Showing posts with label pickwick. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pickwick. Show all posts

Sunday, April 30, 2017

Lizards and Logs

Stress 

I work in a very competitive, thin margin, cyclical industry, in a full commission sales job.  That means I have no paycheck.  Every month they guaranty me $0.  I’ll summarize the experience by saying that it’s very stressful.  Adding to the stress is that we are in a down-cycle and everyone has their job threatened every month.  While fishing is expensive and addictive, it’s one of the few things in life that allows me to escape that stress for a few hours.  I hear that heroin is another expensive, addictive way to relax, but with heroin you don’t catch any fish, so that’s not an option.

Adding to the stress at the start of the year was a project I had for one of my kids sports teams.  I was the guy who volunteered to do the end-of-year video.  It’s a cool project but it takes me about 60 hours to complete.  Many nights I’d come home after work and sit at the computer for 3 to 5 hours, and hit it 5 to 10 hours every weekend until it was finished.  When I was done, all I could think about was a trip to the lake.  Yet it was not to be.

After I got the video complete I had two road trips for work.  One of them was an overnight trip to TX to see two customers.  I left Thursday and returned Friday.  I had a 48 hour trip with only 1 hour of meetings.  The rest of the time was spent in cabs, hotels, and airports.  I spent roughly 15 hours just sitting in airports waiting on planes.  The result was that I came home with Bronchitis.  Bronchitis is no fun at all.  

As you can probably tell by now, the last few months have been nothing to write home about.  However, I had a decent week and my recent road trips have added some hope on the horizon, so I decided it was time to take a trip to the lake and hopefully boost my morale.

Lakebound

The weather man was calling for sunny skies and warm weather, so I took Friday off from work.  I was now, officially, unstoppably, going fishing.  I stood at the tailgate in the sunshine this morning tying lures and prepping my gear amid a growing surge of anticipation.  Gear prep is the first mental step you take toward relaxing.  It forces you to focus.  Where should the fish be?  What should they be hitting?  You create a plan and prep your gear accordingly.  Soon I had the gear rigged, the boat hooked up and was underway.  

I stopped at a new gas station before I got on the highway to top off the truck.  It was kind of a small parking lot, and when I swung wide to get the trailer around the pumps I noticed the parking lot wasn’t square, or even rectangular.  It got so narrow near the front of my truck that I wondered if I’d be able to get out.  BAM!!!  Something just hit me.  

I had taken the turn plenty wide to clear the gas pumps and the island upon which they sat.  However, this gas station thought it would be a good idea to put 4 or 5 inch concrete poles further out so nobody’s tires would scuff the island.  One of those poles slammed my trailer in front of the wheel well, doing significant damage to the “step” on my trailer.

“Ugh!”  I thought, I’m not even underway yet and I just racked up a bill to fix the trailer.  Mentally, I put it aside.  I could not worry about such silliness at the time.  I had a date with the lake and by God nothing would stop me.  I filled up and hit the road.

I drove east toward Pickwick Lake under azure blue skies with just the faintest wisps of cottony clouds here and there.  Under these conditions I usually get my butt handed to me, but I was still optimistic.  It was a beautiful spring day and I was determined to go fishing.  If the truck broke down, I’d pull the boat by hand.  Nothing would keep me from the lake.




Arrival

About two hours later I had the boat in the water and had a pair of decisions to make.  “Where do I go?” and “What do I throw?”  The “what” part was easy.  Last spring I found some success with a Zoom lizard and that would be my primary bait today.  That lizard was so magical that I began calling it the “Lizard of Oz.”  After one memorable trip with the Lizard of Oz I came home and ordered a whole bunch of them just so I could have them everywhere.  I have them on the boat, in my tackle bag, in the truck, my nightstand, the fridge, and in my shaving kit.  I can’t stand the thought of not having that lizard when I need it.  So, that part was covered.  






As for “where” I figured I’d start with a broken dream from last year too.  A bonafide HOG caught me badly out of place last year and broke my heart.  It breached and shook and spit the hook right back at me before disappearing forever.  That would be the place I began.  It’s hallowed ground.  I’ll never forget the lessons the hog taught me that day, those very lessons guided my rigging earlier today.  I had that lizard on the right rod, with the right line, and my drag was set properly.  Today I would be fully prepared for a rematch.

