Saturday, June 3, 2017

Coincidence Saves Us - Marquesas Keys 1987

In keeping with my recent spat of oddness while treasure hunting, I thought I'd relate this little bit of weirdness that happened back in 1987. What makes it weird are the series of coincidences that ensued throughout our misadventure. My good friend, treasure hunter, author and shop owner, Kevin Reilly had been planning a diving and treasure hunting trip for months, and had finally found several low-on-work fishing vessels, the Aubrey and it's sister ship, the Lil Aubrey ready to take our group down to the Marquesas Keys, about 22 miles southeast of Key West. 
My old treasure hunting partner, Kevin Reilly, in 1986, may he rest in peace.
I was informed, a few years ago, by a rather irritatingly rude archaeologist, who worked that area with Mel Fisher, that we had been...trespassing on the Marquesas. "That was ours, that was ours!!" she kept repeating to the point I almost decided to drop their memoir of treasure hunting with Mel Fisher back onto the table. As much as it pains me to say, it was an exceptionally good read! Still, I replied that she and her "group" had left piles and piles of rusted iron theodolite towers all over the islands, 27-years ago as well as most of their trash, and if it was indeed "...their's" than maybe they ought go back and clean it up! Marc Hoover knows who I mean, right Marc? It was a good read though, darn it!
I shot this photo of one of the countless shallow shipwrecks found in the Florida Keys in 1987, no telling how old it is.
The weather was beautiful as we left Key West, with all of us gawking as we passed the moored and famous "Bookmaker," one of Mel Fisher's blower-equipped salvage boats. This was the time of the Spanish fleet's Atocha, and only a few days before Mel's guys finally hit the main pile of treasure that went down with the doomed galleon. We were totally oblivious to all this as we sliced through the crystal blue-green waters, westbound for the uninhabited Marquesas Keys. This is a group of small islands that looks like a tasty shrimp from the air, with a central "lagoon" and separate islands surrounding it.

Shrimp-shaped Marquesas Keys 

After several days of metal detecting and scuba diving scored us a few artifacts, I was using an original hip-mounted Teknetics 8000 Coin Computer with, I think, an 8" concentric coil, which was a pretty good setup for the time. One of the big problems with this detector was if you used it regularly in a marine environment, the mounting hardware rusted up, as it was all unprotected steel. And the rust got all over everything! I got a strong ping on one of the many uninhabited beaches and pulled up a rather worn 1841 Seated Liberty half-dime below a few inches of sand.


My 1841 half-dime perched on the wooden railing of the Lil Aubrey
Everyone aboard the Lil Aubrey were feeling quite free in making up stories on just how the 1841 half-dime had made its way to the island. Everything from a sailor brought a prostitute out to the semi-tropical island from Key West and when he threw his pant's over a tree branch 145-years ago, it fell out onto the sand, to a seagull picked up the then shiny coin off the 19th Century streets of Key West and accidentally dropping it as they flew over the uninhabited key.
Enjoying fresh-caught seafood on the fantail of Lil Aubrey laying off the Marquesas Keys in 1987
We even had a confrontation later the next day with the very same Bookmaker we had seen on the way out of Key West, who hove us over, seeing the metal detectors on board the fantail of the Lil Aubrey, to make sure we were not on their lease. We weren't but they still glared at us, not trusting us, and for good reason. There was a lot of poaching activity around the area, as it was no secret that Treasure Salvors had hit it big before, with the Margarita, and were hot on the trail of the Atocha.

Inside The Pass, Marquesas Keys. I lost the film so it was not developed until 28-years later, hence some light-leakage on the negatives after such a long time in the can.

The captain of the Lil Aubrey, Jon Gerung, a German oceanographer by trade, fishing boat captain by necessity, asked me late one afternoon, if I wanted to go ashore with him and take my metal detector along while he did a independent survey of the on-shore vegetation. No one else wanted to go, so Captain Jon and I pushed off in the little skiff and motored to shore, about 3-miles away. Jon made notes, while I scanned the shore with my machine and came up with a few pieces of rusted iron fragments, not much to write home about.

The small, painfully biting "no-see-um's" started to get bothersome, so Captain Jon and I jumped aboard the small skiff; it was getting dark and we needed to get back to the Lil Aubrey. Jon gave the starter rope a good yank and nothing but a muted putter. We checked the fuel was on and Jon gave the starter another mighty pull. The engine just would not start. The clouds of "no-see-um's" were getting so bad, we pushed away from the shore regardless. Jon picked up a small broom in the bottom of the skiff, and I tightened the screw on my search coil, and we used both as makeshift oars, as we paddled away in the growing darkness. The wind was picking up, which we were paddling against. A few more tries on the outboard produced nothing...it was dead. Jon and I glanced at each other, feeling the southbound wind, and thinking if we don't figure this out real quick, we might end up in Cuba!

