David Heiller
Paul,
Dave, Jim and I had a chilly five days in the Boundary Waters last week. It
froze most of the nights, and snowed most of the days.
But we
didn’t mind, because the fish were biting.
Jim
caught the first one a few hours after we set up camp on the Walter Lake. It
was a 27-inch lake trout. We figured its weight, using a DNR formula, at 13
pounds.
Jim and a northern in the snow. |
Later
that afternoon, Paul landed a 42-inch northern. It weighed 21 pounds. The next
day it was Jim with a 39-inch northern and Paul with a 38-inch one, 17 and 16
pounds respectively. Then Dave pulled in a 30-inch, eight pound northern.
It’s
funny how a person can put up with crummy weather when he is catching fish like
that.
Well, technically, I didn’t catch a
fish like that. I caught a few smaller ones that fit nicely into the frying
pan. It’s all luck anyway, right?
The fish I’ll remember most is the
one that got away.
It took my cisco and bobber and ran
with incredible power toward the shore of the bay where we were camped. Then it
veered left, toward the center of the bay.
It stopped for a few seconds to
swallow the cisco. Then it started swimming again. That’s when I set the hook.
Wow. It was the biggest fish I ever felt. It was almost scary, thinking what
was at the end of my line.
I started
reeling in. The fish and my line went back toward shore. Then it stopped. I
couldn’t budge the fish.
With a
sickening feeling, I realized the fish was snagged on something. Paul came over
with a canoe. I hopped in the front, and we paddled to the spot. He saw a flash
of the fish amidst the branches of a dead tree under the water. The fish had
taken a side trip through the snag when it ran with my minnow, and was now
wrapped around a branch.
I gave one more tug, the line broke,
and the big fish was gone.
How big
was it? A 25-pounder, at least.
I moped about the lost fish a time or
two. Dave tried to console me. “It’s just a fish. It’s just life,” he said in
the canoe later that day. I knew he was right. But I couldn’t help feeling sad.
I couldn’t help wondering how big that fish was. Thirty pounds, easy.
I lamented the loss the next night
around the campfire. Dave said, “Well, at least you can beat it in cribbage.”
We all laughed, and that was the last I mentioned it. No use crying over lost lunkers.
FISHING WAS only part of our trip’s
highlights. We saw a cow moose and her calf one morning. The calf was sucking
milk, while the mother eyed us warily from behind white cedar branches.
Seeing a
mamma and baby moose in the wild is worth at least one big fish. It’s always
amazing how big they are. The cow was six feet high at her hips.
ONE afternoon two forest service
employees came across the lake and checked our latrine to see if a new one
would have to be dug. They were clearing portages, using axes and saws.
We were glad they followed us in. It
made the trip out much easier. On the trip in, we had to climb over several
trees that had blown over the portages. That’s not easy to do with a pack and
canoe on your shoulders.
The rangers were both young women,
fresh out of Northland College. We told them about some of our past 11 trips
together. They listened politely. That impressed me. It’s nice when people know
how to listen. We felt like old-timers compared to them. But they looked very
competent, and no doubt they were.
“They pay
you to do this job?” Jim asked them. That summed up our feelings as they
paddled off to the next campsite.
ANOTHER memory: We were crossing the
first portage on our way to Walter Lake. Paul was walking ahead of me. He was
carrying two packs, one in front and one in back; three paddles, two life
jackets, and a minnow bucket. We pride ourselves on making portages in one
trip, and Paul wasn’t going to break that tradition.
Paul is
not a small man. He says he weighs 300 pounds. As my daughter would say, “Yeah
right, Dad.”
Paul, on an easier portage, during a different year's trip. |
We came to a spot on the portage
where water from snow melt was rushing across. A half-rotten log lay on one
side of the trail. Paul didn’t want to get his feet wet, so he tried walking
across the log. The log cracked and sagged. Paul jolted from one side and the
other, like a cement truck on a high wire. He couldn’t see his feet because of
the pack in front.
We stood and watched and tried very,
very hard not to laugh, the way you do when you see someone slip on a patch of ice.
As usual, Paul made it across. He
always does. He is surprisingly nimble for a mountain. A few well chosen words
always seem to help him. He provided a humorous moment for the rest of us
insensitive louts.
The four of us plan on returning to
our fishing hot spot again next year. I want to take another stab at that
35-pounder that I lost.
By the way, Walter Lake isn’t the
real name of the lake. If I mentioned the real name, I might not live long
enough to return there with my three fine friends.
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