Tuesday, March 3, 2026

Sony World Band Radio

Before the Internet the Sony World 12-Band Radio was my only connection to the West from Biak, Irian Jaya to Tibet.
Primarily the BBC. Big Ben's bongs sounding the hour and then the soothing voice announcing, "This is the BBC. The time is 12pm Greenwich Mean Time."

Plus listening to the music of the world beyond the unlit horizons.

Now all the radio's dials are digital. No more fine tuning as if your fingers were cracking a safe's combination. No freedom to fiddle in Rome, Timbuktoo, or distant stations across the globe. Just what digital gives you.

No surprises.

I left my radio with my Bali house keeper, Nyomon.

He loved me for it.

Long ago in Ubud, I once lived and listened through the night to the news of the world.

So far away.

Same as today from Ubud.

That young man is now in his 50s.

Selamanya muda or Forever young.

Monday, March 2, 2026

GHOST OF THE STUMP

In 1990 gem diamonds were priced to the advantage of the dealers on 47th Street. 50% profit was normal for most quality stones and my boss Manny rewarded his sales staff commissions based on 5% of the gross. Not the profit. On the gross. In late February I luckily hooked of the street a middle-aged woman seeking to buy a 5-carat F-color diamond for her aged mother in Florida off the street. The transaction was smoothly concluded within a week and the customer dropped $50,000 on a 5.12 FSI1 diamond. Everyone was happy with the sales, except for Manny. He thought we hadn't charged enough. Seeking company for his misery, my boss made the woman cry by charging $100 for shipping.

"Her tears were fake." Manny was a firm believer in Cato's old adage that the strongest acid in the world is a woman's tears.

"That may be true." I had fallen in love with enough women to agree with his assessment of her weeping. I always believed the tears. Mine too. "But for a $100."

"Doesn't matter." Manny smiled with the joy of this little victory. "It's all about money."

"She's a potentially good customer." His son and my good friend was trying to educate his father to the modern world.

"No customer owes you any allegiance." Manny was Bowery to the bone. Everything depended on numbers and sleight of hand. "Like everyone else they only think about themselves."

"Thanks. It's a good thing that we don't need repeat customers." Richie Boy shook his head and returned to working the phone.

We never saw the woman again, although the next day she called to thank me for my help. My commission came to $2500. My savings account held over $6000. An ad in the NY Times Travel Section offered around-the-world ticket for $1500. I planned on spending most of my trip in Indonesia.

"I'm going on vacation after you come back from Miami," I informed Manny the next day.

"For how long?" Manny looked out the window. Snow flurries were swirling in the air.

"Six months." I planned on writing a novel about pornography. My finances allowed a budget of $1000/month. The Lonely Planet Guide suggested $10/day for Bali. At $30 a day I was going to live like a pascha, a friend of an Ottoman sultan.

"Your job won't be here when you come up." Manny had worked 6 days a week since the time he was 15. He hated layabouts.

"If it is, it is." I was hoping to get lost on the other side of the world. Few of my family and friends had been to the Orient.

At a farewell dinner at my parents house outside of Boston my family members were curious about my trajectory around the world.

"First stop is LA."

"The home of Mickey Mouse." My youngest brother, Michael, loved Disneyland.

"The second will be Honolulu.

"We've been there." My father tenderly held my mother's hand. Last year they had thoroughly enjoyed their stay at the Royal Hawaiian Hotel. All their trips were second honeymoons.

"Next stop is Biak." It was an island off Irian Jaya. The stopover was optional. My travel agent, John from Pan Express, had said none of his round-the-world clients had stopped there.

"Biak?" My mother possessed a dictionary in her head, but she had never seen this destination in the Boston Globe's crossword puzzle.

"Biak. I know Biak." My Uncle Dave tapped the kitchen table for attention. A cigarrette in hand. He had served in the US Navy during the Pacific War against the Japanese Empire. "I fought there in the Battle of the Sump. We bombed the hell out of the jungle. The Japs didn't surrender easy. I lived on a destroyer for six months off Biak. I bet it hasn't changed since 1944. Coconut trees and cannibals. Let me know if the Dutch hotel is still open. Buy yourself a beer on me, if it is and Stay at the old hotel near the airstrip. It was still standing after the battle. I have no idea how."

