Prior
to the 2005 Conference in Maui, some members of NMEA thought that PIKE
had lived its full life at our auctions and it was time to retire our
old friend. There were even some who felt PIKE should be sacrificed
to the volcanic god Pele at the conference at Hawaii.
Others thought PIKE had only begun its life at the auctions. Thanks
to FMSEA, the true beauty of the fish had been restored (as shown in
the 2004 photograph above). Now, he was in great shape to bring in thousands
more dollars to the organization.
The
NMEA History Committee wanted to know how the membership felt. Comments
were solicited and posted below:
*******
“ I think
that I speak for all of me when I say “The pike must go!”.....
David
Neibuhr
“The
pike lives on!!!”.... Beth
Jewell
"We
'Fish' wish to support our kindred piscatorial as an NMEA icon. Two
votes for 'Save the Pike.' ".... Jeff
and Deb Sandler
“I
love the idea of the sacrifice, but the Pike money is just too good.
I vote in favor of continued ransoming. But - let our good Hawaiian
hosts decide on a fitting sacrifice that can also be auctioned off.”....
anonymous
“The
PIKE cannot be retired. He must live on. I think last year it wasn't
done terribly well as it was late, people were starting to leave, etc.
I
think people must be reminded of the history and importance of the Pike
and
then we go from there. :) Thanks for asking!!!!”...Tami
Lunsfor
“Oh
where Oh where has our little Pike gone, oh where oh where can it be?
Keep the PIKE , keep the fun, keep the spirit of chapter competition.”...Joy
L. Wolf
“Susan,
I think a sacrifice of Pike to Pele would be awesome! We are the National
MARINE Educators Association and our mascot is a fresh water fish? Sure,
the mission states that NMEA is both for fresh water and salt water
educators but our membership does not reflect that. We should have a
sailfish or tuna or king crab or conch as our auction item. Pike does
not draw nearly as much attention and does not raise as much as he used
to. Sacrifice him to Pele, video tape it and sell those, along with
t-shirts of course that say "Pele swallowed Pike" or something
like that!”... Andrew Wilson
“I
have mixed feelings about the Pike. I think we should NOT sacrifice
him to Pele. BUT we need to do something to energize the need of wanting
to bid high stakes for him. The drive for competing for him has sort
of died down and we need something to rekindle the drive. Not sure what
but I'm thinkin'.”.....Carmelina Livingston
“Thank
you for your efforts.
1993 New Orleans - approx. $700.00 by SAME and TMEA
I think anything that makes money for NMEA is a good thing!
Being the keeper of the PIKE is good luck.
I think Hemingway was really writing about a Pike.”
.....John Trowbridge
"Perhaps
Pike should take a sabbatical or a leave of absence. Once Pike gets
to Maui it is possible a life of leisure and rum might become appealing
to him. Pike might just decide to lay low for a few years then mysteriously
resurface in 5 or 6 years in the casinos of Atlantic City.".....
Neil Gilbert
"The
Pike will always have a home on the hill in Manning. Of course I have
moved out and I have no idea how the new owners would feel about a fish
in their midst." ....Gene Williamson
"Hi
Susan,
I like Pike! It's always fun to auction him off and a point of honor
for the next host chapter to win him at the auction. In fact, my chapter
- SCMEA - has a Blue-Footed Booby we auction every year in the Pike
tradition. This was our 3rd year of doing this, but already it has become
tradition. We do this in the late Fred James' honor. Keep Pike! Maybe
we should make buttons for this year's NMEA that say "I LIKE PIKE"!
Just a suggestion!"....Colette Dryden
Pike
is on Maui hanging out at the Ocean Sciences Discovery Center in Ma'alaea.
Pele is after Pike primarily because it is an invasive aquatic species.
Will Pike be saved by friends and supporters or suffer total incineration
never to be seen again? Only time will tell.....
