35 USA - Mark Healey Waterman
Transcription
35 USA - Mark Healey Waterman
$ 35 USA Display until 8/31/15 USA and CAN only The Waterman No. 12 WET WORK Pro surfer Mark Healey goes deep written by Healey picks up dinner in Fiji, 2009. Photograph by Kanoa Zimmerman. 140 141 NED MARTEL The Waterman No. 12 M ark Healey is a professional waterman. That means he can hold his breath underwater for seven minutes and spear a fish as easily as the rest of us spear cocktail weenies. He catches rides on the backs of great white sharks for fun. And above the breakers, he’s a professional surfer with sponsors like GoPro and Monster Energy. Pretty much anything you can do in the ocean, Mark Healey can do better. But he’s also a bow hunter, skydiver, conservationist and parttime Hollywood stuntman, so he might have you covered on land, too. As a kid growing up on the North Shore of Oahu, Healey learned to surf well enough to go pro in his early teens. Under his father’s tutelage, he also learned how to spear fish, first for family dinners and eventually to sell to local restaurants. Recently, he turned his lifetime’s worth of aquatic skills into a business, Healey Water Ops, which offers customized surfing, diving and spear-fishing experiences to high-end eco-marksman could soon be trailed by camera crews as he hurtles landlubbers. The expeditions might not be as extreme as some of his himself into Fiji waves to learn primitive fishing tricks, free dives in the own boundary-pushing adventures, but if you were looking to blow dark depths of the Indian Ocean, or explores America’s inland lakes to bubbles in the waters off Margaritaville, he’s definitely not the right see what lies beneath. Nearing the bottom of a bowl of oatmeal, Healey talks about his guide for you. On a recent Saturday in Santa Monica, Healey has just returned childhood on the North Shore, which is still his home base. It takes from Japan, where a favorite shop is selling T-shirts and hats from one him less than five minutes to haul his gear to the beach in his ’67 Ford of his surf-lifestyle sponsors, Depactus, which he also happens to be pickup. But a lot has changed about the place since he was a kid. wearing. The cap keeps the morning rays off his face, but at thirty-three, “I used to see people get their asses kicked in the water fairly reg- Healey is already plenty sun-blasted. He’s been awake since dawn, mak- ularly,” he says, meaning with fists, in locals-only melees over crowded ing, as it happens, his Fox News debut. waves. “That just doesn’t happen much anymore. Everything gets seen A video of Healey went viral the week before, and some Saturday on the North Shore. And more and more people get their income from morning news hosts in New York had some questions for him. In the the surf industry, so you can’t just go smashing people up all the time.” clip, Healey can be seen launching himself in a high, daring arc off the When he wasn’t fighting for forty foot waves, he was underneath side of a boat that’s about to get walloped by a massive wave. He and them with his Hawaiian-raised father, who taught him how to make a his buddies had been big-wave surfing two miles offshore at Mavericks, living in the water. Healey still fishes under the principles he instilled: the Northern California mecca, and he thought their boat was about to Don’t kill what you or someone else won’t eat. And when you do, kill capsize. But more surreal for him than the incident itself was explaining quickly and cleanly, with as little pain as possible for the prey. Healey’s it to the disembodied voice of Tucker Carlson in an earpiece while star- spear gun—made by one of his sponsors, the Riffe family of San Clem- ing into a monitor in a silent California TV studio. ente—is typically aimed squarely at the brain of some snapper, wahoo, or tuna. The largest he ever landed was a dogfish tuna, the Moby-Dick “Typically, in a potential maritime disaster, the best idea is to of Hawaiian spear-fishing quarry, weighing in at 150 pounds. stay with the boat,” he told them. “But I really didn’t feel like getting smashed around like an ice cube in a shaker, so I looked to my friends to Healey can hold his breath for long bouts—seven minutes in a stat- the left and right of me and just told them, ‘I don’t know about you guys, ic environment like a pool, and just under five minutes on an average but I’m jumping.’” And jump he did. Luckily, the surfers who remained dive—and he can teach others to do so as well. To him, scuba would on board were all fine, so they gathered him up on a Jet Ski. seem like cheating, except the assisted breathing doesn’t actually get you anywhere—scuba divers scare the fish off with their clunky equip- If anything, the interview showcased Healey’s telegenics, which ment and clouds of bubbles. lately have cable producers circling. If they have their way, the Healey and his trusty Riffe spear gun, 2015. Photograph by Jason Reposar 142 143 The Waterman It may sound florid, but it’s true: Healey’s stalking is an underwater Blood cascaded from the center of his face. Only at the hospital, dance. He has learned how his own body language can calm or provoke alone in the bathroom, did he figure out the problem: his nose was a fish, and he calibrates accordingly. For the majority of the time he half-torn off. Playing with his injury, he was able to tilt the tip of his spends on the ocean floor waiting for a clean shot, his body is screaming nose almost to his ear, with a dark hole in the center of his face—“like for oxygen. To keep the anaerobic strain manageable, he has to turn Skeletor!” he laughs. “My beak is crooked as fuck now.” It also barely down his mind. It’s the same “happy place” he goes to when he’s getting functions as a blowhole. Despite his Aquaboy powers, he’s clearly a bit thrashed in the churn of a big wave, or holding on to the fin of a bull embarrassed to admit the truth: he had collided with a turtle. He let the shark dragging him too deep, that moment of extreme danger and max- slowest beast in the ocean get the best of him. imum solitude where, as he puts it, “nothing gives a fuck about you.” In The scrape wasn’t Healey’s first and certainly won’t be his last. order to persevere, his brain channel-surfs to memories that soothe or Spend a little time with the waterman and he’ll rattle off the catalogue excite him, summoning a specific scene with his girlfriend or a particu- of injuries that come with the title. No. 12 “I split my kneecap in half,” he says. “I broke my heel. I broke my larly complex Ravi Shankar measure. Once in a while, in the noisy roil, ribs a bunch of times and separated my sternum. Broke my nose. Broke it’s something by Slayer. my hand…” When he breaks back to the surface, there’s a sense that body and But there’s a method to the madness. mind are together again. But each time, he knows he’s been lucky. And he recommends a buddy in all outings. At age fourteen, he emerged “I’m not afraid of a good old-fashioned bender, that’s for sure. I’m a from some violent underwater episode that he was happy to be done man of extremes,” he says. “As long as you punish yourself afterwards—I with, only to have his friend tell him to get out of the water. His face call it crime and punishment. If I go have a weekend in New York City, was not quite right. then it’s gonna be a week of beach training when I get back.” Hunting on the ocean floor in Mexico, 2014. Photograph by D.J. Struntz Opposite page: spearfishing in Fiji, 2009. Photograph by Kanoa Zimmerman 144 145 “ H The Waterman No. 12 ealey still fishes under the principles his father instilled: Don’t kill what you won’t eat. And when you do, kill quickly and cleanly.” Healey at work, 2014. Photograph by D.J. Struntz 146 147