Sea provided, and it took away
Fishing is a perilous occupation. Not that long ago, we lost one of
our dory men, and I’ve known a couple of people who made their living
at sea and perished there.
Boyd Reeber was one of the local kids who hung out at Little
Corona in the late 1950s and early ‘60s. On the label of Gerber’s
baby food is the picture of a child, round-faced and cherubic. That
child was Boyd Reeber. Obviously, he was a cute kid.
Of course, by the time I knew him, he was heading into his teens
and not quite the angel of the label, but he was a nice kid and he
still had a head of blond curls.
Reeber grew up and bought a boat and began fishing for a living.
He’d done it for quite a few years; and then, one night when he was
due in, he didn’t appear. His wife notified the Coast Guard, and they
headed out to San Clemente Island, where he had been headed. The only
thing they found were some pieces of the boat. From what they could
deduce, there had been an explosion. I hoped Boyd had been killed
instantly, because I can’t think of a worse fate than being miles out
at sea and just waiting to die, like someone else I knew.
Freddie Eastman was a nice guy. Freddie was part of the 1930s
group of Balboa regulars, 20 to 30 young men, most of college age,
who were the summer help at the dance hall, the gambling joints,
restaurants and bars and the bath house -- a few of us even
lifeguards. We got together and rented houses or lived in the
so-called apartments -- read: rooms -- on or near Main Street.
Swing music, the Rendezvous and the musicians from the various
bands were an important part of our lives. We knew all the musicians,
went to their jam sessions, partied and drank with them.
Freddie Eastman showed up during that period. Freddie was very
quiet, very reserved, a thoroughly decent, nice guy. Everyone liked
Freddie, especially the musicians. Freddie was a true jazz
aficionado. It seems to me that I can remember Freddie at every party
and every jam session, just sitting there and listening.
Come World War II and the end of the Swing Era, Freddie seemed to
lose interest in music. Like some of us, he couldn’t make the
transition to modern jazz, so he bought a small boat and became a
commercial fisherman.
One day during the albacore season, they found Freddie’s boat dead
in the water, fuel exhausted and lines dangling, but no Freddie.
A commercial albacore fisherman trolled with about eight hand
lines, four directly off the stern, two on each side extended away
from the hull by outriggers. When a commercial fisherman hit a school
of albacore, he became very busy tending those lines. He put his boat
on a circular course and hauled in the fish as fast as he could. The
best guess is that Freddie fell overboard while tending his lines,
and the boat sailed on without him.
There’s a chilling passage in “Moby Dick” in which a cabin boy or
someone falls overboard. When his absence is finally noted, they turn
the boat around to search for him, and when they find him, he has
gone mad, overwhelmed by the immensity of the sea.
The thought of anyone drowning in the open ocean has always
bothered me. Drowning in the open sea with your boat sailing on
without you must be one of the most lonesome experiences known ...
just treading water and getting more and more tired and more and more
cold.
It was only when Freddie was gone that we found out the Eastman in
his name was the Eastman in Eastman Kodak. Freddie came from a
wealthy background, but none of us had suspected it, he was such an
unassuming guy.
We all have to die some time and some way, but Freddie Eastman
didn’t deserve to die the way he did.
* ROBERT GARDNER is a Corona del Mar resident and a former judge.
His column runs Tuesdays.
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