Ann Coopersmith
“We,
who live near the coasts of the largest fresh water system in the world,
THE GREAT LAKES of Michigan, Erie, Ontario, Huron, and Superior WANT
the PIKE to stay! We are the biggest chapter in NMEA! Do not minimize
our importance by getting rid of our fresh water PIKE! Cheers!”....Margaret
Tower and GLEAMS MEMBERS FROM ILLINOIS, WISCONSIN, INDIANA, MINNESOTA
AND PENNSYLVANIA (the other coasts)
“I'm
curious about PIKE's backstory....I say if it's his time to go, he should
go out with a bang. Maybe we could take a secret contingent of divers
and tie him up underwater offshore somewhere..start an artificial reef...later
on take some photos to explain his disappearance to the NMEA group...anyway,
just thinking out loud”....Liz Foote
“Pele
is indeed a powerful god, perhaps too powerful to be deterred from reducing
pike to ashes and gasses. Alas, the best we may be able to do is give
pike a proper tribute before he is claimed by the fire elements. If
he must go, let him depart this world with honor. We shall prepare the
funeral fires and lift our voices to what is surely the pike’s
last journey. Let the preparations begin.”....The
Big Kahuna (Bill Hastie)
After
reading Ann Coopersmith’s comment above, Liz Foot commented....
“That would be serious environmental pollution--introducing
an invasive alien. I thought it was a model of a fish.....it is real???
Stuffed, mounted, and, super ugly!
******
“Hello,
Susan,
Well, I have mixed feelings about the Pike. I remember back in the good
old days when I was a lad, when he was a distinguished and respected
man of great influence, passion, pride and financial means. His entrance,
like that of a president or foreign dignitary, was the highlight of
each conference, and much creative energy went into keeping him comfortable,
well-protected and sought after. Recently, however, his appearances
at conferences have seemed somewhat
contrived, even forced and a little...boring, kind of like, well, Neil
Diamond.
So,
here's my suggestion:I think we should issue 2005 conferencees a Pike
ultimatum. For a minimum bid of, say, $500, they can win the Pike for
a year (as
always, snore) and force their colleagues to have to suffer through
conference after conference of protracted, recycled, inscrutable Pike
Antics. OR for a minimum bid of, say, $2000, they can win the great
honor of being the last winner of the Pike. They could win the honor
of personally sending the Pike to Pele and forever being renowned as
the person who saved us all from future canned Pike abductions, amateur
videos and pushy auctioneers.
I
say, let the people decide. If they want to cheap out--they can live
with the Pike forever and resign us all to the same tired old NMEA that
we've grown accustomed to like an old smelly pair of slippers. If they
are bold and have some fresh vision for new directions for NMEA, however,
they can fork out the dough and lead us into the 21st Century....Humbly
submitted”....Craig Strang (NMEA member
since 1985)
*****
“Susan,
Speaking as one who lived with Pike for most of one year, it must be
saved.
The current philosophy of bidding on Pike at the auction is certainly
outmoded. In particular the bidding puts a burden on the hosting Chapter
when they are likely already scrambling for enough dollars to get the
coming conference off the ground. In addition, the auction is just too
darned long and anything that shortens it is a good thing... but that
is another issue (I've got a great solution but perhaps that is for
another email). Pike should simply belong to the Chapter hosting the
annual conference. Perhaps at some appropriate time during the conference
there should be a simple rites of passage ceremony (current-to-new conference
host).
I think the exchange of ideas you've encouraged should be to determine
the new role of the Pike in our association, rather than an exercise
in determining whether Pike's role continues as is or if Pike should
meet Pele on the hallowed grounds of Haleakala.
When I first got Pike last year, I thought it
was a little silly. I found it very hard to get local chapter members
excited about Pike's history (but Pike's is truly NMEA's history) if
they had not attended a national meeting. I came to like Pike, grew
fond of the mystique and finally realized that Pike represents NMEA
in some small, if not slightly twisted, way.
All associations have a goofy mascot, perhaps a quirky, fun activity
that is a standard conference function, or some way to lighten the atmosphere.
