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Surging Klamath River Carries Steer into Ocean

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on

When he was born, Bahamas was weak and not expected to survive.  He was an unremarkable crossed Angus-Jersey steer on a farm two miles upriver from Klamath, Calif.  With bottle feeding and tender care he grew strong, gentle, beloved -- and lived to inspire a community.
On Dec. 22, 1964, a combination of heavy snow pack, warm temperatures, and torrential rains raised  the Klamath River to record heights, its deluge sweeping Bahamas and debris downriver to the ocean.
The next day, he was spotted 200 yards offshore, struggling to stay afloat in a mass of churning brush and logs that plugged the Crescent City harbor.  He must have climbed onto flotsam and ridden storm waves for 16 miles north of the river’s mouth.  Rescuers spent hours guiding 800-pound Bahamas to safety.  Reaching shore, he collapsed exhausted.
Bahamas’ ordeal struck a chord—his courage and will to live symbolized recovery for the community. He was renamed “Captain Courageous” and sent to live out his years in a grassy pasture. 
A permanent monument pays tribute to Bahamas at the Klamath townsite, noting that at age 20 he “passed peacefully on to greener pastures.”
Sources: Weaver, Harriett E.  Beloved Was Bahamas-A Steer to Remember. New York, NY, The Vanguard Press, 1974; “Klamath History - Captain Courageous, The Seagoing Bull." Klamath Chamber of Commerce, www.klamathchamber.com/home.cfm?dir_cat=37748. Accessed 17 Feb. 2018.

Episode
3396
Date
Author
Laurel Gerkman