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Child of the Sea

 

Our home was but a few steps from the shore.

 

Winter gales caused the seas waves to crash on to our beach.  At high tide the sea would come right up into the Cross Wynd which was our way to the beach.  In my birth month of February the sounds of the sea are loud as winter gales come roaring ashore.  The high tides leave behind all kinds of tangles, seaweeds, shells and all kinds of flotsam and jetsom.

 

 I don't remember a time when I haven't been a beachcomber.  Since I was a old enough to be trusted on my own I roamed the beaches.  Shells have always fascinated me.  Even though shells of a type may look alike, they're not.  Each one is as distinctive as you or I.  Any time I get near a beach, in short order I'm walking the tide line.  My pockets become filled with the treasures of the sea, gifts to the finder. Sea shells are indeed wonders of creation. My extra special ones are the tiny cowries that are to be found on the Earlsferry and surrounding beaches. Some are ivory white and some are a delicate shade of pink.  To this day, except for the shells that I've given away, I have about every shell I've ever picked up.  Our home and garden has shells everywhere.  Not just hundreds of them, thousands of them. Each shell started as a tiny speck to became shelter and home to the creature that lived within it.

 

 Fortunately my parents never worried about me even though I'd sometimes disappear for almost all day.  They knew where I was.  Depending on the state of the tide I'd spend hours laying beside the low tide pools straight down from our house or I'd be at the high tide stickleback dubs at the Dome Park, watching the movements of the creatures that lived there.  Whelks, hermit crabs, sea anemones of every color, urchins, starfish, cockles, periwinkles, myriad hued seaweeds, bladder wrack, little fish, all living in harmony with the sand and the pebbles in the bottom of the pools.  There were times when I'd come home from school and the tide was out and in a flash I'd be down in the rocks where the sea creatures live. The haunting call of the curlews, the great whaups, the harsh cry of the herring gulls, the shrill call of the arctic terns and the oyster catchers mingled with the voice of wind and the waves was my music.

 

 

Earlsferry Beacon, just off the point at Chapel Green

 

 I always had a small wooden boat of some kind.  My first was a raft that I made from driftwood.  Later John, my brother, made me a beautiful and very seaworthy canoe.  With this I ventured far out to sea. I fished with a heavy chord handline that I baited with lug worms that I dug on the beach at low tide.  There are monsters in the deeps.  One day I was fishing, just drifting along on the incoming tide, about a half mile offshore in the vicinity of the Earlsferry beacon.  Wham.  Something took my bait.  Hard as I tried I could make no headway trying to pull in whatever it was that was on the end of my line.  Whatever it was, it pulled all of my line out then pulled the boat.  It dragged me for about a mile before the line, that I always had tied to the front of the boat, parted.

 

 Another day when I was anchored and fishing, a whale about a mile away started jumping straight out of the water.  As I watched, it repeatedly surfaced, each time in a straight line and heading straight for me. When it came so close that I knew that next time it surfaced it might toss me into the air, boat and all, I furiously grabbed the oars and rowed with all my might to get away from it.  I made a great commotion in the water and discovered to my horror that in my panic, I'd forgotten to pull up the anchor.  Obligingly the whale skipped a surfacing and passed right under me to come up again behind me.  Was I ever lucky that day. It doesn't bear thinking about what would have been the outcome had it snagged the anchor rope.

 

Another day I was anchored and fishing in about the same spot.  When I set out from the beach it was an absolutely beautiful dead calm, warm sunny day.  As I fished I happened to look to the East in the direction of the May Island about ten miles away.  I couldn't believe my eyes. The sky there was pitch black and a wall of water was standing up to form a giant wave on each side of the island.  I hauled in my line and to save time I cut the anchor rope.  In no time I was in the middle of a maelstrom, a howling wind and a torrential downpour.  It became very dark.  The waves grew instantly huge and I feared that this was it for me.  All I could do was lie in the bottom of the boat and bail as I tried to keep the boat headed into the screaming wind.  I feared that at best I'd be driven right up the Firth.  I prayed.  I really did pray.  The howling storm and the huge waves raged past.  With the boat more than half full of water and almost awash I made it to shore at the cliffs. Soaking wet, I hauled my boat out and walked home.  I felt that I'd just used up one of my lives. So much for a beautiful dead calm warm sunny day.  

 

During World War II much shipping was torpedoed and sunk in the North Sea.  After finding several gold braided Royal Navy and Merchant Navy sailors' hats mixed in with the sand on the tide line, it dawned on me that these were the hats of seamen whose ships had gone down and their hats had floated off their heads as they sank beneath the waves.  I placed them in a special part of our garden.  The sea can be cruel and unforgiving.

 

One of my favourite places to go was to lie on top of the Croupie Rock, an outcropping that's at the beginning of the Earlsferry Cliffs just above the 14th tee of the golf course.  From this vantage point there's a 360 degree view.  At most any time the might of the British navy, battleships, cruisers, aircraft carriers, submarines and merchant ships of all varieties could be seen plying the waters of the Firth of Forth.  As these ships disappeared over the horizon I always wondered who was on them and to what far away places they were going?

 

View from atop the cliffs, near the Croupie Rock

Sea Fever

I must go down to the seas again, to the lonely sea and the sky,

And all I ask is a tall ship and a star to steer her by,

And the wheel's kick and the wind's song and the white sail shaking,

And a grey mist on the sea's face and a grey dawn breaking.

 

I must go down to the seas again, for the call of the running tide

Is a wild call and a clear call that will not be denied,

And all I ask is a windy day with the white clouds flying,

And the flung spray and the blown spume, and the sea-gulls crying.

 

I must go down to the seas again to the vagrant gypsy life,

To the gulls way and the whales way where the wind's like a whetted knife,

And all I ask is a merry yarn from a laughing fellow-rover,

And quiet sleep and a sweet dream when the long trick's over

  John Masefield

   

Gifts from the Sea

 

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