Big Bend Sportsman Fishing Stories
Beer and Loathing in Haiti
Of Gold, Pirates
and Voodoo Drums
By Capt.
Wiley Horton
Have you ever wished for
the chance to go after sunken treasure? Spanish doubloons, Blackbeard,
and the Jolly Roger tickle your fancy? Arrrrrgh, matey, sit back and
read about modern day pirates that use your dreams to take your gold!
During
January of 1982, a 62 year-old businessman from Americus, Ga. was
scouting out locations in the Caribbean for a new hotel. His name was
William Forehand but his friends called him Bill. Bill owned Day’s
Inn motels in Americus, Macon, Cordele and Augusta Ga. His idea was
to sell the four properties and build a hotel in the Caribbean as a
retirement vehicle. Toward the end of Bill’s travels, he stopped for
a few days in Port au Prince, Haiti.
During dinner his second night, Bill struck
up a conversation with one Timothy O’Malley, a man whose business card
identified him as the president of Haitian Marine Expeditions or
HMX. Tim was a trim and dapper gentleman from Ireland who
explained his business to Bill. Tim was forming a limited partnership
to explore and salvage the hundreds of sunken ships in the waters
around Haiti. He explained that his company had an exclusive
agreement with the country’s president, Jean Claude (Baby Doc)
Duvalier. The name of the venture was HMX Operation 22. In
retrospect, there is a load of information in that designation. Bill
Forehand got excited. The more he talked with Tim, the more visions
of untold riches danced in his head. To hell with the hotel, this
project could set him up on easy street. Before the night ended, Bill
shook hands with Tim and agreed to raise some money and come back to
finance the deal.
I am proud of my
southern heritage. From 1976-85 I lived in Tifton, Georgia, a little
town with an erudite power structure and a sleepy southern charm.
Chivalry is alive and well, as is a drawl slow as molasses. Bill hit
Tifton with a full head of steam. He set up shop in an office at the
law firm representing his motel interests and began selling Operation
22’s prospectus to everyone he thought might be willing to dream big.
In three days, he raised seven hundred and twenty thousand dollars.
In 1982, America was in the midst of a recession. Unemployment was
running 11.5%. The smallest investor was in for one thousand; the
largest was in for one hundred thousand dollars. I have rarely seen
such a feeding frenzy. It seemed that everyone was afraid of being
left out.
During
that winter of 1982, it can truly be said that I had more money than
sense. It has actually been that way for most of my adult life,
regardless of how broke I was at the time. I completely and totally
understood the feeling of not wanting to be left out. A couple of
fishing buddies and I came up with ten thousand dollars and became
limited partners in the one of the most fantastic scams to ever hit
south Georgia.
After
a week, Bill had close to a million dollars and headed down to Haiti
to get the project started. The first order of business was securing
a base of operations. Bill chose a mountaintop villa, one and one
half hour’s drive from the port. Next up was a project vehicle to
carry him to and from the villa. For this purpose, a new Jeep Grand
Wagoneer was imported from the US. Finally a boat was purchased from
which the actual salvage work would be done. To the investors back in
Georgia, the fact that the boat was purchased was taken as a sign of
good news. The pictures showed a creaky, sixty-five foot workboat
with a pilothouse and flying bridge. A compressor for dive tanks was
located under the whaleback. At the stern, two prop blasters hung
ready for action.
After
three months of rosy reports and nary a doubloon, the investment group
decided to send a fact finding team to Port au Prince to determine
where the gold was, and why it was not flowing freely back to Georgia
where it rightfully belonged. One of the lead investors, a physician,
and an attorney from the firm were elected to form the team. They
suspected they had been duped and said as much out loud. As the only
certified diver among the investors, and with the time to spend a week
in Haiti, I was invited to tag along.
We
arrived in Miami and boarded a jet to Port au Prince. Bill greeted us
at the airport with his son, Willie, and a government representative.
We were waved through customs and loaded our stuff into the Jeep.
