David Heiller
If your ear lobes are intact
now, guard them with your life. I taught a four year old how to cast a fishing lure.
It started innocently enough
last weekend at The Cabin. When my four-year-old nephew, Collin, arrived, the first
words he said to me were, “Uncle Day-vid, I caught more fish than you last
year.”
He had out-fished me one evening,
and he wasn’t about to let me forget it after only 12 months.
Uncle Day-vid and Collin at the cabin: fishing buddies |
The next morning we went to
the dock to catch sunnies. Usually with a four year old, that means dropping a line
from your Sesame Street rod and reel straight down into the water, and watching
half a dozen panfish converge on the worm.
They have a brief conference,
then elect the smallest one to investigate further. You end up pulling in a fish
only slightly bigger than the hook itself. This gives the kid a great thrill, which
gives the adult a great thrill.
But Collin’s Sesame Street fishing
rod and reel were broken. Why is it they only last one summer? Could it be a conspiracy?
I gave Collin my best rod and
reel. I figured I wouldn’t need it. When you fish with kids, you don’t really get
much fishing done yourself anyway.
Collin was thrilled to sit on
the dock and catch small fish. But I couldn’t resist showing him how to cast his
bobber out further, where the bigger fish might be.
Learning to cast a fishing rod
is a milestone in a child’s life, like riding a bike or hitting a baseball. One
of my earliest memories is of fishing with my brother, Glenn, and trying to cast
with a rod and reel.
Glenn must have been in a good
mood that evening to let me use it. Usually it was Cane Poles Only.
The open-faced reel had a thick
black line. You used your thumb for a drag. It was virtually impossible to cast
without getting a backlash the size of an eagle’s nest.
I think I made one cast, then
spent the rest of the evening trying to untangle the line. Glenn was not pleased,
to put it mildly. But I was thrilled to have been given the chance to actually cast
my bait. I eventually mastered the reel, and was able to cast it at least five feet.
Getting the bait on is the step before casting. |
With that rite of passage in
the back of my mind, I showed Collin how to cast. I showed him how the line-release
button worked. I showed him how much line should be dangling at the tip of the rod
when you cast.
I told him how to bring the
rod back to two o’clock, then bring it forward to 10 o’clock. I don’t know if he
knows how to tell time, but he nodded dutifully. I held his hand and we did it together.
The bobber soared out at least five feet.
No fish was hooked, but Collin
was. He couldn’t believe he had done that. He grabbed the rod from me. “I want to
do it now, Uncle Day-vid,” he said.
“Let me show you one more time,”
I said. But we both knew that wasn’t necessary. He kept the rod and kept casting.
Most of the time he looked like
a mule skinner whipping a team of horses. He churned up the water with short casts.
Once in a while he’d get one out 20 feet.
Fishing pretty much stopped
for Collin at that point and casting took over. He would simply cast and reel, cast
and reel. He paused only long enough to have me bait the hook after a fish had caught
up to it long enough to strip it bare.
On Saturday night, I took Collin
and two adults out in the 14-foot fishing boat. I sat in the rear, manning the six-horse
Mercury and keeping a close eye on Collin.
Watching a kid cast on a dock
is one thing.
You can give him a wide berth.
Sitting next to him in a boat is another. There’s no place to hide.
Collin worked both sides of
the boat. He cast to the front and to the back. He would announce his direction
with a polite sentence. “Excuse me, Day-vid.” “Excuse me, Nancy.” “Excuse me, Mike.”
We wanted to excuse him into
the lake. But instead we just hunched our shoulders and lowered our heads and waited
for the bobber to go whipping past.
Collin was sitting on a boat
cushion. Each time he cast, it inched off the seat. Finally after one mighty cast
he ended up with a crash in the bottom of the boat.
No, I didn’t hope he had a broken
arm. But I couldn’t help telling him that that’s what happens when you cast so much.
“You need to let your bobber sit for a while,” I told him for the umpteenth time.
But Casting Collin wasn’t going
to let a bruise or two stop him. He kept on casting, and we kept on ducking.
I know I could have made him
stop and sit still and be quiet. But fishing is supposed to be fun, and Collin was
having fun. So I let him cast away.
I ended up catching three keepers
to his one. “I caught more fish than you,” I said with a smile that he recognized.
“Maybe that’s because you did too much casting.” He didn’t say anything. It was
a four-year-old dilemma.
We got back at dark. Collin
held a flashlight while I cleaned the fish. We ate them the next day. There’s nothing
better than fried sunfish fillets, rolled in flour, fried in butter, and seasoned
with salt, pepper—patience!
Time will tell where Collin
goes, fishing-wise. I tried to teach him how to put on a worm and take off a fish.
He didn’t want learn that mundane skill quite as eagerly. But I’ve got a hunch he
will.
Once you learn how to cast,
the rest is all downhill.
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