He’d
been hinting at it for about a week, edging ever closer to what I’d hoped would
be the ultimate question and result in the day I’ve been waiting for since the
smooth-talking outdoorsman first put a minnow on my fishing hook.
“I was
thinking about going trout fishing this weekend. Would you like to go along?”
he said from the other end of the phone line.
There
would be no trying to contain my inner childlike glee this time, no hiding my
absolute enthusiasm at the prospect of landing a fighting machine, cousin to a
salmon.
I did a
fist pump in the air, kicked my leg forward and up and smiled wide as the Grand
Canyon.
“You bet I do!” I replied.
Immediately
I pictured myself landing a record weight trout that would take me an hour to
reel in. I would use every muscle I had. Maybe it would pull me overboard and
I’d have to wrestle it into the boat. The trout would be so big I wouldn’t be
able to pick it up for that photograph in the latest fishing magazine.
My
resolve was crystal clear. The lean, mean fighting machine swimming in those
deep cold waters out there in a northern lake had no idea who was coming for him.
“But
there’s only one catch,” added the man with the tackle box. I’d heard that
cautionary statement before but this time I knew he wasn’t going to say we’d
have to snowshoe two miles in to get to the almighty lake.
Instead
it was a call to the crowing rooster in me and an early start to the fishing
trip.
No
problem. I was born early—5:20 a.m. to be exact.
It was
like Christmas morning on that “troutful” day. I flew out of bed and into
fishing gear, packed a lunch, slammed a coffee, stuffed my pack with chocolate
and mosquito repellant and waited on the street corner at the pick-up point
with my straw hat.
I was so
“bare bones basic” that my smooth-talking outdoorsman nearly drove right by me,
mistaking me for a pedestrian.
In the
boat on that northern lake, I waited eagerly for my fishing rod to be loaded
with a flashy, smart-looking roguish lure like the one the outdoorsman had tied
to his own line. All I could think about was that rod-snatching bulldog cheetah
of freshwater that had my name tattooed on his gills.
Hopes
were dashed when I saw the lure my fishing partner pulled out of the tackle box
for my fishing rod, coupled with a lead weight much bigger than I thought I
needed.
I didn’t
know a thing about trout fishing but I was sure he’d made mine an ill-fated
mission.
“I’d
like to change to something else. I think the weight is too heavy and I’d like
a bigger lure,” I proposed, after a long, long while of trolling in vain.
“Really?”
he queried, in a curiously responsive way. “When you catch your first trout,
then you can change it,” he said, smiling.
Empty-handed.
Yes, that would be me.
There
are times when I know what I’m talking about and times when I do not. This was
one of those times.
It was
all I could do to reel in—catch and release—of four big, beautiful, strong,
fighting machines including a 30” fat lunker.
And when
I gave the brute back to the deep the outdoorsman asked, “Do you want to change
up that lure now?”
I just
smiled my “you were right” smile and said, “Not in a million years,” as I
watched that gorgeous fish jettison away.
I am the
luckiest girl I know.
1 comment:
What a beautiful fish!! Just nothing like hooking into a lake trout.
Don
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