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Authors: Josh Harris,Jake Harris

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There are still more hazards to avoid. Rough seas and icy temperatures are the ideal conditions for the killer whales of the Bering Sea to go hunting. Nothing chills the soul like watching a whale just off the bow as it feasts on a great white shark.

Then, there are the icebergs. The
Titanic
didn’t survive even a single confrontation with a mountainous mass of ice. Crabbers, in much smaller boats, face those huge killers every season. Sometimes the crabs congregate near the ice floes. And crabbers go where the crabs are.

Just being on board a crab boat is hazardous, but nobody is ever just on board. The fishermen are there to work, and their work is grueling. Take the brutal and seemingly never-ending task of stacking the eight-hundred-pound crab traps. Though a winch lifts the pots and delivers them on deck, they must be grounded so that the stacks are even and don’t collapse onto the crew. Positioning the pots becomes a matter of muscle because they don’t respond much to finesse. Even when they are properly stacked, the pots can tumble when they become caked with ice.

The bodies of crew members take a beating from head to toe. A crabber can expect to have his tailbone rubbed raw from slamming against the pots as he works. A bloody back and hindquarters are just part of the job.

The extreme changes in weather and temperature tend to wreak havoc on a deckhand’s complexion. The toughened facial skin peels off in strips when exposed to extreme cold on such a regular basis.

The hands of a Bering Sea deckhand make those of a professional bull rider look manicured and pampered in comparison. Many deckhands are not able to retain all the digits on their hands. The fingers that survive grow gnarled, swollen, and misshapen. A crab boat deckhand sews his own stitches as readily as a carpenter applies a Band-Aid.

The dangers of such a job are reflected in data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics that ranks commercial fishing as the occupation with the highest fatality rate: 121.2 deaths per 100,000 workers, thirty-five times greater than the average for the overall American workforce. Loggers rank second with 102.4 fatalities per 100,000, followed by pilots and flight engineers at 57.0. The death rate for Bering Sea crabbers, in particular, is even higher still, at 260 per 100,000, according to a study
by the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health. Eighty percent of those Bering Sea fatalities are due to drowning or hypothermia.

Pound for pound, crabbers are the toughest bastards on earth.

This is the life that our father, Phillip Charles Harris, was destined for when he was brought into the world on December 19, 1956.

CHAPTER 1
SALTWATER IN HIS VEINS

It is dour; it freezes hard; it is difficult to navigate when the ice crowds down; and it punishes those who miscalculate its power. But it also teems with a rich animal life and rewards good hunters and fishermen enormously.

—James Michener on the Bering Sea in his novel
Alaska

His name is on the lips of every man who has ever sailed north of the Aleutian Islands. But if Vitus Jonassen Bering’s name had not been affixed to the Bering Sea, his role nearly three centuries ago in exploring the then-uncharted body of water would by now have been long forgotten.

Bering was a Danish-born sea captain who sailed under the Russian flag. It might seem strange that a foreigner would be given such a central role in the Russian navy, but it wasn’t that unusual in an era when the Russian czar, Peter the Great, was always on the lookout for exceptional sailors. He wasn’t concerned with their nationality, only their ability to help maintain his country’s sea power.

Born in 1681 in Horsens, Jutland, the part of Denmark that connects it to the European continent, Bering took to the seas at the age of fifteen. In the next seven years, he sailed widely, reaching both the Danish East and West Indies.

He was looking for new horizons by age twenty-two, and he found
them through Cornelius Cruys, a Norwegian who had become a vice admiral in the Russian navy and was, like Peter the Great, constantly in search of new nautical talent. Bering boarded his first Russian ship in 1703 and went on to distinguish himself in both the Great Northern War against Sweden and the Russo-Turkish War.

His military successes earned Bering the opportunity to take part in one of the great adventures of his age. Back then, much of the world, including Russia, didn’t know if Asia and North America were separate continents or if they were connected by a land bridge. In 1725, Bering led an expedition to learn the answer while also searching for a northeast passage to China and exploring the possibilities for Russian trade and colonization in North America. He returned in 1730 to report that Asia and North America were indeed separated by a body of water, one that would later bear his name.

