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Danger fish - craigmedred.news

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A typical Turnagain Arm hooligan (eulachon)/Alaska Department of Fish and Game photo

If reports coming from the Twentymile River approximately 45 miles east of Alaska’s largest city are to be believed, some six- to eight-inch long fish nearly killed a couple of people over the weekend.

Yes, the hooligan are running, and not everyone rushing out to dipnet a bucketful of the tasty, little, fat-laden fish understands the threats posed by the river’s current, the silty goo that accumulates in places on the riverbed, the Turnagain Arm tides or the glacial silt that turns to foot-grabbing mud in the Arm.

Wasilla’s Rodger Painter said he was on the river Saturday when he heard someone yell for help and looked upstream to see an elderly fisherman porpoising out in the 40-degree water.

“His family was trying to pull him in by his dipnet,” Painter said, “but the river was going over his head. His head was underwater. He was bobbing up and down.”

With the man’s feet mired in the mud on the river bottom, the man couldn’t get his legs under himself to stand up, and the river was having its way with him the way it does with driftwood stuck to the bottom in a fast current.

“He was going to drown,” said Painter, who expressed shock most others dipnetting hooligan or watching the fishing were ignoring the man’s predicament.

“There was at least 20 people right there,” he said. “None of them moved a muscle.”

The right thing

The 52-year-old Painter decided someone better do something and charged into the river. Fortunately, he was wearing waders with some insulation beneath and belted at the waist in case he fell down.

“(So) I can swim better with waders on,” Painter said.

Out in the river, he managed to pull the man loose from the bottom and get his head above water.

“That water is frickin’ freezing cold,” he said. “(But) I had his face up out of the water and got him on his knees so he wasn’t in danger of drowning.

“He wasn’t the slimmest guy in the world and his waders were full of water. He wasn’t wearing the belt around the waist.

“I think he would have drowned if I wasn’t there.”

While Painter was helping the man toward shore, he said another fisherman – a “big Samoan guy” – who’d been even farther away from the scene than Painter arrived to help pull the man out of the river and reunite him with his family.

The family was very thankful, said Painter, who didn’t get the man’s name.

“He was embarrassed,” Painter said, “which I understand. That’s never a situation you want to be put in – embarrassed and almost dead.”

It was after the man was safely ashore and under the care of his family that Painter said he learned the rescue was the second of the day.

“There’d been an incident earlier,” he said, “a young man kind of in a similar situation. He got stuck in the mud because he wasn’t moving.

“Once you get into that stuff, it’s hard to get out. He made a common mistake. People need to get some awareness down there.

“Two people almost drown on the same river in the same day? It’s kind of sad. But they both made it. That’s the most important part.”

Do the right thing

The rescue story could not be independently confirmed, but there’s no reason to believe Painter made it up. All sorts of strange things go on at the head of Turnagain Arm during the early May to early June fishery.

And what appears to have caused Painter to talk about the incident at all was some growing frustration with the behavior of other dipnetters.

Painter, who said he grew up in Sitka and trained as a Navy diver, said he simply cannot understand how people could just stand by and watch when a man’s family is yelling for help and someone appears to be struggling to avoid drowning.

“I was disappointed,” he said, He was so disappointed he later posted this on his Facebook page:

“OK, today at 20 mile, (I) heard a scream for help. Help my Dad is drowning . So I put my net up and start running . I get up there and the gentleman was hanging on to a net .I jump in the river waste deep . Pull his head above water . And one other person shows up to help out of 15-20 people most in their 20 and 30’s . I am 52 and the frist person their other then his family . Not sure how this can happen . This was a human drowning !!!! The cause of this was he got stuck in the mud and dropped his net . Folks your net is not worth your life and if my 52 year old ass can save a man for your 20-30 year olds…shame on you.”

The post was subsequently shared to a number of fishing sites on Facebook. The reactions voiced a near-unanimous belief that the old Alaska standard that says you do all you can to help others in trouble is fading in modern times.

The mainly urban Americans of today grow up with different values than those of an older Alaska. Those values made a big impression on Painter.

“It’s definitely an incident I won’t forget about,” Painter said.

Ok today at 20 mile , heard a scream for help . Help my Dad is drowning . So I put my net up and start running . I get up their and the gentleman was hanging on to a net . I jump in the river waste deep . Pull his head above water . And one other person shows up to help out of 15-20 people most in their 20 and 30’s . I am 52 and the frist person thier other then his family . Not sure how this can happen . This was a human drowning !!!! The cause of this was he got stuck in the mud and dropped his net . Folks your net is not worth your life and if my 52 year old ass can save a man for your 20-30 year olds can shame on you

standing below bridge. net stuck. “his family was trying to pull him in by he dipnet, but the river was still giving over his head.” “he was definitely in his 50s.” “he wasn’t very tall, but a little husky.” yelling for help. “his family were trying to pull him in, but they were doing it wrong.” 50 year old man sprint up the beach. nobody moved. “there was at least 20 people. i was the first person there.” “none of them moved a muscle.” incident earlier, young man, “kind of a similar situation. he got stuck in the mud.” not moving mud. “once you get into that stuff, it’s hard to get out.” suction. first of year. people forget. “he made a common mistake.” heard of one earlier. “someone has to get some awareness fo what goes on down there.” “he was embarrassed, which I understand. that never a situation you want to be put it. enmbared and almost dead.” “his head was underwater, popping up and down.” didn’t think much about it at the time. “I was a little disappointed.” born in ’68. class in sitka. see people in distress go help. lack of help. “I was kind of shocked.” “there was nobody near that man.” samoan guy. fishing under highway bridge. just upstream from the rocks a little bit. “my net wasn’t hitting the rocks all the time.” people fishing below. Samoian guy twice the distance to get there. “I had his face up out of the water and on his knees so he wasn’t in danger of drowing.” “he wasn’t the slimmest guy in the world.” waders full of water. “he would have droawn if I wasn’t there.” goretex waders, “he wasn’t wearing the belt around the waist.” trained as a navy divers. “I can swim better with waders on.” “I was born and raised in Sitka.” dipnet there. redoubt, whale bay. fast water. knocked over rocks. head banged. “you fall in there, you’re done.” “it’s the same kind of fishery.” shorter nets. “he lost his net.” “that’s what caused him to get in trouble.” “at the end of the day, saving your life is not worth your life.” “screw the net.'” watched people tie themselves to net. “it’s shocking how many times I’ve seen it.” spent lot of summers in kenai. belong to sealaska, she atika. registered tribal member. seen lots of different fisheries. “it was pretty cold.” “my dipnetting was limited because I didn’t bring a pair of gloves with me.” “so i froze hands off.” got a couple, 4. “after all the excitement.” didn’t bring right gear to wear under waderes. “I’m expecting today will be better.” “two people almost drown on the same river. it’s kind of sad.” “they both made it.” “that’s the most important part.” “it’s definitely an incident I won’t forget about.” 38/39 degrees. “that water is frickin’ freezing cold.” “I’m surprised at how far out in the community this Facebook story went.” “mom of the guy who went in the river begged me to post something….i don’t even know how the she found me, but she found me.” “he was grateful.” “she’s just grateful.” “nobody wanted to have the embarrassment of having that happen to them.” “but i was disapointted” people making no effort to pitch in. put tops on minute, minute and half. “at the rate everyone else was moving, it would never have happened. he would have drown.” couldn’t live with self if didn’t act.

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