After a short run I was in the arena.  I was right back where I lost the Battle of Panther Creek last spring.  Sadly I discovered that some of the timber I fished last year had floated away, and the weeds hadn’t grown much yet.  It was kind of barren.  To kill some time I decided to pitch the Lizard of Oz at whatever cover and laydowns I could see along the bank.  It seemed like a fruitless endeavor because all that cover was in 2 to 4 feet of water and I’ve never had luck finding bass spawning that shallow on this lake.  I was already here though, and I figured it would be a good warmup. 

Now that I was moving slower I had a chance to notice the things around me.  Everything was blooming and this creek seemed to be nothing but blue skies and butterflies.  The butterflies were everywhere, big yellow and black ones flitting on the breeze, alone and in pairs.  It just kind of added to the “springtime” atmosphere seeing them doing their thing.  There was a giant woodpecker somewhere in the hills above me going to town on a tree.  There under a warm spring sun I realized that a woodpecker sounds a lot like an M240 machine gun.  The sound and cyclic rate are remarkably similar, the only thing the woodpecker lacks is the booming echo.  

The air and water temp were both 66 degrees, and I was pitching a lizard at submerged timber under clear blue skies; there were worse places I could be.  In fact, at that point I had forgotten all about the busted trailer.  If it weren’t for the periodic deep coughing fits, I’d have forgotten about the bronchitis as well.  

I had fished perhaps four laydowns by this point and my casting was still a little rusty.  I was not accurate at all with the Texas rigged lizard.  One of my casts was so bad I actually said out loud “There ain’t nothing there.  That’s a terrible cast.”  The words had no sooner tumbled from my lips when I got thumped.  Something hit my lizard!  WHACK!  I set the hook.  Despite a terrible cast, in water that was “too shallow” I had just caught the first bass of the day!!!






I couldn’t believe it.  I had been actively fishing for less than 20 minutes, in conditions where I should be getting my butt kicked, and I just put one in the boat.  The Lizard of Oz had struck again.  

That fish really got my attention.  I immediately decided that I’d just keep the trolling motor going, and I’d move as fast as I could from cover to cover.  I’d stop and fish it thoroughly when I arrived at each stump or brush pile, but I’d be moving quickly in between them.  There might be a brush pile here, then 40 yards up a long algae-covered stump dropping off the bank into deeper water.  The bank was dotted with structure like that for a few hundred yards.  Some of the timber was bleached white by weather and time, others were victims of more recent storms and still had bark on them.

Soon enough I caught another fish using the same tactic.  I had cast across a “V” shaped trunk coming off the bank and slowly crept the lizard back to me.  I felt it climbing the backside of the first trunk, then saw the red flake along it’s watermelon back sparkling in the sun before it followed the Texas-rig head first into the murk that lay between the logs.  It was there that the lizard met the bogey man.  Thump!  The line cut to the right, toward deeper water.  I can’t recall exactly how I got the fish out of the limbs but soon enough I had fish number two in the boat.  The only remarkable thing about the catch was that it was so much shallower than I was used to.  Maybe I’d had some strange trips last year, but despite days of trying, I never caught one in less than 6 feet of water.  

The fish seemed to be telling me what they want, and I planned to listen.  If they want a slow lizard next to timber, so be it.  It’ll be lizards and logs the rest of the day.  

I fished my way out of that creek with no more luck, but I had boated a ton of confidence.  I pulled the trolling motor and sat at the helm.  I decided to head for another creek I knew of that had similar structure.  Somewhere in the distance another woodpecker fired a long burst at full cyclic rate and I smiled.  Nature is just out here doing it’s thing.  

Lizards and logs

A few minutes later I pulled into a creek roughly 400 yards long, 200 yards wide, and filled with snags and timber on both sides.  Early into the creek I was casting to a really shallow gravel bar perhaps 20 yards wide with a dead tree right in the middle of it.  The gravel and the tree both slipped away into deep green water, leaving you to imagine what might lurk down there.  I had to find out.  