Uncle Dave cuffed me $20 and back in New York I read about the Battle of the Sump at the Main New York City Library on 5th Avenue. From May 27 to August 17, 1944 the US Marines and Imperial Army fought the first tank vs. tank battle in the Pacific Theater. The defeated Japanese forces hid in a gigantic cave. The marines poured gasoline on them. Only few hundred survived the conflagration spreading through the cavern. I would drink a beer for them and the Marines too. I told my travel agent at Pan Express to book a stop on the island.

Two weeks later a Garuda 747 landed on the lengthy tarmac of Mokmer Airfield. The Indonesian Tourist Board hoped to develop Biak as a tourist destination. The disembarking passengers were greeted by a trio of black guitarists playing BY THE RIVERS OF BABYLON. The musicians were near-naked, except for a long gourd capping their penis. A string attached to a necklace of amulets directed the shell skyward. After a quick tour of the souvenir shop the hundreds of weary passengers reboarded the trans-Pacific flight bound for Bali. Naked Canninals were a hard sell for westerners.

I watched the 747 lift from the runway. Silence descended on the airfield like a long-borrowed cloak. The customs officials processed the two missionaries and me. Dusk sped from the east contradicting the  tropical laziness of the languid evening.

Across the street from the terminal was a low wooden building with the name HOTEL IRIAN JAYA. It was Uncle Dave's hotel. The establishment wore neglect with understated pride, but it looked comfortable and solid. The tropics were hard on buildings and even harder on people. Booking a room was facilitated by the absence of other travelers. This was the end of everywhere. The bellhop wore a vest along with a penis gourd. His skin was the color of the old mahogany piano in my grandmother's living room in Maine. Anthropologists called the inhabitants of Biak Melanesians.

"Have you ever heard of Africa?" I asked slowly in English, as I entered my room. "Africa." His eyes revealed a maze of miscomprehension.

"The continent of Africa." I pointed to his skin. Somewhere during the last Ice Age his ancestors must have across the landbridges from the Mother Continent to Asia and this archipelego.

"Tidak tahul, mistah." The bellhop shook his head. He hadn't understood a single word that I had said.

"No problem." I tipped him a dollar, which was big money this far from anywhere and he said, "Terami kasih banyak."

I figured that had to mean 'Thank you alot' and replied, "You're welcome." I put away my bags and opened the door to the veranda. Indonesian pop music was playing in the hotel bar. The sun was setting to the west on a mirror of slate gray sea. I checked my watch. 6:13. Biak was south of the equator. Day and nights were equal. Joseph Conrad might have sat in this room. So might have my Uncle Dave. I sniffed at the air. Clove. Someone was smoking a clove cigarette. I went to the front desk to make a phone call.

"To my mother." "

Sorry," the Indonesian manager explained that the phone only worked for the island.

"No problem."

I decided to celebrate my isolation from the rest of the world with a beer. The bar was at the end of a bamboo hallway. Two 40-watt bulbs provided illumination for the swirl of insects. The clove cigarette smoker wasn't an Indonesian or Biakian either. A white man with a beer-barrel chest sat on a stool with a diminutive oriental female aside him. He looked like an overweight Popeye and noticed my staring. There was no one else in the bar.

"You get off the plane?" His accent originated from Panhandle Texas. I had hitchhiked through Amarillo in 1974. I hadn't stopped there.

"Yeah, my uncle fought on Biak. He gave me $20 to drink beer at this hotel." I pulled out Dave's 'double sawbuck' and walked over to them. "Can I offer you drinks?"

"Then you've come to the right place. One for me. The missus is a Muslim. She'll have a soda." He introduced himself as Larry Smith. We shared the last name. The woman was Annisa. Larry explained it meant woman. He was a diver hired by a Singapore concern to open a scuba school on Biak. "The sea here is virgin. The reef drops into chasms. Fish and sea turtles everywhere and even better old Jap ships sunk during the war are scattered underwater. Rare fish, wrecks, reefs, and cheap beer. You can't get better than that. I have a good boat, but it has a shit engine. I'm waiting for someone to fly in a new one from Surabaya."

Every word cast a magical spell. The Texan was living many men's dream. Larry had escaped East Texas by going to sea. He had learned his diving skills on the oil rigs of the Gulf. His right hand was missing two fingers from an accident off Borneo. None of his stories were lies, because he had nothing to lose by telling the truth. His girlfriend came from Jakarta. They were staying at a less expensive hotel in town. My room was less than $10. His was $3. At midnight we finished the last beers in the hotel on my Uncle Dave's $20. The big bottles were $1 each. 

