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46' Converted Salmon Troller (1947) - TOMTE

  • 1C54C674 A420 475B BDD1 1B68EA159545
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    3 thoughts on “46' Converted Salmon Troller (1947) - TOMTE

    • Alex Zimmerman 5 years ago

      Great story, Nate! Thanks for telling it. I have good memories of rowing the length of Tolmie Channel in the calm, too.

    • Nate Rooks 5 years ago

      It all started about 2 weeks into our 3-week “Race” to Alaska aboard a 17′ open dinghy. In Tolmie Channel, rowing a sailboat slowly across glass-calm water, appreciating sporadic waterfalls and that – for now – at least it wasn’t pouring rain.

      A sweet troller chugged up the channel, and the other R2AKer we were buddy-boating with said “Hey, I know that boat from Sidney!” As the troller pulled abeam and slowed, we saw that she was called TOMTE, with a radiant Angel of a woman waving from the deck.

      The Angel was giving us encouragement in that perfect, optimistic Lower Mainland lilt, when the Captain came out to offer his kind of encouragement, mostly in the form of dirty jokes. When we told him we were indeed in R2AK, but the winners had finished almost 2 weeks earlier, he said “Well, sounds a bit like teenage sex. You’re not proud of your performance, but you’re sure glad you’re doing it.”

      We recounted that story to one another over the next few days as we battled against gale up Grenville Channel, finally making it out for a slow row into Prince Rupert. As we got closer to the docks of the harbor, we started hearing air horns and cheering, and lo and behold Peter and Christy were at the end of the dock with a crowd they’d gathered, cheering us in.

      They insisted we raft up to TOMTE and have beers, pulled up from the bottom in their crab-pot cooler. We chatted and were completely enthralled with this odd couple – the Angel and the Captain. One seemed to beam sunshine with every look or word, the other seemed to have an endless supply of stories, usually dirty or adventurous, often both. They offered to let us sleep in TOMTE’s hold, and despite first thinking “nah, we like our beds with a little water around them in the bilge of BUNNY WHALER,” we wised up and had a dry, comfortable night as TOMTE seeped into our blood, bones, and story.

      The next morning, sitting in TOMTE’s cabin having breakfast and tea graciously prepared by the Angel, the Captain kept regaling us with more stories. We couldn’t get enough. I said “Captain, your stories are amazing. You need to write a book.” Lo and behold, he pulled out a signed copy of his book Lee Shore Blues – Sex, Drugs, and Blue Water Sailing from below the table.

      Both boats left to catch slack through Venn Passage, and Coop and I read Lee Shore Blues out loud to one another as we rowed away from Prince Rupert, towards Dundas Island and our final goal of Ketchikan, AK. The written stories were even more insane and hilarious than those spoken.

      Upon landing in Ketchikan, we scrambled to find moorage for the boat for a month until she could get a ride home on a fishboat. And there they were again, the Angel and the Captain, getting moorage for TOMTE. Third time’s a charm – we bowed in front of the goddess Sea Serendipity, and accepted each other as family.

      We’ve had the good fortune to stay in touch and see each other fairly often. They’ve since given me a place to stay more than once. And, to top it all off – for now, at least – it was the Captain who put me in touch with Ron and the CROW, my dream boat/home/office, checked out the boat in person as the border was closed, and encouraged me to live the wooden boat dream.

      None of it would have happened if it hadn’t been for a chance meeting on a calm, cloudy day in Tolmie Channel, and yet now I have two more wonderful people I consider family (and a troller I consider ideal). I love TOMTE and the fact that she will live on thanks to their care.

    • William Noon 5 years ago

      Great write-up!!!! Tomte looking good!