As I worked the left side of the tree I made another terrible cast.  I attempted to throw onto the gravel shelf then work it deeper, but instead I clumsily cast it straight into the deep stuff.  That wouldn’t work.  I was a little shocked at how poorly I was casting.  I was wasting time with such poor throws.  I quickly went to retrieve and recast when BAM!  My lizard got smashed!!!  This was the second time today that a terrible cast got clobbered.  It was starting to feel like “one of those days” when everything goes right.  After a quick fight I landed a fairly small bass.  It was a violent strike, the hardest I’d felt so far that day, but it was a fairly small fish.  I figure he must have hit the lizard with a monkey-wrench and dropped it after I set the hook. That’s the only explanation I have.

About that time another fisherman idled into the creek.  I was on the South bank and he on the North.  It looked like it would naturally work out that we’d each fish the side we were on until we hit the back of the creek.  I didn’t pay him much attention but it looked as though he were throwing a spinnerbait and moving quickly.

We both reached the back of the creek with nothing to show for our effort.  He picked up his trolling motor and left.  That allowed me some time to work the very shallow back portion, then hit the side he had already worked.  

The back of this creek looked to be just two feet of water that was absolutely choked with submerged limbs that the wind and current had pushed in over time.  My polarized glasses allowed me to see many of the shapes that were just under the water and it was a crazy patchwork of limbs and trunks.  I couldn’t imagine a bass being this shallow on this lake, but hey, why not try it?

On perhaps my third cast into the thin water something grabbed my lizard and was politely removing it from the area.  It was just gliding to the right and I could almost hear my line scraping on the tree trunk over which it travelled.  I set the hook but got nothing.  Hmm.  Two casts later the same exact thing.  Something grabbed my lizard, marched it to the right, and wasn’t there when I set the hook. That bugged me enough that I pounded the area with the lizard.  I don’t know how many times I cast but the fish went quiet and I never heard from it again.  Next I turned my attention to a few other downed trees.  I got a light bump at the end of a tree in 3 foot of water, but it wasn’t substantial.  It felt almost like a bluegill tugging on the lizard tail so I picked up a small crappie spinner and threw it in there.  BANG!  A small bass crushed it almost immediately.  At this point I could tell that the fish I was catching in the really shallow water were smaller.  

I decided to pull back to deeper water, then work my way out of the creek with the Lizard of Oz.  There was plenty of cover to work with here.  

100 yards later I was in deeper water and working the side the other fisherman had hit on his way in.  There were wonderful targets all along the North side.  There were whole trees, broken trees, branches poking up above the water, it looked like an awesome place to throw a Texas rig.  If Disney made a place just for guys who like flippin and pitchin, this is what it would look like.  It was Laydown City.  

I poked and prodded the cover from every direction I could hit.  As I worked I marveled at how pretty everything was out here.  The hillside above me was alive with squirrels running through the leaves.  Pink blossoms were bursting out on trees along the bank, bright yellow flowers were blooming on the emerald green stalks of weeds poking up along the waterline.  Life was emerging from it’s hibernation.  It was a natural cycle as old as the earth, and during the short time I’m alive I plan to enjoy this cycle as much as I can, to immerse myself fully in it’s splendor.  I know many guys who are at home watching basketball right now.  While there’s nothing wrong with that, I just can’t imagine missing natures spring time big show to sit indoors on a couch watching other people do something indoors.  






I was absolutely dragging this lizard, there was nothing fast about the retrieve.  This was Bass Fishing 101.  I’d pitch it in, let it sink, then drag it a few inches and let it sit.  Drag and sit, drag and...bump.  It felt like something hit me.  Hookset, BAM!  Fight on.  This was a good fight.  On the outside of a brush pile in 12 feet of water something tried to take my lizard!  This fish was putting up a determined fight, it was clearly a better fish than the others.  He had some say in whether or not he was coming to the boat.  