Three years later, Bering departed again on what became known as the Great Nordic Expedition, leading a group of as many as ten thousand on a journey that would last a decade, although he himself would not live to see the end of it.

In the summer of 1741, commanding his ship, the
St. Peter,
but separated by a storm from a sister ship, the
St. Paul
, Bering reached the coast of Alaska. On July 20, Georg Wilhelm Steller, a German naturalist, became the first European to set foot in Alaska when the
St. Peter
stopped at Kayak Island, east of Prince William Sound in the Gulf of Alaska.

He didn’t get to stay long. Fearful of being stranded when winter arrived, Bering ordered Steller back to the ship and kept sailing, first north to the Alaska Peninsula, then west past the Aleutian Islands. But, despite his caution, Bering never made it back home. He was shipwrecked on an island just short of his destination, Russia’s Kamchatka Peninsula. Suffering from starvation and scurvy, he died there along with twenty-eight crew members in December 1741.

But Bering will not soon be forgotten, because so much of the area—the Bering Sea, the Bering Strait, the Bering Land Bridge, and
Bering Island where he died—bears his name, a tribute to the man who reached Alaska decades before the United States even existed.

Over the centuries, many sea captains, Russian and American, have followed in his wake, venturing into the Bering Sea’s treacherous waters and handing down the region’s seafaring traditions from generation to generation.

•   •   •

For Grant Harris, though, there was no such family tradition, no notable lineage or treasured fishing lore. He didn’t inherit a legacy, but he would certainly pass one on.

Grant, born in Seattle in 1933, never met his father. His parents were divorced and his father departed before he was born. Grant couldn’t even claim his love of the sea was in his genes, since his father was a steelworker.

And even though he grew up in Seattle, a coastal city surrounded by water and home to a large fishing industry, Grant himself didn’t leave dry land for a paycheck until he was twenty-seven. Before then, he had been an auto mechanic and worked in construction. He had always liked boats, but his interest was limited to canoes and rowboats.

Nonetheless, in 1961 Grant went to sea, going to work on the
Reefer II,
a boat that hauled frozen fish to processing plants up in Alaska. His five-year-old son, Phil, watched Grant leave on what must have seemed like a great adventure to the youngster.

“It was hard work,” said Grant, “but when you’re young, hard work doesn’t mean too much. To me, the harder it was, the more challenging it became.”

Perhaps the hardest thing of all, though, was his painful absence from his wife and young son. On that first trip, Grant was gone for six months.

There were many more such trips over the next four years. But over that period, the family adapted to the cycle and Grant learned to love the feel of the ocean and the essence of being a fisherman. He had found his life’s work.

Only to lose the love of his life.

In 1964, his wife, Phyllis, just twenty-seven at the time, died of skin cancer. Her eight-year-old son, Phil, was devastated, left with a void that seemed impossible to fill. With his father out to sea for half of each year, Phil had forged a bond with his mother that he thought was unbreakable.

Both of his grandmothers tried to fill that black hole, serving as surrogate mothers, trying to make a trip to Grandma’s house as special as they could. Whether it was showering Phil with gifts, making sure he did his homework, or nursing him through a cold, they were there, especially when Grant was working.

Grant, anxious to at least give his son the stability of familiar surroundings, didn’t move from the family home in Bothell, Washington, even though, after Phyllis’s death, every room in the house reminded him of her absence. Bothell was the only town Phil had ever known. A town of 2,200 back when Phil was growing up, Bothell, located twelve miles northeast of Seattle, has around 30,000 residents today. It’s a quiet middle-class community where manufacturing and high-tech research and development are the leading industries.

Staying in Bothell gave Phil the benefit of attending the same school and keeping the same friends. But Grant knew that without Phyllis, he was going to have to do more. His own life was going to have to change: as a single parent, he couldn’t spend months away in Alaska anymore.

“I wasn’t just going to pawn Phil off on somebody else,” Grant said.