Ours is Pike. Pike has history, Pike has value to many people, Pike
represents the kid in all of us.
Pike should remain our mascot, 'cause knowing many of you, knowing myself,
we'll just go out and find another wacko icon that allows us to tilt
a cold one in its honor anyway!”....Scott Willis
Tales
from the Sandman....George
Duane
Legend
of the Pike
My
sons live by the mantra: "Never let the truth get in the way of
a good story."I will adhere to this as I try to relate my close
association with the zenith of the NMEA annual auction, the Pike, Lucius
lucius.
Attending
my first complete NMEA Annual Conference at John Carroll University
in Cleveland, Ohio, 1986 in a small auditorium setting with more free
wine than any 100 could drink, the fish made its inaugural appearance
rescued from someone’s closet, and described by his widow as a
barracuda. John McMahon of Washington bid the lowest amount to ever
to win the prestigious award.
A
sabbatical in the South Pacific kept me away from the Kingston, RI and
Santa Cruz, CA conferences where the innocuous fish garnered $210 and
$600 respectfully.
The 1987 purchaser Gene Williamson, of Oregon, joins John McMahon as
the only other solitary bidder to win the honor of owning the Pike.
For 17 years NMEA local chapters, coalitions of chapters and groups
of individuals have financially prostituted themselves bidding more
than $500.00 to net the Pike. The famous fish’s annual appearance
at auction has often brought between $500 - $1200 to the NMEA coffers
and scholarship funds.
"And,
now" , as radio commentator Paul Harvey would say – "for
the rest of the story"…
Each
year, from one summer to the next, the Pike experienced places you and
I may never visit. He/she has been photographed entering and exiting
several states, national monuments, amusement parks and sport stadiums.
He/she has been draped with leis, stickers, beads, baubles, hats, scarves
etc. This fish has even attended Mardi Gras, the Rose Bowl and the Super
Bowl. No piker this pike, quite a cut-up in the off-season! The Pikester
is always in training for the next NMEA auction.
In its 18 years of existence, only 1 appearance was missed. The delivery
truck didn’t come through on time – and I don’t remember
what year that was.
I
saw the ragged fish for the first time in 1986, but I didn’t get
my hands on it until 1989 when MME outbid everyone at auction in Hawaii.
How fitting were the US Route 90 stickers we added to the plaque? In
Massachusetts, Route 90 is a toll road know as the Mass Pike and "Mass
Pike" became our rallying cry as we trucked the fish from meeting
to conferences and then back to my bookcase.
While in Portland, OR 2 years later, I was part of a 4 man conspiracy
to remove the president’s bell from beneath the reigning NAME
president’s chair as he sat in a workshop. Hastie, Williamson
and Tinnin provided all the necessary outside work.
Later
that conference: Several teams roamed the conference, a false fish was
hidden, but behind a moving hanging sheet the Pike disappeared from
the auction stage. And, with that, a serious game of "steal the
Pike" was born!
At
each conference, attempts were made to ensure the Pike’s safe
arrival at auction. However, on numerous occasions, the Sandman purloined
the Pike. Accomplices were varied, and often, unsuspecting of their
part in the plot. Locked rooms never seemed to be a barrier even when
the pike was locked in a car trunk or the campus security office. When
I was acting suspicious and being watched, minions were often carrying
out the plan. Grownups playing kids games!! There were even ransom notes
sent to the auctioneer. The Pike making an appearance in CT only to
disappear again!! Several funny stories come to mind, but I’ll
only relate 2 of my favorites: 1997 Chicago and 2002 New London, CT.
In
1997, in "the windy city" on day two of the conference I asked
if anyone had seen the Pike. An answer was quickly furnished that you
could see it through the window in the security office. Enlisting the
help of Robin Dobyns, we talked a security guard into letting us have
the pike to dress it. Within minutes the theft was noticed, my dorm
room was searched, but Robin had removed and hidden the Pike.