"I'm going diving tomorrow." He stood and tottered like he had spent too many years off dry land. His girlfriend helped balance him with her 40 kilos acting as a crutch.

"Where?"

"Out there?" He pointed to the black sea. "You want to come along. I'll show you the island too."

"Sure." The hotel wasn't pushing tourist tours. "See you in the morning."

"We don't get up early."

"Me neither."

They wobbled from the bar and I returned to my room. My one luxury was a world-band radio. I tuned to the BBC and fell asleep to a report about the first McDonald's opening in Moscow. I hadn't eaten a Big Mac in 10 years.

In the morning hunger growled through my stomach like a rabid tiger in the jungle. The nearest man-killer was at the western end of Indonesia on Sumatra. I had plans to go after Bali and Java. I washed my face in the sink and went down the hallway to the dining area with a Nelles Map of Indonesia in hand. I was the only guest for the breakfast buffet of eggs, bacon, toast, coffee, rice, and fruit served by the gourd-adorned waiter. I didn't have the courage to ask why they didn't bother to cover their balls. Michael Rockefeller had been eaten by my server's brethren on the Asmat coast.

Food was not the answer to my hang-over, so I drank bottled soda water and ate another order of toast. My waiter was grateful for his tip of $1. His smile revealed sharp teeth. The guide books assured travelers that no Biakians had eaten human flesh for over fifty years. The waiter's fangs looked flossed from use and I exited from the hotel with a shiver.

The gunmetal sea was flat as a young girl's chest. The palm-fringed beach was littered with broken boats and the bones of dead pigs. Large fish quivered at the banquet of dead flesh along the shore. I put my foot in the water. I hadn't come halfway across the world to be squeamish and stripped off my shirt. I swam out beyond the filth. Within seconds my hangover was history, thanks to a surge of exhilaration.

Americans aspired to visit the cathedrals of Europe, the Riviera, and Rome. In the 180s I had lived in Paris for six years. A single night in Biak exorcised those years and I asked myself why I ever bothered living in the West. This was the world of Jack London's Tales of the South Pacific. I swam back to gritty beach and toweled off the wet. I tugged on a shirt and walked over to Larry's Hotel. Biak's market was flush with exotic fruits and multi-colored birds. This was also Conrad's Orient. LORD JIM and MCHALE'S NAVY.

"Mistah tingal di sana." A banana salesmen pointed to an unpainted barrack. Larry's hotel would have been condemned by a bribed housing official in Appalachia. His girlfriend was outside on the patio, washing a tattered shirt the size of a tent.

"Rarry." Annisa called without lifting her head.

"Hey, man." Larry exited from the room naked. His girlfriend threw him a sarong with horror. He wrapped the shredded fabric around his waist. "Go figure. All the men around here wear nothing but a gourd. That's all right. But I go buck-naked and she has a cow."

"You mistah. Not Orang Papua." She didn't look his way. His penis was erect without any help from a gourd.

"Yeah, I mistah Rarry. The Indonesians still show a little respect for the white race. Guess the Dutch knew how to whip 'em good. Me, I believe in the carrot and not the stick, but the Dutch are a tough people. Have to be to grow a tulip. Give me a few minutes and we'll start our tour." I tried to start up a conversation with his girlfriend. She spoke no English. Larry seemed stuck on American as his language. He didn't say good-bye to her, but confided to me, "A good woman, although it's not so hard to find a good human this far from anywhere." An Indonesian waited by a Toyota Landcruiser. The rental cost was $20/day with fuel. The owner didn't ask for any ID. There weren't too many roads on Biak and we weren't going far. "First stop is the caves."

"Where the Japs died." Larry got in the front and I squeezed into the back. He took up a lot of room.

"Good, you know your history." We headed toward the airport.

"My uncle fought here on a destroyer off shore."

"Ugly fight." He didn't say much on the rest of the short ride. We got out of the car and walked to the edge of a cave.

"This is where the Japs were trapped by the Marines. Maybe 4000 of them. Maybe more. The Marines asked them to surrender. The Japs said no. The Marines poured gas into the pit and burnt them alive. Every week a few survivors fly in from Japan to honor their dead." Larry threw a rock into the pit. The smell was of deep earth. "I've never gone down there. You want to go down?"