Bill explained that the boat was leaving late that evening to
investigate a site Tim had recommended and we were to be guests on the
voyage. We made a quick trip to inspect the boat and make sure
provisions for our expedition were loaded properly. A cruise ship was
tied up to a nearby wharf. Dozens of children bobbed in the water on
the bay side as the ship’s passengers tossed pennies, nickels and the
occasional dime from the after deck. The water was over forty feet
deep and the kids would dive for the coins they missed
While
checking out the boat, we were introduced to the crew. They were as
rough a collection of humanity as I’ve ever seen outside of prison
walls. In a small epiphany, I realized that if we actually located
any doubloons, these guys would kill us and probably kill each other
before we ever got back to port. The cook was a small Englishman with
a cockney accent who cursed a blue streak, only stopping to inhale
half a cigarette in one drag. The lead diver was a brooding hulk of a
man, his speech a snarled mix of English and Creole. The ship’s
engineer was equally imposing, sharpening a large knife. He could be
single-handedly responsible for the current tattoo craze. The captain
was absent.
Our
gear loaded, Bill suggested a trip to the villa, followed by dinner
and a visit to the local casino. We agreed, glad to get away from the
humidity of the port. April in Georgia is pleasant. In Haiti the
heat was a palpable force, every movement taking far more effort than
we were accustomed to. The ride up the mountain started through some
of the most pitiful living conditions in the western hemisphere. As
our elevation increased, the people appeared more prosperous. After an
hour and perhaps fifteen miles, we approached the top of the ridge
overlooking Port au Prince. The road was so steep that three of us
had to get out and push the Jeep up the last hundred yards to the
villa.
The
“villa” was actually a rambling stone fortress built into the brow of
the ridge. There was a large, well kept pool with a stunning panorama
of the ocean and the city far below. After freshening up, we headed
to dinner in a part of the city known as Petionville and on to the
casino. Dinner was unremarkable. The casino had an exceedingly
European flavor with Baccarat seeming to be the game of choice. I
discovered yet another card game with which I have no talent. At
midnight we were driven to the boat.
As the
others retired for the crossing, I headed to the pilothouse to meet
the captain. He turned out to be a wizened old man, appearing well
over seventy to my twenty-something eyes. His English was spoken with
a heavy French accent. The evening was clear, but new moon dark and
this fellow was about to head out of one of the most difficult harbor
entrances on the planet. Accustomed to the electronic navigation
technology of the time, I could find none on the bridge. The only
instrumentation was a large compass and a chronometer.
With
the rest of the crew fast asleep and no desire to deal with them after
an evening of rum, the Captain sent me up to the flying bridge to help
spot markers or anything else that might get in our way.
Communication was via a two-inch brass tube that ran from the bridge
to the helm. Actually very little was said on the way out as the old
man expertly snaked his way out to the open ocean.
Eighty
miles ahead, our destination was a reef on the eastern approach to the
Ile de la Gonave. The voyage went without incident and just before
dawn we were off the coast of the island. The only lights on the
island were fires, visible through the thick foliage. I imagined the
faint beat of drums….or did I? Willie Forehand had towed his old
sixteen-foot Glastron ski boat behind us and was off to find the
shipwreck. He located it and before breakfast, we were anchored from
three directions directly over a brace of cannons protruding from the
reef. The water was twenty feet deep.
After
a greasy breakfast, we dove in to take a look at the wreck. This ship
had obviously gone down in a storm. Contrary to popular belief, ships
that go aground don’t just sink and stay there. This ship had been
blown onto the reef and the force of the wind and waves tumbled it
across the coral for hundreds of yards. Its cargo was scattered
across the area and, except for the cannons it was covered by coral
growth. The reef was spectacular with one exception: it was
completely devoid of fish, even small tropicals. The inhabitants
evidently did not cull their catches and had virtually fished out the
barrier reef surrounding the island.