Up he came with the familiar arc of a largemouth that is about to break your heart.  I saw a flash of creamy white belly with green scales and red gills pass the boat.  He sliced this way and that and finally breached with a powerful head shake as he tried to free himself of the Lizard of Oz.  Catching a fish is an interesting event.  Two brains are working very quickly to solve a problem from opposite ends.  His was screaming “Breach and shake!  Breach and shake!”  Meanwhile, mine was screaming “Keep tension!  Keep tension on that line!!!”   Ultimately all the running and breaching couldn’t help him, he ended up in my boat and then in my phone.  Snap.  Another picture of another fun fish.  A sturdy 3 lb. specimen.  Solidly built, fast, agile, powerful, it was a wonderful example of an aquatic predator.  

It felt like I had just learned something.  Pitching tight to cover with a slow moving soft plastic was clearly working on a blue sky day, but I also appeared to be catching bigger fish deeper.  It was too early to call it a pattern, but it was noticeable.  I took a picture and released him.   With two swats of his tail he was back in the murky depths from which he came.  He was perhaps the fifth fish I caught on that same lizard.  That bait had served me admirably and with great distinction and bravery, so I decided to retire him.  Despite having been attacked by at least 5 largemouth, getting hung on innumerable rocks and logs, and dragged through grass mats it was in remarkably good shape.  It’s way tougher than a regular lizard, so much tougher that I think they should rename this thing the Gila Monster.  

After releasing him I stood on the deck and surveyed my surroundings.  Every year some astronomer tells us when the first official day of spring is.  Who the heck is he?  Why does he get so say?  I say the “first day of spring” is the first day I catch a largemouth on a lizard!  That’s how I will mark it from this day forward.  It can’t possibly be spring without largemouth, and what a spring it was turning into on the water today.

A word on the “types of bites” might be in order here.  There are many ways a bass can hit your bait.  Sometimes they hit it like a freight train, other times it feels like they hit it with a bat or a pipe wrench, yet still other times its very subtle.  Today most of the bites felt as though the bass picked up the bait, put it in a bag, and was walking out to the trash can to dispose of it.  Most of todays bites were anticlimactic.  You had to be paying attention or you might not realize you got hit.  The fights had been good, but the bite itself had been a little on the sneaky side much of the day.

Two logs later I pitched the lizard to the backside of a log jam, into the water between the bank and the cover closest to it.  BAM!!!  The Lizard of Oz took a vicious uppercut and was being dragged hither and yon by an enraged predator on a tight line. It ran deep, out toward open water and closer to the boat.  It was putting up a nice fight and about the time I thought about getting the net I heard something.  The drag!!!  This angry fish was stealing drag from my spool!  What a fight! Soon enough I had him in the net, snapped a pic, and tossed him back. Things were certainly getting more interesting in the deeper water.






The birds were singing, my drag was singing.  Ladies and gentlemen, spring time has SPRUNG and I am basking in it’s glory!!!  This is what being alive was meant to feel like!

The action kept up like this for so long that I had to make sure I kept my phone in the right pocket to make the pics easier.  By the end of the evening I could hold that lizard in my left hand and point at the water with my right and a fish would jump into the boat.  I didn’t even need to use a rod and reel any more, I could simply summon them with the Lizard of Oz.  

BOOM!  Another green monster attacked my lizard. SNAP another pic.  I was absolutely slaying the largemouth.  All of my stress was gone.  I was having a ball.  I didn’t feel sick, I wasn’t worried about work, or my banged up trailer.  I was focused on fishing, and on the beauty of spring time.  

At some point I noticed the shadows were getting long.  It’s always tough to say goodbye to a day like this and I reluctantly checked the time.  6:15 PM.  Wow, I still had over an hour til sunset!!!  Let the beatings continue! 

That long bank meandered back and forth from gravel to mud, and every 20 yards or so the lake claimed another tree through erosion.  Those trees fell into 12 feet of water and made wonderful homes for all manner of aquatic life.  Tonight it seemed as though every time I tossed a lizard into a tree it got devoured.  The only thing that could have made it more magical would be if a mermaid riding a narwhal approached the boat and gifted me Neptune’s trident.  This day was so good I’ll remember it forever as the Bronchitis Beatdown.

