in over sixty fathoms with that same line
"That is true," said one of them politely, "we were told
that you and Tiaki (one Jack O'Brien, an old trader) of Funafuti have caught
many palu with your long lines; but the palu is a weak fish even when he is a
fathom long. And as he comes up he grows weaker and weaker, and sometimes he
bursts open when he comes to the surface. Now if a big eel—an eel two fathoms
long—"
"If he was three fathoms long he could not break this line," I
replied positively.
They laughed and told me that when I hooked even a small eel, one half a
fathom in length, I would change my opinion.
Soon after our midday meal was over, and we were preparing to return to
our fishing-ground with an ample supply of fresh bait, the sky to windward
became black and threatening, and through the breaks in the long line of palms
on the weather side of the island, which permitted the horizon to be viewed, we
could see that a squall of unusual violence was coming. All the canoes were at
once hauled up on the lee-side of the islets, the huts were secured by ropes as
quickly as possible, and every one hurried under shelter. In a few minutes the
wind was blowing with astonishing fury, and the air was full of leaves, sticks,
and other débris , whilst the coco-palms and other trees on the islets seemed
likely to be torn up by the roots. This lasted about ten minutes. Then came a
sudden lull, followed by a terrific and deafening downpour of rain; then more
wind, another downpour, and the sun was out again!
As soon as the squall was over, I walked round to the weather side of the
islet with some children. We found the beach covered with some thousands of
atuli and beautiful little garfish which had been driven on shore by the force
of the wind. We were soon joined by women carrying baskets, which they filled
with fish and carried back to the camp. On returning, we again launched the
canoes and started off again—to meet with some disappointment, for although the
gatala still bit freely and several eels were also taken, some scores of the
small, pestilent, lagoon sharks were swimming about and played havoc with our
lines. These torments are from two to four feet in length, and their mouths,
which are quite out of proportion to their insignificant size, are set with
rows of teeth of razor-like keenness. The moment a baited hook was seen one of
these little wretches would dart at it like lightning, and generally bit the
line through just above the hook. So quick were they, that one could seldom even
feel a tug unless the hook got fast in their jaws. Taking off my sinker, and
bending on a big hook with a wire snood, I abandoned myself to their
destruction, and as fast as I hauled one alongside it was stunned, cut into
three or four pieces, and thrown overboard to be devoured by its fellows. Many
of the Ellice and Tokelau islanders regard these young sharks as a delicacy, as
their flesh is very tender, and has not the usual unpleasant smell. In one of
these young sea lawyers we found no less than five hooks, with pieces of line
attached; these were duly restored to their owners.
Another two hours passed, during which we had fairly good sport, then the
rain began to fall so heavily that we gave up for the day. We spent the first
part of the evening in the huts, eating, smoking, and talking, and overhauling
our tackle for the next day. It had been intended that about midnight we should
all go crayfishing in the shallow waters along the shore of the islets, but
this idea had to be abandoned in consequence of the rain having soaked the coco
palms—the dead branches of which are rolled and plaited into a cylindrical form
and used as torches. The method of catching crayfish is very simple: a number
of men, each carrying a kaulama torch about 6 feet in length in the left hand,
and a small scoop net in the right, walk waist-high through the water; the
crayfish, dazed by the brilliant light, are whipped up into the nets and
dropped into baskets carried by the women and children who follow. They can
only be caught on dark, moonless nights.
* * * * *
When we returned to the village our spoils included besides a great
number of fish, a few turtle and some young frigate birds. The latter were
captured for the purpose of being tamed. I made many subsequent visits to the two
islets, sometimes alone and sometimes with my native friends, and on each
occasion I left these lovely little spots with a keen feeling of regret, for
they are ideal resting-places to him who possesses a love of nature and the
soul of a fisherman.
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