Not Exactly The Fish They Were Looking For…

Summary

A Bellingham fishing trawler snagged a metallic device with Russian lettering while fishing 14 miles off the Washington Coast.

Story Published: Jul 12, 2005 at 10:55 AM PST

Story Updated: Jul 24, 2009 at 11:01 AM PST

Not Exactly The Fish They Were Looking For…
BELLINGHAM - Quick: What's metallic, with little fiberglass wings, weighs nearly two tons and has Russian Cyrillic lettering on the side?

Apparently, some Cold War era communications device.

It was hard to miss -- the stubby missile, floating about 14 miles off the Washington coast, was crusted with barnacles, seaweed and seagull droppings and had a live seagull sitting on its nose.

The trawler Windjammer had just pulled its net when skipper Erik Eide spotted the object on Sunday afternoon. He decided to move in for a closer look.

It looked to him like a World War II buzz bomb. "It was kind of freaky at first," Eide said.

Then he remembered seeing something similar on the Discovery Channel and he was pretty sure it was a type of sonar rig. Eide decided to haul it on board in hopes that it could be worth something. "We're just four guys struggling to make a living," he said.

When they scraped off some barnacles and seaweed, they saw Cyrillic letters and that's when Eide decided they better report their find to the U.S. Coast Guard. Minutes later, the Coast Guard radioed back to say it was coming to take a look.

"What happened next is exactly what I thought. They took over the whole thing. Whatever they wanted me to do - I had to do," said Eide.

A helicopter flew over, a vessel pulled alongside, took some digital pictures and then the Navy ordered Eide to head to Port Angeles instead of heading to the Bornstein Seafoods dock in Bellingham, with his perishable cargo of cod and sole.

Jay Overton, spokesman for Navy Region Northwest, confirmed Eide's assessment that the object was not dangerous. He said Tuesday that the Navy had decided the device was some kind of Cold War era communications device floating in the currents of the Pacific Ocean for decades, but never used locally.

Officially the Navy is not prepared to say exactly what was pulled aboard the Windjammer, but they are certain it is not a weapon.

The Navy insists whatever it is, the technology is obsolete.

"It has no real value to the Navy," Overton said, adding that they would probably be returning it to Eide with the government's thanks for doing the right thing and reporting the find.

Ironically, in 18-years of fishing, this would be the first time skipper Erik Eide ever brought a camera.

"Never had a video camera on the boat until this trip and then we got this thing," laughed Eide.