But he wasn’t willing to completely give up his life at sea, so he settled on a compromise. Rather than working for someone else, he would get a boat of his own, allowing him to fish when he pleased.

Along with a partner named Ralph Shumley, Grant leased a boat for the summer for salmon fishing in Bristol Bay, southwest of Anchorage. With the season starting in June, Grant took Phil out of school a little early so he could accompany his father up north.

The venture was so successful that, after two summers, Grant was ready to take the next step and buy a boat.

That seemed like a good idea until he went shopping. What he found on the market was too little in the way of quality and too much in the way of cost.

So Grant came up with a better idea: he would build his own boat. A marine architect designed the plans for the vessel, to be made of Alaskan yellow cedar.

During the daytime, Grant worked as a carpenter and handyman in the Seattle area. Every night and on weekends, he would go to nearby Lake Union to work on the boat, focusing his carpentry skills on the project that had become his passion.

On many days, he had a young helper. After school and on Saturdays and Sundays, Phil, ten by then, would go down to the lake with his dad as the ship took shape.

It was much-needed therapy for Phil, who was still getting over the loss of his mother. Ultimately, it was the lure of the sea that pulled Phil out of his grief and loneliness.

“While I was building the boat, I had Phil do a little bit of painting or a few other simple things he could handle as a youngster,” Grant said. “The main thing was, I wanted him with me. At that age, you can’t turn a kid loose. With his mother no longer around, I needed to know what he was up to.”

Phil soon became a familiar sight around Lake Union. As he hopped from boat to boat, the stories of life at sea, the smell of the water, and the creaking of the ships all made a huge impression on his young mind.

It took Grant just seven months to complete his dream boat. He named it
The Provider
with the hope that it would be just that for his family.

Grant had the boat put on a freighter and shipped north to Bristol Bay, having adhered to that area’s limit by making his boat thirty-two feet in length with a twelve-foot beam.

He got a job working for a fish processing plant and put the finishing touches on his craft at night. In June, when the fishing season opened,
The Provider
left Nushagak in search of king salmon, with co-owners Grant and Shumley on board along with the boat’s junior crew member, Phil.

It was the beginning of a lifetime of fishing trips for Phil, though he could never have dreamed of that fate after that first outing—he absolutely hated it.

The summer fishing season coincided with baseball season. Phil loved the sport and wanted to be back home in Bothell playing with his friends.

Adding to his misery was the seasickness. The waves around Bristol Bay were nothing like the monsters Phil would later encounter in the midst of the Bering Sea. But at that age, it was more than he could handle. His solution was to try to sleep as much as possible on that trip, a luxury that would be unthinkable to Phil as an adult fisherman.

Grant, however, wouldn’t allow his son to act like a passenger on a cruise, so he had Phil doing everything from handling the bait to helping unload the product of their labor.

“My grandpa didn’t know how to raise a kid,” Jake would later say, “so he raised a worker.”

Grant didn’t limit his fishing to salmon. He went up to Togiak, north of Bristol Bay, to catch herring, sold salmon eggs to a buyer in Hawaii, hauled fish, including silver salmon, to market, and captained charter boats.

In his many years at sea, Grant earned respect for his calmness in the face of danger, his determination to succeed no matter how daunting the task, and his carpentry skill.

Proof of that skill is
The Provider
. Grant sold it years ago, but it remains seaworthy to this day, moored in Seattle forty-five years after he built it by himself as a moonlighting project.

Grant doesn’t brag about that, or anything else. He is a humble
man who shuns the spotlight. Serene as a ripple-free pond, his emotions held in check, he is a man who speaks as if he has a limited supply of words. Yet he never fails to get his point across.

That’s a stark contrast to his famous son, who relished his time in the eye of the camera. A type-A extrovert, Phil could be as explosive as the seas he sailed on, loud and nervous, sweeping through life as though driven by a swift current.

“They were such opposites,” said Sig Hansen, captain of the
Northwestern
, “that when I met Grant and saw how quiet he was, I couldn’t believe he was Phil’s father.”

BOOK: Captain Phil Harris
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