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The Village Squire, 1981-07, Page 9times The wind and water of Huron can be as unforgiving as any in the world and the fisherman who isn't weatherwise is not long in business. Specific VHF radio channels, a MAFOR (marine forecast) code, improved ship -to -ship and ship -to - shore communicatoins, and highly - accurate navigational gear all help to improve the odds, but common sense remains a trump card. McLeod uses every tool he can to ensure a safe outing for himself. his crew and his boat. "When the weatherman says 7-7-7 you get everything aboard and get the hell home." he chuckles. In MAFOR that means wind out of the northwest at between 48 and 55 knots per hour with snow or rain and snow. "I don't like that snow." growls McLeod. "Everything gets covered and unless you've got radar (which he has) you can't see a thing." For a man of McLeod's background it's a common question. perhaps. but there's no hesitation in the answer. His worst day on the lake was November 10, 1975. He was at the wheel of the Bessie -Ann, standing in for his friend Bob McGraw. They were between Bayfield and Goderich and a stemwinder began to blow out of control. Water was corning over the piers at Goderich and McLeod opted for Bayfield where he "didn't think it was that bad until I got in and looked at it. People on the dock watchin' us were more scared than us." Within hours he heard about the Edmund F. and how she had been caught on the same storm, on Lake Superior. She and her crew of 29 didn't make it home. "I don't want to see any more of them," says McLeod, his voice tailing. ❑ VILLAGE SQUIRE/JULY 1981 PG. 7