By the
time we got back on board, the engineer had lowered the prop blasters
over the propellers. They took the propeller thrust and directed it
down toward the bottom. I thought they would be used to blow sand
from around an area, but to my horror, the force tore the coral below
apart and exposed the cannons and other artifacts. The water turned
milky and visibility was reduced to near zero. For a couple of hours,
the professional divers and I used hoses connected directly to the
compressor, called hookah rigs, to explore the aftermath of the prop
blasters. We felt along the bottom and placed anything that didn’t
feel like coral into mesh bags we carried.
Examining the booty topside, we discovered numerous cannon balls and
grapeshot loads. There was a lot of old broken pottery and
silverware. Sailing ships of that era had copper sheets attached to
the bottom with bronze tacks to prevent fouling growth. Strips of the
copper, still holding the tacks, were sticking out of the rubble
everywhere. Occasionally a large piece was found tacked to a
seventeenth century plank from the ship’s bottom section. We found
buttons, tobacco pipes, belt buckles, etc. Over my protests, we
continued to expand our area of destruction until mid-afternoon the
next day with similar results. Every sort of detritus imaginable from
the ship was found with an important exception: there was not a
doubloon in sight.
There
were storm clouds gathering on the horizon when Willie and I set off
in the Glastron to check out some local fishermen in a small wooden
boat. We were trying to barter for some lobster and Willie’s obvious
distain for the locals was not helping when the wind freshened. We
were about two miles from the mothership. The dark clouds had
gathered rapidly behind us and there were already whitecaps past the
reef. The bigger boat was heading out to deeper water. As we tried
to catch up, the Glastron had difficulty with the sea conditions. We
began shipping water almost immediately. The bilge pump refused to
work. I jerked the wires from the switch and wired it directly to the
battery, all the while imploring Willie to get to us to the big boat
NOW.
I know
you’ll find this hard to believe, but in 1982, the weather forecasts
were slightly, shall we say….unreliable. The predicted calm weather
gave way to a fast moving front. The workboat was in the
uncomfortable position of being on the eastern end of the island and
being pounded by westerly winds at a steady 30-35 knots. One of the
elderly diesels has died and they’re trying to keep from being turned
broadside by the wind and driven up on the same patch of reef that
they’ve just spend the better part of two days demolishing. The milky
water has been transformed into the Sea of Irony.
At the
same time, they have two young men in a tiny boat trying to reach them
and not having much success. To this day I am convinced that, had his
father not been on the boat, Willie and I would be sporting great
tans, speaking fluent Creole and beating on those drums…that is if we
had made it back to the island. The natives would have loved In-A-Gadda-Da-Vita.
The old captain made a quick and calculated turn. We were able to
jump from the Glastron to the larger boat and tied the ski boat off
the stern. It sank within a few minutes and we cut it loose…an
offering to the Gods of the reef.
The
engineer can’t make the second diesel work and, with no safe
anchorage, the captain heads for Port au Prince. We are beating into
twelve-foot head seas with a single engine and not making very good
time. The doctor and lawyer have gotten more than they bargained for
and stay below. Throughout the night we gradually fall under the
protection of the mountains on island of Hispanola. The wind’s effect
on the waves diminishes. Those same mountains have knocked the starch
out of many a hurricane. I spent the night observing the old captain,
how he handled the boat and managed the crew. Around four in the
morning, he asked me to once again head to the flying bridge and keep
watch as we limped into the port. Once inside the harbor, I collapsed
on the floor of the bridge and slept as never before.
I was
having a dream about swimming in an icy cold mountain stream when a
foot rudely awakened me. “Man, we thought we lost you out there!”
said my lawyer buddy. A swarm of mosquitoes buzzed about. He’d been
spraying me with insect repellent, thus the dream. “It’s ten o’clock
and we’ve already reported you lost at sea.” I started thinking about
the pain that news will cause my family. “Come on, we gotta get this
straightened out or you’ll never get out of the country. Not only
that, but we got a lunch appointment with Tim O’Malley, and I want our
money back.” I took a quick shower and dressed. My stuff got loaded
in the Jeep with the boys and we drove a short distance to a
restaurant outside the iron market.