I shook my head. The smell of burnt flesh lived on the rocky walls. 4000 dead for an Emperor who spoke like a crane. The ghosts deserved their rest. Larry and I drove back to town. We stopped in town at the fish tanks swarming with rare species for export to the West. He showed off his boat. It had no engines.

"Fucking Bugis in Surabaya me promised engines last month, but out this end of the world time is the only luxury not for sale." He shouted to a Biakian puttering with a Zodiac inflatable. "You ever free dive?"

"I have good lungs." I could hold my breath underwater a good two minutes. At least last year off Isla Mujeres I could.

"Where you free dive last?" v"Isla Mujeres, Mexico. 1989." Last summer I had swum through a cave 100 meters long. It was 20 meters deep. I hadn't tried the hole until I was ready and said to Larry, "I'm good for 10 meters."

"What I have to show you won't take us that deep." He ordered the mechanic to fill the gas tanks and a minute later the Zodiac skimmed atop a reflection of the sky. Islands floated on the horizon like ships dedicated to never sinking. Their distance promised that their beaches were preserved in a time warp dating back to Uncle Dave's time and beyond that into the dust of time. Larry slowed the engine and handed me a diving mask.

"This is the place."

"Aren't you coming?" We were a good three miles from Biak.

"Only got one mask. Don't worry, I'm not going anywhere."

"Sure." I strapped the mask over my head and he handed me a large rock.

"What's this?" I was a good diver. Not very good. Only good.

"The rock will take you down fast. Stay as long as you can. You'll never see something like this ever again. Few people will, unless I get that engine from Surabaya."

I held the twenty-pound stone in my arms. Larry nodded with a heavy head. I looked at the sky. The clouds reflected in the flat sea. I dropped into the water on my back and plummeted into its depth for several long seconds until I spotted the long destroyer on its side. The markings were Japanese. Sea snakes withered on the current and turtles chased octopii. Fish flowed through the battle wounds like smoke through a chimney. They numbered in the millions. I saw no skeleton. A reef made not by any gods, but by war.

Other ships lay in reflecting shadows. This was defeat. Uncle Dave must have seen the shattered ships aflame. Sailors like soldiers never tell the truth of horror. No one would believe them. My lungs burned like those of a drowning sailor and I rose to the surface half-expecting to not find the Zodiac.

"Pretty damn impressive." I reached out my hand. Larry pulled me from the sea. His eyes scanned the horizon for something dangerous. He had not mentioned sharks. I huffed air into my depleted lungs.

"And there's more down there. I once found a sea cave stacked with artillery shells. 20 meters down. Stacked. Who the fuck would do something like that?"

"Soliders with orders." I had been brought up to think of them as fanatical. So was Larry and Uncle Dave. We all followed orders.

"Yeah, and now all the youong Japanese tourists want is build a golf course here."

"And dive a little?"

"I can only hope for the best. What you think about beer?" "Like it's a good idea."

Larry drove the Zodiac back to Biak without any detours. We drank the first beers to Uncle Dave and killed the rest of his money toasting the fallen. Theirs and ours. That war was long ago. There were more to come. Today the noon sun was wicked, but the beers were cold under the palms of the Dutch Hotel. Almost as cold as the dead.

The Timeliness of Horseshoe Crabs

Fotos from beneath the Broad Channel Bridge June 2025

Now awaiting on Clinton Hill for the Summer homecoming of the Horeseshoe Crabs.

Rene Descartes author of The Age of Reason had argued that animals had no intelligence, because they had no sense of time. The rationalist lablled them 'automata'. or mndless creatures. To argue that accusation horseshoes crabs return to the same beach to lay eggs year after year according to the cosmic time of the moon and have for over 400 million years well before Man needed a clock to know the time.

Moby Dick Amnesia

Everyone of my generation was forced to read Heman Melville's MOBY DICK. The first line of this epic novel "Call me Ishmael" was burned into our memories and teachers spent days trying to decipher the meaning of the novel, but few of us were aware of MOBY DICK's voyage in American Literature had only sold 3000 copies during Merville's life. After slipping out of popularity Melville was employed at the US Customs House in Lower Manhattan.   

