There are some tricks to bidding on eBay. The first is to keep bids low until
the end. You don’t want to allow someone a week to get used to a high bid—you
hit hard and fast at the end, a practice called “poaching” or “sniping.” In
my small hometown of Unalaska, there’s an added courtesy of not outbidding
a local who has dibs on something. (I unknowingly did this once and got in a
bidding battle with someone trying to give me the item as a gift.)
In the post office Monday, I was told that someone else in town really wanted
the bow piece for her husband’s Christmas gift. This was a terrible blow
to me as it meant two things: One, I was going to have to crush a friend of mine,
because I wanted it badly and wasn’t willing to step aside; and two, the
secret was out. Foolish me—I thought I was the only one who had seen it.
Let the war begin, I thought.
The seller had no idea what was happening in this remote Alaskan community. He
had committed one major faux pas in setting up his auction. He had started it
at 9 A.M. Michigan time, which meant it would end a week later, at 5 A.M. Alaska
time. He wouldn’t get top dollar because there wouldn’t be much poaching
on this one. I was lucky that I was on Christmas break and would be able to sacrifice
a good night’s sleep to get in on the final hours of the auction.
The bidding started out mellow, $75 to $100 in the first two days. By the end
of the week, it was still lowballed at $200. Someone must have told the seller
what he had because the word baidarka appeared in the item description. Fortunately,
the word was misspelled, so it wouldn’t bring in whole other segments of
bidders using baidarka as an eBay search word. Nice.
I stepped things up with a $400 shot to get rid of the amateurs. It was nearly
immediately topped by a bidder identified as “arcticarchaeologist.” He’s
a good friend, and I knew this was getting serious. I smirked when I saw his
bid trumped by “bitsofak.” Arcticarchaeologist came back raising
the ante by another $250. I could hear the seller gurgling with joy. With one
day left, the bids slowed. I was waiting to snipe the archaeologist in the end,
but then a new player entered a yet higher bid. He even upped his own bid by
$100 to $700 after he placed it. Perhaps right before his bedtime.
I came home from a Christmas party at
midnight. Time to play hardball, I bid $1,002—another eBay trick,
adding a few dollars to a round number—and hit the sack. When
the alarm rang at 4:45 A.M. a heavy snow was falling. This meant my
satellite dish would be full of snow and the Internet link it provided
would not be working. Another option was my cable modem, but when I
logged in, my access was denied—there was snow in the cable company’s
dish as well. I called a friend who was monitoring the action on a
landline link. “Dude, you’re on top with 43 seconds to
go!” Seems my rivals slumbered too late. Forty-three seconds
later, I was the proud owner of a genuine late 1800s Aleutian baidarka
bow piece.
When the piece arrived, I was surprised at how small it was. The second thing
that struck me was the presence of nails and a large brass screw, neither of
which were traditionally used in kayak construction. But all that paled when
taking in its delicate beauty and fine craftsmanship.
The piece is a textbook example of an Aleut bow shape. It is known as a bifid
bow because of the open slot, which allowed the skin covering to take a more
seaworthy shape. Bows from the Aleutians differed from their neighbors to the
east, the Pacific Eskimos, in that the bow was made in two pieces and lashed
together—in this case, with split spruce root.
The most unusual characteristic of this specimen is that the lower piece was
lashed to the keelson. In most recorded examples of Aleut kayak bows, the lower
piece is carved to include the forward segment of the keelson. In this one, it
attaches with a hooked scarf joint, a characteristic of all Pacific Eskimo boats
but incorporated only late in the 1800s in Aleut uluxtux, or double-cockpit kayaks.
These two-man kayaks were made by the Alaska Commercial Company and sold to the
hunters. (A full frame with an identical bow piece is in the Burke Museum in
Seattle.)
Another unusual feature is the upper piece. The upper part of the Aleut bow flares
to add buoyancy and is traditionally all one piece. On this Banks-collected piece,
however, the top plate is nailed on to the flared piece. Metal fasteners are
rare in Aleut boats. The upper bow piece is the most difficult to shape, and
this variation seems to be an unusual but effective solution to its construction.
The commonly recognized upturned curve of the lower bow piece is just one variant
of Aleut boats and the most frequently used by those re-creating the baidarkas.
The earliest recorded Aleut kayaks had straight horizontal and parallel bows.
This required lashing a stick across the opening to prevent seaweed and other
debris from getting caught in it. In later designs, the upturned lower bow piece
performed in the same capacity as the stick.
On two- and three-hole boats, the top plate also had an upward-turned projection.
Its function is unknown but may have allowed a gun or spear case to be tied off
to it. The piece I’d purchased is missing that horn, and the brass screw
is in the place where it would have been attached.
Traditionally, Aleut kayak frames were painted with red ochre to preserve the
wood and to symbolize the blood of the “living” boat. The Banks bow
has some traces of red on it but most seems to have faded into a dark patina.
The curved part apparently had been worked on, as the wood is free from any coloration.
The
design, crafting and assembly of the bow piece connects us with the greatest
kayakers in the world—the Aleuts of the past. I often sit and stare at
the piece, noticing new subtleties in color, nuances of shape and tool marks
showing techniques, and daydream, especially during the cold of winter, of digging
out my pale plastic descendant of this amazing craft and paddling the same waters
as the original owner of this piece. |