A short time later the sun was behind the hills and I pointed the boat toward the ramp.  Everything in life felt perfect.  Driving into a sun that has already dropped behind the hills is always a treat.  Water, land, and the sky are all cast in a gorgeous shade of light one normally doesn’t see.  The heavens and the water are separated by the long inky black profile of hills backlit by the setting sun.  The glossy surface of the water yields to the dark strip of land, which in turn yields to glorious shades of yellow, gold, then deeper shades of blue that fade to black as another night falls upon the lake.  Another cycle is complete. 

As I blast across the smooth water in the cool late evening air I have a few moments to reflect.  This day is coming to a close, but with a little luck I’ll live to see another one.  If I do, what will I do with that gift?  Will I spend it indoors, watching other people on TV?   Or will I use that gift to really, truly live?  When I’m old and gray will I wish I’d had more days of indoor TV watching when I was younger?  Or will I long for the days of spring when nature proudly displayed her power to create life and beauty?  


Fishing is about so much more than just catching a fish.  It’s spring time folks, get out there and live!








Sunday, December 4, 2011

Dam fishing

Last call
Winter is almost upon us and with its arrival comes the process of laying up the boat for the year.  It’s not that you can’t fish here in the winter…it’s just that I’m not going to.  I have no urge to float around on 40 degree water while the 34 degree air whips me at a constant 25 MPH as I try to keep from getting destroyed on the rocks just so I can try to catch the most sluggish bass of the year…I’d rather spend the winter in a room full of tarantulas. 
I thought we were done fishing for the year but the weather took a great turn this weekend.  Our choice was do we go sit in a deer stand and fight the heat and mosquitos, or do we head to the lake for a last chance at the bass?  It was an easy decision…the lake was screaming our names.  The plan was to put in below the Pickwick Dam.  I’ve never fished below the dam but I’ve heard its dynamite action.  You can catch all species in large numbers when the conditions are right. 
Dam fishing
A word about this dam is in order here.  Pickwick dam is a power generating dam…they let water through to both control flooding and generate electricity.   The dam itself rises up from the river like an impenetrable fortress…you rarely get to see this much concrete in one place…it is a monstrosity that rises over 10 stories high and is 1.5 miles wide.  This dam holds back roughly 43,000 surface acres of water and it generates power by selectively opening one or more of its 22 flood gates. 
The reason the fishing is so good below the dam is because of the water flow generated by the open flood gates.  Water falls down these huge concrete chutes as it comes through the dam and slams into the river over 100 feet below.  This water then flows down the river toward Kentucky Lake over 100 miles away.  A single flood-gate pouring water from the lake 113 feet above generates some water current when it slams into the placid waters of the river below.  As you open more gates you introduce more turbulence and current.    
The fish love it and the idea is that you drive the boat up close to the dam (not all the way) and then you cast a line out and you let the current push you back down the river as your bait bumps along where a hungry fish can make a meal of it.  It conjures up images of lazily floating down the river and enjoying some conversation while occasionally catching a fish.  It ought to be a very relaxing afternoon. 
I’d like to say that the dam is the first thing you notice as you approach…but it’s not.  When we get there we are greeted by some of the most violent water I’ve ever seen.   It’s like a 2 mile wide white-water river.  Usually when you see water like this there is a Coast Guard helicopter hovering above it trying to rescue people below who are desperately clinging to trees or the shattered remains of their homes.  This isn’t water you go into…its water that you’re lucky to be rescued from.  A sockeye salmon would find it tough to make it up this river today.  There is only one other boat trailer in the parking lot…it’s empty so we know he launched earlier in the day…and if he can do it - we can do it.  The thought never occurred to me that he might have been immediately swept away and destroyed on the rocks…such is the mindset of the fisherman…always an optimist.  We decided to park the truck and prepare our gear here in the parking lot.  Normally we’d rig up new baits in the boat but from what I can see we are really going to have our hands full just controlling the boat…there will be no opportunity to fool with the gear once we’re underway.
My buddy got done with his rigging first and walked the 50 yards or so over to the launch ramp to check it out.  He came back with a concerned look on his face.  The short version of what happened next is that the raging and rolling white-capped tsunami current coupled with the strong winds prompted us to change our plans.  There were far too many jokes about death and sinking the boat flying around to make us comfortable…so we decided to put in above the dam on the lake side. 
Lake side
We had a very short drive as we only had to go up a hill to the top of the dam, drive 2 miles across it, and then launch on the other side.  We had the boat wet less than 10 minutes after we started up the hill.  Our plan was to fish our way through a 1.5 mile “no wake” zone then work our way down the river hitting spots that held potential.
Our route took us through a large marina with row after row of large yachts on the right which gave way to older and unused docks, then to the main creek channel where we’d turn north and make our way to the lake.  We had to cover perhaps 500 yards before we got past all the yachts and docks. 