I have visited that oval room many times and imagined Melville working day after day at a meaningless job dreaming of foreign places and a pen in his hand, except that Beaux Arts structure hadn't been erected until 1904, however I later discovered dew-masked bust of Merville near the Customs House, but in recent years I haven't been able to find the wall panel, as if he was once more banished into neglect. Thus flees fame and Melville died in 1891 with none of his books in print. but I still love TYPEE, his romantic novel about two sailors deserting their whaling ship in the Marquesas Island. It shed light on a world beyond the land.  

First lines from TYPEE    

CHAPTER ONE

THE SEA--LONGINGS FOR SHORE--A LAND-SICK SHIP--DESTINATION OF THE VOYAGERS--THE MARQUESAS--ADVENTURE OF A MISSIONARY'S WIFE AMONG THE SAVAGES--CHARACTERISTIC ANECDOTE OF THE QUEEN OF NUKUHEVA Six months at sea!  Yes, reader, as I live, six months out of sight of land; cruising after the sperm-whale beneath the scorching sun of the Line, and tossed on the billows of the wide-rolling Pacific--the sky above, the sea around, and nothing else!  Weeks and weeks ago our fresh provisions were all exhausted.  There is not a sweet potato left; not a single yam.   Those glorious bunches of bananas, which once decorated our stern and quarter-deck, have, alas, disappeared!  and the delicious oranges which hung suspended from our tops and stays--they, too, are gone!  Yes, they are all departed, and there is nothing left us but salt-horse and sea-biscuit.  Oh!  ye state-room sailors, who make so much ado about a fourteen-days' passage across the Atlantic; who so pathetically relate the privations and hardships of the sea, where, after a day of breakfasting, lunching, dining off five courses, chatting, playing whist, and drinking champagne-punch, it was your hard lot to be shut up in little cabinets of mahogany and maple, and sleep for ten hours, with nothing to disturb you but 'those good-for-nothing tars, shouting and tramping overhead',--what would ye say to our six months out of sight of land?  

My family whaled the oceans.    

Atlantic and Pacific.      

My great-grandfather died at sea twice.        

I have killed nothing and never eaten man.          

I'm not scared of nothing than the jaws of Mooka Dick.            

Sunday, March 1, 2026

Whales for Sale USA

Written Feb 20, 2013

Back in 2007 two humpback whales became befuddled by the backwash of mobile phones in San Francisco Bay and swam seventy miles up the Sacramento River. Oceanologists failed to seduce the errant sea mammals to the open sea with love sirens from other whales and Japanese researchers offered to lend California marine biologists a sonar signature of their whaling ships in hopes that the whales will flee the estuary in terror. The Bush administration responded with an entreaty from a Sapporo fish market, which would purchase the pair for scientific culinary purposes should the whales die.

"Maybe this gesture will ease the entrance of US beef into the Japanese market," one FDA official mused at a Georgetown sushi restaurant.

Whale meat?

Yes, whale meant.

In the 1960s a Haymarket fish market served whale sandwiches to Bostonians. My friend and I tried one. It tasted nothing like beef or chicken or salmon. It was much better, although my great-grandaunt Bert who sailed around the world in the 1870s said that that the cheaper slabs were very blubbery and full of fat.

Despite its deliciousity I never ate it again for moral reason.

I guess it was too much like eating a fat person, but it's a good thing whale meat has no aphrodisiacal properties or else the Chinese would have sucked the bone marrow out of the last whale decades ago.

Lip-smacking good.

ps thankfully those whales made it to the sea after feasting on the fish in the estuary.

Bertha Goes Whaling 1871

Aug 23, 2021

My great-grand-aunt Bertha Hamblin Boyce wrote this in her 96th Year.

"Maria, it is almost time for my ship to sail. Are you going with me this time?"

That was my father, Capt, John C. Hamblin, speaking to my mother. She had been with him on two voyages, and he hoped she was going with him this time. My sister Alice was born in Australia, and my brother Harry was born in Norfolk Island, in the South Seas.

My mother shook her head and said, "Oh, John, I don't see how I can go this time."

There were six children to leave at home. But I noticed that the trunk came down from the attic, and Aunt Abby and Uncle Josiah came up from Pocasset to take care of the family, as they always did when Mother went whaling. And Bertha, age five, and Benjamin, age two and a half, were outfitted for a whaling voyage; so there were only Etta, Alice, Harry, and John, the four older children, to leave at home.

