A little after
four in the morning on a summer day in 2002, three setnetters pushed their 22
foot skiff off a beach in Uganik Bay on the west side of Kodiak and headed for
their gillnet a quarter of a mile away. It was daylight, but barely; the difference
between sea and sky and mountains still questionable, the shoreline and the greasy
water and the buoys on the net visible only in shades of gray. Dave Little, Tollef
Monsen and a third crewman had climbed into the skiff a few moments before with
four hours sleep. This sliver of rest was not unusual for them during salmon
openings, but they’d made the run out to the net hundreds of times that summer
and knew the routine at a level beyond consciousness. Dave Little, the fishing permit holder, was
driving the skiff, just enough awake to keep the boat headed in the right
direction and from hitting any floating logs. The two crewmembers focused on not
falling in the water.
And then suddenly,
a couple skiff lengths off the port side bow, something stuck its head out of
the water.
Nine years later Monsen
would tell an interviewer, “There’s this neck and head, and it wasn’t like your
hands around the neck big, it was like your arms around the neck big.”
In the same
interview, Little would say “I saw it do its movements, but I couldn’t tell you
if the neck was a foot in diameter or three feet in diameter. It was all
darkish but I was paying attention to driving the skiff.”
However big it
was, it didn’t pay them any mind.
Monsen remembers
that, “It didn’t really focus on us. It didn’t look at us, it didn’t make eye
contact, no. And whatever it was didn’t stick around. In a few seconds it was
gone, back under the water. I mean we were so tired that it was like, did I
just see that? Did we just see that?”
So what does he
think it was?
“Who knows?”
The next summer Monson
stayed behind in the holding skiff one evening to clean it out while Little and
the other crewmember went to pull a net. It was calm and sunny. He was crawling
around scrubbing the fish totes when something hit the bottom of the skiff.
“All of a sudden
it was like DONG! And the skiff kind of lurches, and I’m like what the hell was
that?”
There was no motor on the skiff, it was at
anchor, and there were no whales nearby.
“It was big, like
a log (hitting the skiff). But nothing goes DONG! and lurches this big old
skiff like that. I don’t know what that was either.”
The sea creature observed in Uyak Bay in 1971 |
Pakkanin said that
another man in the skiff, DeWitt Fields, fired at the animal with a rifle as
they approached it. The animal went below the surface then and turned and swam
under the skiff before surfacing on the other side.
“We don’t know
what it was, but it had a grayish color and we couldn’t see any fins or any
tail and it never made any noise. It would just come up and you could see the
head and part of the body.”
Another person in
the skiff that sunny day, also quoted in the Elwani article, remembered recently that the animal was “hanging
out,” when they first saw it, and like Eddie Pakkanin, he remembered that as
the skiff crowded the animal against the shoreline it turned and came toward
them on the surface, and then, about 25 yards out, dove and swam under the
boat. They all had a good look at the animal as it swam two feet beneath the surface
of the clear water.
In the Elwani interview this second witness
says the animal was more like 40 feet long, “with a dull brown color, and it
did have hair, sort of like sea lions, but not as thick. It had a real narrow
and long head, kind of horse shaped with two nostrils. When it came up, the
head and the neck and part of the back came up, with water covering the middle
part and then the tail would come up.”
In a photo taken
that day from the skiff by DeWitt Fields’ wife Wanda, reprinted here courtesy
of Elwani and interpreted recently by
that second witness, a long snout skims the water ahead of the eye, the nape of
the neck behind the eye slopes down into the back beneath the surface, and the
tail just behind it just breaks the surface. Big eye. Long nose. Nostrils way
out in front. It looks like Alf, the late ‘80s Alien Life Form sitcom
character.
Eddie Pakkanin told
his interviewer that the animal appeared around two every afternoon for a few
more days before disappearing forever. That other person in the skiff remembers
seeing the animal one more time two or three years later. His family had closed
up camp for the summer and were loading their skiffs for the 100 mile run back
to town. They looked up and saw the animal right off their beach.
“If we hadn’t been
trying to beat the tide we would have gone out for a better look, but we were
pressed for time.” He never saw the animal again either.
Unknown object, perhaps a sea creature, just above the bottom line on an echo sounder paper recording made on the F/V Mylark in Raspberry Straits, April 15th, 1969 |
But again, who knows?
This story, by Toby Sullivan, Executive Director of the Kodiak Maritime Museum, first appeared in the Kodiak Daily Mirror, March 3, 2015