We were having a hard time locating the Lil Abrey in the darkening anchorage, as no one was aboard who knew how to turn the running lights on. As we paddled on, we passed an large, anchored, sailboat. A big white dog suddenly showed up on it's bow and started barking at us, bringing a rather pretty woman in a white bikini to the bow, watching us pass. Suddenly, a guy appeared on the bow holding a drink. He shouted at us, "You guys okay?" whereas Jon yells back, "Our outboard quit...we are trying to get back to our boat!" We  paddled over to the sailboat and the guys says, "Isn't that the skiff from the Lil Aubrey?"

We were dumbfounded. As we reached the side of the sailboat, the guy climbs down into our skiff, and he pulls off the cover of the outboard. "Yea, I'm Jerry. I used to be the captain of the Lil Abrey about seven-years ago, and this sonofabitchin' outboard was always a problem!" He had a pair of Craftsman pliers in his hand, and grabbed a spring in the motor and pulled it tight onto a component. He closed the cover, and gave it a pull. The outboard sputtered a bit, the roared to life. Jon and I had our mouths open...still just dumbfounded. Jerry handed us a flashlight, and off we went, finally getting back to the Lil Aubrey. Jon turned on all the running lights, and we told the story to everyone aboard, who thought we might have been killed by drug smugglers, which was a danger at that time.

The coincidences were simply staggering; we broke down 22-miles from Key West, a dog just happened to bark at us from an anchored sailboat along our course, alerting the owner, a former captain of our fishing boat, who had intimate knowledge of our busted motor, and knew exactly how to fix it! 


7 comments:

  1. Replies
    1. Thanks for your comment, Will. It was all adventure back then, and quite a bit of danger even. You know what I mean!

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  2. Hya Jim:
    What with UFO's and now this...weird! I reckon you should try your hand at divining with metal rods.

    Y'know I'd trade all the roman sites I've permission to detect for a couple of days hunting on the Keys.

    Regards

    John H

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    1. John, I actually had a pair of dowsing rods I made out of a few pieces of welding rod and some copper tubing. They worked quite well, and I cannot tell you why. I had a friend that was about 90-years old then who taught me how to use them. I didn't believe they would work, and they didn't as long as I disbelieved it. When I finally got the thought patterns right, and learned how to hold them correctly, they DID work. And they worked looking for practically everything, not just treasure! Sorry to say, they don't work anymore for me, now I'm old.

      Yea, I wish you could have come over in the mid 1980's before the "Keys Marine Sanctuary" was sneaked into place, effectively making it illegal to dive on old wrecks nowadays. The El Enfante galleon we used to dive and find pieces of Ming Dynasty china and 1732 pillar dollars has long been out of bounds, now with Florida Marine Patrol officers constantly watching. The FMP guys used to harass us even in 1985, when they would write up a fine for "disturbing marine coral" when they saw faint traces of long-dead coral on a cannon ball we had recovered. Now, it's all "federally protected" by NOAA, which is a weather agency basically. Times have changed and not for the better. Thanks for your comment John!

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  3. Jim:
    What's really baffling is map-dowsing. I have no idea what the 'force' is behind it, but it works.

    Some years ago, I was asked to recover a couple of vintage shotguns. During the search I was asked if I could find a wooden cap to a very deep well (located somewhere in the front of a late 17C house) which posed a danger of suddenly collapsing.

    In the event, I contacted a friend who was an accomplished map-dowser, with a map of the house's forecourt. It came back with a 'X' marked within a circle to the south of the map. When the location was examined by the building contractors, the wooden, and by now rotten cap, was located!!

    Seems as though the FMP are protecting some kind of heritage cartel where only a select few are allowed to explore. Trace it back and I bet you'll find archaeo-politicos. at work.

    Cheers!

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  4. Loved that story Jim....hope you are writing a book.

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    1. Glad you liked it, Dick. I was thinking of doing just that. Still sifting through mounds of old 35mm slides and b&w negatives looking for some photos from that time. As you know, we didn't take selfies then. Film and development costs dictated we shot photographs of things we considered important, and our ugly mug was not on the list. Thanks for your comment, Dick!

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