The ship, the Islander, sailed out of New Bedford. That is where they sailed from in the 1870's. The only way to get to New Bedford was to take the stage coach, so we went bag and baggage by Stage. We never had been on the stage coach before, so that was exciting, of course. A horse and buggy had been the wav we traveled, as there was no railroad in chose days.

When we got to the wharf in New Bedford, there was the ship out in the harbor. We had to go out in a row boat. I remember I was very much afraid the sailors would spatter some water on my beautiful new hat. But I don't chink the hat got wet.

We reached the ship and went aboard. The cabin looked rather small to me after the living room in our great big house in West Falmouth, and I wondered what my mother was going to do with two lively children in that small space.

The Captain's bedroom, with its swinging bed, opened out to the tight of the cabin, and when bedtime came for Bertha and Ben, a trundle bed was pulled out from the swinging bed. And there is where we slept all the time we were on the ship.

On July 25rh, 1871, up went the sails and off we went for the Indian Ocean. And I could have told the whales that they should stay out of sight under water or my father would catch them!

I guess they didn't stay under water. They have to come up to breathe, you know. I am told my father sent home 895 barrels of sperm oil from the whales taken in those two years on the Indian Ocean. So I guess the folks had plenty of oil for their lamps and didn't have to go to bed in the dark.

Everyone wants to know what we did for amusement. What did we find to play with on board a ship bound for the Indian Ocean? We won't see land again for quite a while. Instead of the woods and green fields for our play ground we will have the ship's deck. It was July. The weather was warm, so we will go up on deck and see what we can find that is interesting. I guess there was no danger of our falling overboard, for Mother let us go up alone.

Of course, there were the sailors, but they were too busy on the first day out to pay any attention to us. There was a little house on deck called the cook's "galley," where he gets the food ready. We had to get acquainted with the cook, hoping to get a handout. Then there was a great big sea turtle crawling around on deck. He didn't look too friendly, but I can tell you that I spent many hours on that turtle's back while he was touring the deck. I was careful to keep away from his head so he couldn't bite me. I suppose that in the course of time he was made into turtle soup and other good things to eat, for we brought home a big box of turtle shell, which we shared with our friends.

Ben was a lively little lad. One day he was playing with a rope on deck. The wind was blowing, and the ship was rolling, and Ben found himself swinging out over the sea! Evidently he wasn't frightened for he held on and came back when the ship rolled again.

In the morning as soon as breakfast was over one of the sailors was hauled up to a seat at masthead called the crow's nest. The sailor had a spy glass, which he used to search the sea for sight of a whale. When the sailors on deck heard the words "There she blows!" they knew a whale had come up to breathe and had thus disclosed his whereabouts. The sailor would also tell his latitude and longitude from the ship.

Down go the whale boats into the water; the harpooners begin the chase. Very likely the whale goes down again, but they follow him until they get a chance to harpoon him. Then the fight begins! They are fortunate if the boat isn't smashed before they hit a vital spot. The whale has an enormous jaw with big teeth and can do great damage to the boat. I remember we brought home a whale's jaw that hung on a tree in our driveway for a long time.

Naturally the whale fought for his life. After he was finally killed, he was towed to the ship. The cutting stage was lowered, and the men peeled off the blubber (the fat) in large pieces. It was then hauled aboard, cut in smaller pieces called Bible leaves, and cooked in the try pots. Up in the bow of the ship there was the fire with two large, iron try pots. This is where they cooked the blubber and turned the oil into wooden barrels to be sent home. The fire was started with wood but later would be fed by scraps of boiled blubber.

Sometimes the try works were burning at night, and we enjoyed that. We could see our shadows on the deck.

In those days kerosene was not plentiful and there was no electricity, so people had to have the oil for lamps. I remember two Sandwich glass lamps on our piano which burned oil but later had kerosene burners. We had the first piano that was brought to West Falmouth.

I don't know the names of the islands in the Indian Ocean where the sailors went ashore. Unfortunately, I gave my father's log book away and have lost track of it. The captain or first mate wrote each day's happenings in the logbook. I used to read it once in a while. I remember it told which way the wind was blowing. And all up and down the edge of the page were little black pictures of whales if they had happened to sight one. I remember that one day he wrote: "Next week is Thanksgiving. I hope next Thanksgiving will be spent at home. If it weren't for hopes, what would we do."