Tim
cheerfully greeted us and asked about our exploits. The doctor said
it sucked and asked how much money was left. Tim replied, “Not
much.” The attorney demanded a complete accounting and the immediate
return of all remaining funds, or else. “Or else what, mate?” The
cheerful demeanor was gone. “I don’t think you’ll find that American
law degree of much use in here in Port au Prince. My friend, Jean
Claude, will see to that….so bugger off.” It’s easy to believe the
venture’s Operation 22 designation meant there had been 21 equally
gullible groups proceeding our own. The haggling began and continued
until I grew bored and walked outside and into the iron market.
Street
kids clawing and begging for attention instantly surrounded me. A
large youth approached and offered protection for one dollar. I paid
him and the children promptly retreated a few feet. They remained
within striking distance as we walked through the market. A
well-endowed wooden mermaid caught my eye. The carving was five feet
high, cut out of solid mahogany. She had a long sinuous tail and a
face straight off an Easter Island moai. The asking price was $450
American. Ten minutes later I walked out of the market, my protector
toting the mermaid, after he negotiated sales price of $24.75. The
attorney and doctor emerged from the restaurant with a dejected look
on their faces. They now knew that over one million dollars had left
South Georgia and it was not coming back. Bill Forehand remained
optimistic. “You boys get on home and scare me up a little more
operating money and I’ll find the gold!” He left for the villa and we
caught a taxi to the airport.
Compared to the passage back from Gonave, being escorted by MIG
fighters through Cuban airspace on the flight to Miami was a walk in
the park. I was unwilling to check my mermaid and had to carry her
in my lap on the plane. Trying to clear customs at Miami
International was a trip. Picture this: It’s 1982. Miami Vice rules
the television. A sunburned, mustachioed young man with longish hair
is trying to pass a wooden mermaid with large breasts, dive gear,
camera bag, an attaché containing five bottles of Barbancourt
Reserve-Especial Rhum and a big duffle bag through customs. The folks
in line behind me did not appreciate the fact that the customs
officials left very little to chance. They x-rayed the statue, looked
through all the bags in detail, and had the dog sniff the whole
shebang, me included. In the process, someone stole my camera bag
with the photos of the trip and a Nikon FE inside. I do not care to
visit Haiti again.
A few
months later, the political climate changed in down there.
Jean-Claude Duvalier was deposed and fled to France. Bill Forehand
managed to escape the country, taking the boat to the Bahamas where it
was sold. The investors got a very small amount back from the sale of
the boat and a large tax deduction.
“Sixteen men on a dead man’s chest, yo-ho-ho and a bottle of Rum.” I
still have about half a bottle of that Barbancourt Reserve-Especial.
Occasionally over the years, I’ve poured a snifter, toasted the buxom
mahogany mermaid and contemplated what happened and what was to be
learned from it. I lost an extremely small sum, relatively speaking,
and got a splendid adventure and a mermaid to show for it. The rest
of the group was not as fortunate. To overstate the obvious, the lure
of easy money can infect anyone. There were some very savvy and
intelligent folks on the investor list. Our efforts to get a bigger
piece of the return resembled nothing more than a school of hungry
jacks tearing a bait pod apart. Additionally, there are people out
there slicker than a river rock and just as slippery. The only thing
wrong with your money is that they don’t have it. They are willing to
go to extreme and ingenuous lengths to separate you from your cash and
all of us are susceptible at one time or another.
Without putting too fine a point on it, there are also people that
live lives of unimaginable desperation. The faces of the grimy
children in the iron market still occasionally haunt my dreams.
Theirs is a world where life, human or otherwise, has little meaning
or value. I try to thank God every day for being born in America……and
especially being born in the South.
From a series of fishing stories submitted by Capt Wiley Horton
copyright Capt Wiley Horton
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