Monday, July 31, 2017

A Good Day to Explore

I get to Clear Creek and find two fishermen ahead of me downstream. That's where I was going. It seems clear that my only option is to head upstream. This is a good day to explore some new water.


I pass the old bridge abutments. I have to cling to the bank like the water snake I disturb, half in and half out of the water, to get around a deep pool.


I make it to the bridge over the county road and have easier going from there. The bridge itself feels like a portal to another world.


Past the bridge I clamber up the bank and find a trail going my way. The stream is partially dammed here by big blow downs. Is this the handiwork of one buster of a storm, or is this flotsam collected over time? I go on. I'll fish the pools here on the way back.


I come up on a big riffle and see that there's a nice long run along the far bank. I eagerly head up to find its beginning.


I come to a long slick and watch as two does and their fawns wade and drink, seeking relief from the heat of the day.


The does probably knew I was there before I spotted them. They guide their fawns out of the river and into the safety of the woods.


I'm ready to start fishing. I work the run carefully. It's a beautiful piece of hydrology, and I'm sure there are smallmouth peering back at me from its depths.


The first fish, though, is a rock bass.


But a few feet further on a bright shape flashes out from behind a rock and attacks the fly. Small but mighty.


I take a break and sit on a rock near the stream. Looking down I see evidence that someone else was here before me. I think maybe I've found myself another rig, but no. It's old and beyond salvaging. I have to wonder, though, what the story is behind its loss.


There's a place where the run flattens into a wide riffle, then narrows and dumps into a deep hole at the head of a pool.


I let the fly tumble into the deep water along the log jam. I get bumps right up at the head where the current is fastest. I manage to hook one.


I work the pool over as best I can. I let the fly tumble and sink as deep as I can make it go and strip it back smartly. I can't get anything to take. I climb the bank back to the trail.


I work my way downstream then wade in again. Several little slots and a deep run next to another logjam look really good, and should have fish in them, but I get nothing.


I pass under the bridge and fish the run that I clambered past earlier by clinging to the bank. I get as far as I can toward the abutments before the water gets too deep. I think I may wade out and find the trail and move on downstream. But I hear voices and laughter and screams from around the bend. Then a couple come wandering down on the gravel bar by the old bridge abutments. They see me fishing my way toward them, but they casually begin throwing rocks in the water. The bigger the better.


Guess I'll call it a day. I head back to the bridge and find a trail going up to the county road.


It has been a good day. I've caught a few fish, but mostly I've opened up some new water that will be calling me back again soon.

Thursday, July 27, 2017

"Driving the Beast" by Christopher Bakken

Painting by Deb Gengler-Copple



             In the thick brush
they spend the hottest part of the day,
             soaking their hooves
in the trickle of mountain water
             the ravine hoards
on behalf of the oleander.
             You slung your gun
across your back in order to heave
             a huge grey stone
over the edge, so it rolled, then leaped
             and crashed below.
This is what it took to break the shade,
             to drive the beast,
not to mention a thrumming of wings
             into the sky,
a wild confetti of frantic grouse,
             but we had slugs,
not shot, and weren’t after their small meat,
             but the huge ram’s,
whose rack you’d seen last spring, and whose stench
             now parted air,
that scat-caked, rut-ripe perfume of beast.
             Watch now, he runs,
you said, launching another boulder,
             then out it sprang
through a gap in some pine, brown and black
             with spiraled horns
impossibly agile for its size.
             But, yes, he fell
with one shot, already an idea
             of meat for fire
by the time we’d scrambled through the scree.
             And that was all.
No, you were careful, even tender,
             with the knife-work,
slitting the body wide with one stroke
             then with your hands
lifting entire the miraculous
             liver and heart,
emptying the beast on the mountain.
             Later, it rained,
knocking dust off the patio stones.
             Small frogs returned
from abroad to sing in the stream beds.
             We sat and drank.
The beast talked to its rope in the tree.
             And then you spoke:
no more, you said, enough with mourning,
             then rose to turn
our guts, already searing on the fire.


Back to the North End

Heat wave. I go back to the north end of Yellowwood for the first time since they opened the freshly paved road. Will it be cooler in the north? I kick out and scoot over the mudflats like a ray. I find a lotus leaf bigger than my hat. Now I have to go back to see the bloom. I extend the loop to overlap the loop I make from the south. I pass the turtle nest and wonder if the eggs are still there and when they will hatch. I find bass. Each one makes me a little bit later. Full dark catches me still kicking for home. And drinking in the stars.