In the Eye of the Whirlpool
From the mythical Charybdis to the monster Maelstrom, these watery gyres thrill and chill us
- By Simon Winchester
- Smithsonian magazine, August 2001, Subscribe
(Page 6 of 8)
Poe had it just about right
Einarsen stopped for a moment off the lighthouse at the point and asked if we felt content and confident. Getting the answer he wanted he then floored his engine, rounded the ledge of cliffs—and the gray waters hit us like a sudden succession of hammer blows. Edgar Allan Poe, I later read, had it just about right when in 1841 he wrote:
"Even while I gazed, this current acquired a monstrous velocity. Each moment added to its speed—to its headlong impetuosity. In five minutes the whole sea ...was lashed into ungovernable fury....Here the vast bed of the waters, seamed and scarred into a thousand conflicting channels, burst suddenly into phrensied convulsion—heaving, boiling, hissing...."
It was indeed a tremendous display of the power and might of fast-running, uncontrollable water. We bucked and twisted, rose near vertical, plummeted deep into troughs, spun round and round, took heavy waves from every side. Occasionally Einarsen, who knew these seas like the pattern of his grandfather’s oiled-wool sweater, would duck the boat into a peaceful inlet. From there we would watch the chaos rage for a few drenched moments, before venturing out into the roaring and the cold once more. And just as the Scottish boatman had done years before, he kept us there for a full hour until, with a grin, he finally relented, set the lighthouse on our port beam, and zoomed north past the point and out into the calms where the fishing boats lay, before chugging us steadily home, out of the rain.
On the way, he told us a little of the stories that have surrounded this mighty force—of how Poe had written an entire story about it, of how Jules Verne had used the Maelstrom as the place in which to destroy the Nautilus, and of how 1,000-year-old Nordic legends related that two giant millstones had sunk off Scotland, and had rolled across to these islands, grinding away still, making the sea as salty as it is today. The whirlpool appears on a map in the great Description of the Northern Peoples, published in 1555, and I’ve seen it on 17th-century charts of the Hanseatic League. As we came into port that evening, we could see a flag fluttering above the town hall: it was blue and, lest anyone forget, had a white whirlpool at its center.
But what are these things? Why do such whirlpools form? Why are they so fixed, so dangerous, so legendary?
They have their similarities and differences. The Corryvreckan is perhaps a quarter of a mile across, with its great belches of water appearing randomly, whirling dervishlike for a few moments before being replaced by others just as wild. The Old Sow is a thing of lumpy waves and one large sinkhole of water that seems to suck into itself for many minutes at each flood tide. Japan’s Naruto Whirlpool, which also can be viewed from a highway bridge, is much like the Norwegian Saltstraumen—small chains of whirling water racing down the currents, neat and tidy in its sudden spasms of violence. The Maelstrom somehow combines all of these into one huge area of mightily confused sea, gray and ponderous in the way that it grinds up all ships who pass through incautiously, turning them into matchwood and oblivion.
Boiling down those ferocious boils
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Comments (3)
Riveting article! Truly an excellent read.
Posted by Ryan on March 13,2013 | 06:13 PM
Where are the pictures? Seriously? You visit some amazing natural phenomena and take NO pictures. Nuts....
Posted by sdr19899 on March 12,2013 | 12:54 PM
Sir, re the comment that Belnahua was flooded by a great storm.
Today, Aug 25, 2009, I talked with Angus Shaw, aged 102 years, whose uncle , James Shaw quarried slate on Belnahua uuntil at least World War 1 and possibly beyond.
Apparently the quarry always flooded naturally and only constant pumping kept it at bay. When work and pumpinmg stopped - the island flooded.
Posted by Alan Hunter, Scotland on August 25,2009 | 03:23 PM