I remember that the sailors did go ashore, for one day one of them brought back a pail of turtle eggs. The turtle lays its eggs in the sand and depends on the heat of the sun to hatch them.

We must have stopped at an island where there was a cow for they brought back some milk. My mother scalded the milk so it would keep. It was on the table in the cabin. I decided to take a drink. It burnt my mouth, and I screamed, "I am dead, I am dead!" My mother put me in the swinging bed with Arabian balsom in my mouth, and I was soon asleep. I didn't die!

Sometimes there was another whale ship sighted. That was a great day. The captains would visit each other and have a gam and have dinner together. They would talk of world affairs and share experiences.

Sometimes days went by without sighting a whale. This was rather dull for the sailors, so they spent their time making things out of whalebone. These bones and the things which were made from them are called scrimshaw. It is highly prized by museums. I have two beautiful boxes made of whalebone. My father, Capt. John, was a 33rd degree Mason, and one design was a Masonic emblem. They also made India ink pictures on the large whale's teeth and on ostrich eggs. I also have what is called a swift, for winding yarn. It is adjustable so you can wind a large or small skein. They made a fork of whale bone with a wheel on one end which they called a gadging wheel, used to crimp pies.

My mother used one of these. She must have crimped hundreds of pies for her big family and many guests. She didn't have time to make cookies, so she made what she called "hard gingerbread." The top was ornamented with the wheel. When it was cool and cut into squares, it was like soft molasses cookies. It was much enjoyed by her eight children and all the neighboring children, who were always welcome at our house'.

We sailed the Indian Ocean all of the year 1872 as far is I know. I do know that August 31st was my sixth birthday, and I spent it on the ship, which was anchored between Africa and Madagascar.

My youngest brother was born on the ship the day before I was six. His name was Ernest Seaborn Hamblin. When he grew up the children used to tease him by calling him an African and saying that he could never be president of the United States.

A whale was caught on my birthday, and my father promised to give me a watch for a birthday present.

I remember my father took Mother and me over to see the Chief of Madagascar. He had seven wives. I remember just how they looked. They were dark skinned of course, being Africans, and they were dressed in white. Their lips were blood red from chewing betel nuts. I tell the girls that is where they got the idea of using lipstick.

Early in 1873 my father must have decided he had caught whales enough, for we sailed for Australia. We left the ship in Tasmania, for I remember the ride across the island. There was a wonderful road made by convicts—prisoners from England.

I never will forget that ride across the island of Tasmania. Wild roses were growing all along the road. The blossoms had gone but the red seed pods were very beautiful to me, who had looked out on the Indian Ocean for so long.

When we reached Australia we stayed with a Mrs. Tassell. She was a misslonary, I think. Anyway, she had Sunday School for the natives. Evidently she had Bibles to give away, for she gave me one. I have that Bible now. My mother wrote my name in it and the date presented by Mrs. Tassell. It is such fine print I don't think I could read it now. She also gave me a song book which I lost on my way home. My favorite song was:

I want to be an angel And with the angels stand, A crown upon my forehead And a harp in my hand.

The ship was sold in March, 1873. Capt. Hamblin, my father, had decided to give up whaling and go home. The ship sent home 895 barrels of oil and never went back to New Bedford. The first mate, Mr. Hiram E. Swift of Whitman, Mass., now took over as Captain. His wife came to be with him and brought their little daughter, Amy Louise, but no little boy.

Capt. Swift once visited us in West Falmouth and told me that his little girl had my picture and made a real playmate of it. He also told me (hat one day I went into the cabin and got his pocket book to play with. I told him I didn't take the white money, I only took the yellow money. It was the gold I was after. Even at that early age I knew the difference.

Captain Hamblin and family were now ready to go home by way of London. We took a steamer for London, stopping at Lisbon, Portugal, and Le Havre, France. I know we visited those places for I have on our living room table a pretty little shell snuff box from France and a large shell that held a thimble, little scissors, and a case for needles that I bought in Lisbon.

Our next stop was London. The thing I remember about London was that my little brother decided he would explore the city by himself and was lost in the crowd. My mother was frantic until he was found. We also made a visit to the Zoological Gardens and almost got a ride on an elephant. The elephant was off on a trip with some other children, and we couldn't wait for him to come back.

