Saturday, August 18, 2018

The Lake Is Wet

Yellowwood. On the drive in I flush a venue of vultures hard at work on a carcass hidden from my view. There are the expected turkey vultures in the bunch but I also discover black vultures. The first time I saw one was in Virginia, but they are extending their territory north.


The lake is wet, by which I mean the road, the ground and the parking area are puddled up from an earlier rainstorm. I can hear the deep guttural sound of thunder off to the north. I'm hoping the storm will continue on its way and let me fish dry.

As I begin to kick out of the inlet I see something I have been seeing the last few trips: a school of two-inch minnows launches themselves out of the water. I seldom see any sign of the predator causing their panic, but this time what I presume to be a bass, moving at high speed, pushes a bow wave right into the weeds. I think he got a good mouthful that time.

I throw some minnowy flies for awhile, but I apparently can't strip as fast as the minnows swim. I'll work on that problem and see if I can't get in the head of those minnow feeders.


I head out. I'm going to fish the south end and the dam. The spillway is gurgling with the fresh runoff as I make my way around the shoreline trailing a heavy white bead head streamer, the last minnowy fly I tried.


The thunder is still booming and it sounds closer. I look around to the west and see dark clouds rushing out of the woods. I'm sure I'm going to get nailed. I batten down the hatches.


It's just the outriders of the storm. The brunt of it slips by to the east and north. It's enough to put the vultures up, though.


I think maybe the rain will miss me, too, but the sprinkles soon turn into a downpour. The lake is wet again.


Now I'm fishing a plastic worm and getting a few pulls. I see something struggling in the water and kick over to see what it is. As I expected, it's a cicada. It's a noble insect, very beautiful. It makes an interesting photographic subject.

This is the Green-winged Cicada, different from the 17-year cicadas we experienced last year.

When I'm finished I attempt to shake it off my thumb but it hangs on tight. So I pluck it off and it lets go with an earsplitting high-pitched buzz. Makes me jump just a little. Maybe it's a scream for help. I put it back in the water anyway. Feed the fish, I always say.


I get back to fishing and hook up with a good fish. He measures out right at 18 inches. I'm pleased.


It rains harder while I look for an even bigger bass. It seems like the perfect time. Instead I find a smaller bass.


The rain quits by the time I get back to the dam for the home stretch.


I work my way slowly all along the dam with the worm, but the catching is over.


The moon peeks out of the clouds for a moment or two, but quickly ducks back in.


Time to go home and dry out.

Thursday, August 16, 2018

Grateful

I'm back. My cataract surgeries are over and almost 100% successful. At the moment I have 20/25 distance vision, and reading glasses do very well for reading and fly tying and tying knots on the water. And spending time on the computer; I will be dropping posts here again on a somewhat regular basis. I have a trip planned for the Henry's Fork for ten days at the beginning of September but I think I'll take my computer for some posts direct from Last Chance.

Meanwhile I tested my restored vision in fishing mode as soon as I could get to the lake. Here are some photos of those recent trips to Yellowwood. She's bright and beautiful in all her late summer garb, and I was able to change flies whenever I wanted to. Then the last time I was there I was able to see the stars in all their glory. I even caught a Perseid meteor over the south end of the lake. I am grateful.


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Wednesday, August 15, 2018

"Burn" by Janice N. Harrington

"Prairie Meadows Burning" George Catlin 1832


The wind then, through seams of bluestem,
or switchgrass swayed by a coyote’s passing. 

Where the fabric gapes, Barthes said,
lies the sensual. A prairie cut 

by winding seeps, or winds or shearing wings.
Mare’s tails, mackerels, cirrus, 

distance dispersed as light. Under a buzzard’s bank
and spiral the prairie folds and unfolds. 

Here between the stands of bluestem, I am interruption.
I rake my fingers over culms and panicles. 

Here seeds burr into my sleeves, spur each hem.
In a prairie, I am chance. I am rupture. The wind— 

thief, ruffian, quick-fingered sky, snatches a kink
of my hair. The broken nap falls, wound round 

like a prairie snake, a coil of barbed wire, a snare
for the unwary. In the fall, volunteer naturalists 

will wrench invading roots and scour grassy densities
with fire. Wick, knot, gnarl, my kindled hair 

will flare, burn, soften into ash, ash that will settle,
sieve through soil, compost for roots to suck 

and worms to cast out, out into the loess that raises
redtop, turkeyfoot, sideoats grama, 

and all the darkened progenies of grass
that reach and strive and shape dissent from light. 

S. C. O. F. Summer Issue 2018

SCOF28Sum18forCW

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