Mispillion Lighthouse from the Delaware Archives
As our last Memorial Day rolled around, I thought back to those holidays of the past while living in
Every year at the first sign of warmer weather, I scanned
the newspaper ads for boats for sale. I can’t tell you how many boats we looked
at, but Jim always found something wrong…until the right one came along. It was
an 18’ MFG open bow, cathedral hull with a 125 HP Evinrude. The cathedral hull
(or tri-hull) is shaped somewhat like a wavy m and is more stable in the water.
That means harder to turn over, but in a heavy sea it’s a rougher ride because
of the additional surface contact. Jim, a West Virginian turned Delawarean via
Air Force and marriage, was not a water fiend like me, but he did like to fish
and the open bow and tri-hull sold him on the boat.
There are lots of things you don’t think about when buying a
boat like the hitch, the size ball, registering with the State, and getting the
required safety items such as a compass, life preservers, flares and an oar.
These all take time and effort and delay the fun part. We did our paperwork,
made the trek to the Department of Motor Vehicles, and went shopping for the
other stuff. Maps and a two-way radio were purchases left for another day. We
were ready to fish.
First, we had to decide where to fish. I’m not much for
fresh water so I lobbied for the Delaware Bay .
Even that left many options because Delaware ,
although a small State, has a lengthy coastline. Many sites beckoned close by,
including Woodland Beach , Port Mahon, Slaughter Beach ,
Mispillion Light and some others. We chose the Cedar Creek Marina just south of
Mispillion Light for our first outing. Although renowned for sudden storms, the
fishing was said to be excellent.
Hot, clear and sunny was the forecast when we pulled out of
our driveway in the morning mist at 6 A.M., towing our new, used motorboat
behind us. After waiting in line to launch at the marina, we slowed snaked our
way through the creek in a long line of impatient fisherman. The first thing we
realized we had forgotten was insect spray. Mosquitoes were on the warpath and
the cavalry were sitting ducks. There was no turning back in that line.
Where an inlet
meets a larger body of water, it usually means a churning of the waves. Think
of it as trying to pour water from a soup pot into a Coke bottle and you’ll
have the picture. I had been standing in back of Jim as he piloted us into the
Bay from the Inlet when we saw a woman driving her sleek-looking powerboat too
fast. She hit an oncoming wave at the mouth of the inlet and went almost
vertical in the air. I thought she would hit the bell buoy, but she slowed down
just in time. After righting her boat, she took off again and was soon out of
sight. I thought of her later.
Once we were in
the Bay, I estimated we rode along at a steady pace about 25 minutes. Then we
cut the engine and dropped anchor, slathered on some sunscreen and baited up
with squid. We were after speckled trout for a fish-fry supper with the family
next door. Jim caught a small one right away, but our luck didn’t hold. An hour
went by and nothing snagged our hooks.
“Did you happen
to notice the compass setting when we came out of the inlet?” Jim asked. He was
sitting on the bench in the stern with his line dangling over the side.
“No, I was too busy watching that lady driver bouncing over the waves with her bow stuck up in the air.”
I turned around
and looked back, shocked to see a rolling fog coming toward us. The sun had
disappeared behind a mass of gray sky.
“Do you have any
idea which way is back?” I asked.
“Well, I’m sure it has to be west, but I’m not sure we’ll find Mispillion Light. I don’t think we’ve been going in a straight line.”
These were my thoughts, too.
“Well, what do you think we should do? Sit here and wait for it to lift or try to find our way back?” Jim didn’t answer.
The fog rolled in
quickly until we could barely see the ends of our fishing poles. It was so
quiet not even a hungry gull could be heard squawking overhead. Then we heard a
clicking noise. Click, click, in a continuous rhythm. It was coming from the
stern. Jim stood and looked over the motor at the water, and I cautiously
walked down the center aisle toward the back to see.
The dark water was circling around the motor like it was going down a drain.
“We must be in a little whirlpool, and it must be turning the prop and making that clicking noise.” Jim voiced his logical explanation.
I leaned over slightly for a closer look. The bottom could be a hundred feet or more this far out. Oil tankers travel up and down the
We had set the anchor, we thought, but it looked like we might be drifting. We had the required flares, but who would see a flare in this stuff? Those oil tankers could plow right over us and not even feel it.
“Hey, we’d better turn on our running lights,” I said to Jim, as I heard the sound of a massive hull moving through the water and felt our boat rise a little from the waves. I held my breath until I heard it moving off in the opposite direction. We had seen nothing through the thick murk. We rocked back and forth from the tanker’s wake, and I clenched the side of the boat until my knuckles turned white.
We were hopelessly disoriented, and there was nothing to do but wait for the fog to lift. If we moved, we could run into something, and we had no idea which direction to go anyway.
After a couple hours the fog began to clear and we were able to see the beacon at Mispillion flashing our direction home. It remained overcast so we opted to hightail it in while we had the chance. No more fishing this day.
We learned a valuable lesson about boating. Always take a compass bearing just before you get out into open water, but after telling our story to everyone we met when we got in, they said we did the right thing by staying put. They strongly suggested we buy a marine radio if we planned any more early morning fishing forays. And a boating course couldn’t hurt either.
When we got home, our neighbor said it had been hot, bright and sunny all day. No fish-fry this time, but seafood restaurants are for unlucky fisherman, or in our case, lucky.