Our next stop was at Fayal, one of the Azores. We were there long enough to visit one of the parks and to eat some nice little cakes brought around by a man with a little tin trunk. We also have a beautiful lace shawl from there. My mother always told me that the thread was neither cotton or silk but the fiber of a tree. It is a museum piece. We also have some flowers made of feathers, which are still perfect.

Now we are really on our wav home on another steamer. We left home on the stjage coach; but while we were away, the railroad was built to West Falmouth, so we had a ride on the train.

Of course, there was no one at the station to meet us because there were no telephones in those days, and no one knew just when we would arrive. Our house was not far from the station, so we walked home. I will never forget that walk home. The Boyce house wasn't built then. The only house I remember was painted white with blue blinds. It looked very pretty to me. The First stop was at the Hamblin house, to get reacquainted with Aunt Abby and Uncle Josiah and our brothers and sisters. That was exciting! In the course of time we also got acquainted with the house in the barn, also tile hens and chickens, also the two pigs in the pigpen. Life was going to be quite different from our life on the ship in the Indian Ocean.

There were hay fields in front of the house and woods to explore at the back of the house as we got acquainted with West Falmouth. But that is an other story.

I last saw my great grand aunt in 1960 on her 100th birthday. Bertha was in a nursing home, but I recall a vist to her house. it was filled with objects from those travels; shark jaws, Maori spears, scrimshaw. She left everything to her nurse.

The Catoosa Blue Whale


Entered May 15, 2011

Whales are everywhere.

From my novel BACK AND FORTH a 1974 cross-country homage to Jack Kerouac.

Vickie sped east out of Tulsa on the ghost of Route 66. The land was flat farmland with long lines of trees acting as windbreaks. The houses dated back to the Dustbowl. The wind tugged at their hair.

The Le Mans was the fastest car on the road.

After twenty minutes at 80 mph Vickie pulled into a dirt parking lot bordering a pond on which floated a large concrete whale painted blue.

“The Blue Whale?”

“One and the same.” Vickie left the car.

Teenagers were diving from the whale’s head. Young girls were basking in the sun. It wasn’t Encinitas, but this spring-fed pond was America at its best. Families were gathered around the pool. The benches and tables were crowded with hungry kids. Hot dogs sizzled at the refreshment stand. They drank sodas on the grass.

“Nice place.” Sean toed off his sneakers. The grass was lush under his feet.

“Everyone in Tulsa loves it.” Vickie unbuttoned her shirt.

Everyone there was white.

“And no one seems to mind our longhair.” AK tugged off his shirt.

“Maybe in 1969 they would, but also this isn’t Muskogee.” Her one-piece bathing suit complimented her long slender body. “

“A place where even squares can have a ball.” Merle Haggard had immortalized the small town in his 1969 country bit OKIE FROM MUSKOGEE.

“There’s no college there, but there are some hippies.”

“Wearing sandals and beads.”

“More cowboy boots and hats.” Vickie slathered on suntan lotion. AK was dying to do her back.

“I’ve performed in school plays in Muskogee. Romeo and Juliet.” Sharlene was cute enough to be on the silver screen. “Daddy doesn’t like my acting. Thinks it’s unholy, but he loves me and puts up with it.”

“She played Juliette last spring.”

“And you probably had a hundred Romeos.”

“Not even one. I’m saving myself for my wedding night.” The teenager regarded her older sister. Vickie had slept with Nick. The med student from Staten Island had been her first beau.

“Nothing wrong with that as long as you don’t wait until you’re a hundred,” joked AK and the Spear girls laughed at the prospect of Sharlene ending up a spinster.

“I’m sure we can marry her off before then.”

“Enough talk about marriage. Let’s go swimming.” AK ran into the pond. Vickie, Sharlene, and Sean followed closely behind. They dove under the cool water and surfaced in the middle.

“This is great.” Sean hadn’t been in fresh water all summer.

"The water rises from natural springs,” explained Vickie.

“Just like the quarries near my house south of Boston.”

“Are you a good swimmer?” Marilyn asked AK.

“Okay enough.” He had spent three hours a day in the ocean.

“What about a race?”

“Sure.”

Vickie counted out the start.

Sharlene and AK swam the crawl. She won the race by several body lengths.

Vickie and Sean returned to the sandy beach and blew up rafts. They floated in the sun. Her blonde hair hung in the water like a mermaid stranded far from sea