As we slipped along at idle speed I was focused on driving and picking our first spot.  Lowery was casting as we went to see if he could get lucky early.  My thoughts were suddenly interrupted by my fishing partner yanking back hard on his rod with a guttural “WHOA…BIGUN!!!”  I about leapt out of my seat to help him…only to find him doubled-over laughing at my reaction.  He had no fish on…he had no bite…what he had was a joke to play on his fishing partner by tricking me into thinking he had scored huge on his first cast just so he could see me jump out of my seat.  It worked well…and I briefly thought about hammering the throttle to send him from his doubled-over-laughing position to a “man overboard” position to put the joke momentum back in my favor.  It was a good joke…and he laughed and I muttered about it under my breath for the next 100 yards and then we got back to fishing.
About the time I had quit cussing my fishing partner, I noticed a bass boat up ahead.  Then I noticed another one.  These boats were just 5 yards apart and fishing the same spot…they likely knew each and were hanging out talking.  In their current positions they were kind of choking off the creek and we’d have to squeeze past them a little closer than I’d like.  I didn’t expect a crowd out here on a day like today…and the spot we wanted to fish was just past them by only 50 yard so this could get interesting.  I didn’t see either one of them catch anything as we approached so I guess it wouldn’t hurt anything…now we’d have three boats in the same area not catching any fish instead of just two.
They moved apart as we approached and we slipped by them to get to our spot.  We would be fishing an old boat ramp on the end of a small peninsula where the old state park lodge used to be.  It burned down years ago but the old concrete ramp is still there.  It’s a crumbling, run-down piece of work that you could hardly launch a canoe from.  The old ramp is covered in weeds and trees but the structure it provides to the fish as it descends into the water makes it a very nice place to start. 
I had caught a nice 5 lb. bass here the prior March and now I make it my first stop each time I launch from this area.  Today was no different…we’d stop at this nameless point to start our day.  The wind was blowing fairly hard which was making boat control a difficult.  I had to pay almost constant attention to steering the boat with the foot-controlled trolling motor rather than actually fishing.  I’d get us within casting distance and we’d throw up to the faded yellowing concrete and drag our lures back into the water and toward the boat.  Then I’d notice the wind had blown us out of range again and I’d have to turn up the trolling motor power and fight the wind all the way back toward the ramp until we were in casting distance again.  The whole time I’m trying to make sure the back of the boat is parallel to the bank so my partner has good casting angles…but the wind is just killing me.  I can’t keep the boat straight and I can’t keep it within casting distance.
I had been fighting the wind for maybe 5 minutes when I hear some muttering from the back of the boat accompanied by the quick lurching action of a hook set.
“You got one?” I asked.
Lowery responded by calmly stating “I think so…but it’s got to be a little one…it’s not pulling at all.”
He’s not arched back and muttering unintelligibly like I’d expect if he had a nice fish on…he’s just standing there reeling in a dink…from the looks of it this fish will likely be as small as the lure he used to catch it.
Unimpressed by either the bend in his rod or his reaction to the fish I keep working my reel as I watch him bring in our first tiny fish of the day.  I’m watching his line slice through the water and I’m waiting to see this small fish come drifting to the top like the small ones always do when a bass the size of a whale busts up to the top and rolls to the left.   I couldn’t…believe…my eyes.  He had a pig of a fish on his line.  The Loch Ness Monster breeching next to the boat could not have surprised me any more than this hog did. 
I’d like to say that my partner became a stuttering, muttering, bumbling mess at this point…but I couldn’t hear him over my own stuttering mumbling excited ramblings.  I dove for the net like a fat kid going for a girl-scout cookie…I HAD to get that net extended and into the water quickly.  If this fish got away it would be embarrassing…not due to our poor angling skills but because there would be two tough guys out here crying like babies in the middle of the lake. 
I came off the front deck looking at the fish instead of where I was going and I tripped…almost giving myself a concussion as I went for the net.  This paints a humorous picture in my head of my fishing partner stepping over my lifeless body as he maneuvers up and down the boat trying to land this fish.  I’d expect nothing less…a picture of a fat bass next to me lying on the deck unconscious would be the trophy of a lifetime.
I recovered from my fall with the grace and athleticism of a drunken rhinoceros and I grabbed the net.  Lowery was leading the fish toward me to make this an easy pluck from the water.  I extended the net…mesmerized by the fish…and as I went scoop him up…I missed and I banged him hard in the side with the metal rim of the net.  This was like watching a train wreck.  We have a very nice fish on the line…from our first spot of the day no less…and my actions seem to be helping the fish escape rather than helping my partner land him.  As I watched the rim of the net push the fish I could feel the strain on every component in the chain that connected us to him.  I felt his ribs flex, I felt him turning his mouth toward us, I felt the knot on the lure slipping microscopically, I felt the line stretch, I felt the rod bend, I felt the earth’s rotation slow, and I felt my heart breaking as I waited for what felt like an eternity to hear the line emit the super-sonic crack it makes when a line under pressure snaps.  I was about to cause us to lose this fish…it was a heart wrenching, slow motion moment.
But the line held!  And I was back in business.  I pushed the 5 foot long handle even deeper into the water this time to get fully under the fish, and with the skills of an ancient and sage angler Lowery steered the fish to a position where even a blind man could net him…which I did.  I was howling with laughter as I pulled this fat beast from the water.  My friend had just hooked and landed a very nice 5 lb. largemouth bass.  Making this even sweeter was that it was maybe his third cast of the day…and we were so close to our launch point that you could still see the truck.  What a start!