On
the evening of the auction, in a medieval banquet room with opposing
balconies, I walked through with a sheet over a long box, ascended to
the balcony and with all eyes watching, revealed an empty box!! At the
same time, on the other balcony, Robin was holding the Pike, behind
and high over the head of the auctioneer. A good laugh and the fish
was auctioned for several hundred dollars.
A
few years ago in CT., Adam Frederick was a conspirator and we gained
access to the room where the Pike was blatantly displayed in the 2nd
floor window overlooking the banquet and auction. We never removed the
Pike, just hid it in the room. Oh, the look on Thaxter Tewksbury’s
face when I pointed to the window and the Pike was gone!
Later, after the MAMEA/SCMEA consortium won the Pike, we removed it
from under their banquet table and a 3rd time sent a young woman to
dance with the gentleman holding the Pike. Delighted, he set the fish
down, went out to the dance floor and it disappeared for the 3rd time
that night!
Others
may remember good stories about the Pike and another story would be
welcome.
"Pike Posse" members throughout the years include:
B.
Hastie
G. Williamson
R. Tinnin
J. Clauson
R. Dobyns
C. Livingston
A. Wood
A. Fredericks
M. Armand
M. Oswell
D. & W. Allen
Interest in the Pike is waning, but it still generates NMEA scholarship
and treasury money."
Kecia
Joy
(current "Keeper of the Pike") wrote to say:
"Aloha
!
I
have a PIKE update for ya. This fish is livin it up here in Maui. Frannie
and I had it out for a few beers not long ago, it has been kayaking,
boating, eating fish tacos, meeting new marlin friends, hangin at the
beach and much more. I have no idea what this famous fish’s fate
will be next month during the conference. Stay tuned!!
A hui hou,
Kecia Joy"


*****
At
the 2005 Auction, a 4-page pamphlet (shown below) describing Pike was
distributed to the membership. The pamphlet described some of PIKE’s
history with NMEA. It was decided to auction PIKE to the highest bidder
and NYSMEA (host of the 2006 Conference) won the bid.




In
2006, PIKE was retired. In the July conference booklet, Bill Hastie
(OR) wrote an article about PIKE's retirement. Click on the picture
(left) to see this page.
In
September 2006, the NMEA Board received the following e-mail from Johnette
Bosarge, Administrative Assistant (National Office):
"It
gives me GREAT honor to announce the arrival of a mysterious package
a couple of weeks ago…… One of the MEC educators assisted
me in opening the large box. And, as we lifted the Pike from the
tattered box he (the Pike) had a big smile on his face as if he knew
he was home at last!! The Pike arrived safe and sound at his retirement
destination—The NMEA National Office……
The
MEC Educator said who sent us this thing??? I told them “don’t
kid yourself!!” The MEC does not have enough money to buy
this fellow—he has been more places than we can count… and
probably even around the world!! And, I proceeded to tell this
staff member the history of the Pike and NMEA.
At any rate, the Pike and I have had several conversations and you all
should know he has much wisdom from his many years associated with NMEA!
The Pike has a wonderful view of the National Office’s day-to-day
operations as he rests on top of our filing cabinets. And,
I think it is safe for me to speak for both Sharon and me when I say
we are delighted and honored to have the Pike join us at the MEC/NMEA
National Office. You all are invited to come down and visit us
anytime you wish!!"
In
response to Johnette's e-mail, several people commented:
“Johnette-
The Pike deserves a happy retirement surrounded by people who truly
know and love him-- we all know he will be in good hands with you and
Sharon. Take care of him! :)--Hugs..."
Tami Lunsford (Board Member-DE)
“how perfect is that?! sounds like the absolutely
right place for this well traveled, well loved, wise and witty Pike."
Lynn Whitley (President Elect-CA)
“I am thrilled he/she is at home with you all and keeping you
company. Better there than under my bed!!!!!"
Paula Keener-Chavis
(Past President and Chair of the Conference Committee-SC)
“Love the story and that our most well-traveled NMEA elder will
be in good hands!"
Amy Gollenberg” (Board Member-HI)