

Mikimoto Pearl Island divers and a gratuitous picture of Yuriko Doguchi - the pearl diver in "Tampopo"
Michigan Today (1998): Women Divers of Japan
Imagine yourself 30 feet below the surface of the Pacific Ocean, so deep in the murky water that the noon sun is just a dull gleam like a flashlight. Powerful waves undiminished by any breakwater roll above you, and cause strong surges beneath the surface that yank you forward and backwards with each sweep...You have descended willingly, but now that you're down there, you've got to find something to bring back before you will permit yourself to breathe again...If you're lucky enough to find your target, a $40-a-pound abalone, then it's time to get the tools out and start wrestling. Abalone resemble suction cups about five inches in diameter, and while their top part is protected by a thick mother-of-pearl shell, they are grabbing onto rocks with their underside with enough strength that you can't pry them off with your bare hands, hence the necessity of a tool that looks like a combination spatula-crowbar-knife...The abalone is literally fighting for its life, and you feel like you are, having gotten so caught up in the struggle that you feel that you must remain struggling until you've secured your prey, or else you've made your 60-foot, 80-second roundtrip for nothing, because if you ease up for a moment, the abalone will slither deeper between the rocks out of your reach.