A fish’s point of view
On the drive home I had time to ponder a lot of things.  One of the thoughts was “can fish hear us when we pull them from the water?”
If so, then fish must think the world above them is entirely populated by shouting, laughing rednecks that smell like beef jerky and chewing tobacco.   I imagine the conversation that bass must have had when he returned to his underwater hideout.
Fish 1: Dude…where did you go?
Hog: I don’t know…I hammered a small shad that came by and it dragged me all the way up to where we run out of water.
Fish 1: What happened?
Hog: Some rednecks clobbered me with a net, then scooped me out with it, laughed, weighed me, ate some beef jerky, took some pictures, and threw me back.
Fish 1: Dude that’s crazy. 
Hog: No…I’ll tell you what’s crazy…the new iPhone apparently has a flash on it…I’m still half blind from it.
How a place gets a name
We’ve been going to Pickwick often enough that we’re figuring a few things out.  Over time you earn your experience and the places where you’ve been successful get burned into your memory.  This nameless point is beginning to get a reputation on my boat.  Last year I caught a five pounder here, and this weekend Lowery caught one of equal size.  The most logical name for this place now is Five-Pound Point.  Like success itself…these named places are few and far between.  Currently, I only have three or four places that are productive enough to have a name.  These are places like The Hog Pen, Baitfish Cove, and now Five Pound Point. 
The rest of our day was an exercise in boat control and anger management as the wind blew relentlessly and we caught nothing else.  Ultimately the day was a huge success…we came out under apparently difficult conditions, caught a very nice fish, and didn’t sink the boat in the tsunami below the dam.
The layup 
If this is the last time I put the boat away before winter then I’m doing it with great satisfaction.  We caught some good fish this year, right up to the last trip.  From mid-March to December 3rd that boat served as an escape from reality.  It’s too cold to fish now so I’ll lay the boat up for the next four months.  
Until then it will sit covered in the back yard, the cold air chilling its hull and the driving rain rolling off its cover.   Occasionally I’ll stare at the boat from inside the warm and dry shelter of my home as I slowly sip on a hot mug of coffee and remember the good times we’ve had on it.  A few more months and we’ll be at it again…a few more months.