David Heiller
It was
one of those fishing moments that don’t come along real often.
I had
just brought a big sheepshead to the side of the canoe when something hit my
other line. It was even bigger, and the way it fought, heavy and hugging the
bottom, I knew it was another sheeper. This one finally surfaced by the first
one, and for a few seconds my two rods sliced the air like a conductor at
Carnegie Hall. Only this was much nicer than Carnegie Hall.
Both
fish ended up in the bottom of the canoe, one 26 inches, the other 21 inches.
Some
people aren’t real fond of freshwater drum, which is the fancy name for
sheepshead. I like them fine. I want to try smoking some, and these two will
work well for that experiment.
Autumn view towards the quarry at Fairy Rock |
It It was a
fitting end to a fine fall day. The sun was setting on Wisconsin, and the hills
stretched to the north, dappled in calico. Brownsville ended the procession,
jutting out further than the others. I’ve always liked the looks of those
hills. They’ve been landmarks for many people, and they always convey a feeling
of security and stability. The rest of the world can be going to heck, in fact
it seems to be doing just that these days. But those hills aren’t going
anywhere, and for some reason I take reassurance in that.
It’s
that way with the river too. I can throw in my canoe and I know there will be
fish waiting. I can sense them. My wife wonders why, if I can sense them so
well, I don’t sense a few crappies instead of those sheepshead. But that’s not
the point. The beauty is in the sensing.
That’s
the way it was Sunday night. Further up the river a big flock of geese called
to each other. They were settling in for the night, taking refuge in the
refuge. Maybe some swans mixed in, some ducks too. It was a good sound to hear.
They are noisy cusses, but it was music to my ears. It reminded me of where we
are right now, the peak of a beautiful fall.
Another hike, this one in the late fall, early winter. Alex, Laura, Cindy and Malika. |
That
peak hit me earlier in the day too. Five of us had hiked down into the Reno
Valley. I walked with my nephew Alex and his girlfriend, Laura, while Cindy and
her girlfriend, Sara and the dogs took off at a brisk pace ahead of us. (Why do
women walk so much faster than men?) We didn’t meet a soul, which surprised,
but didn’t disappoint me. The sun cut through the trees, which it couldn’t do
just a few weeks ago. Alex pointed out a huge bird circling high over a bluff
on our right. Another bluff further on to our left jutted over the valley. A
hawk high-tailed it over that bluff, heading south. The area is a major
migration route for hawks.
“Does that bluff
have a name?” Alex asked.
“Probably,” I
answered. I didn’t know it. “It’s too far from my territory?” That’s the way it
is. Five miles from home and it’s wilderness in hill country.
Alex
pointed out a path coming down the hill. “Deer trail,” I said. He knew that,
but I had to sound like I knew something.
We came
to a huge oak trunk that had been cut a few years back. I counted the rings,
135.
The mauve bluffs of Wisconsin at sunset. |
Laura at
some unnoticed point had followed her womanly genes and sped off ahead of us.
Now she waited by a fork in the trail to make sure we would find the way that
the gals had gone.
“I left
a sign on the trail,” she said. “I wasn’t sure if you would see it so I waited.”
“Of
course we would have seen it,” I said even before I did see it. You have to
show confidence on a good hike. She had drawn an arrow in the dirt, about 18
inches long, pointing to the right. I don’t know if I would have seen that. I
personally would have used three logs about six feet in length to make an
arrow, like Melvin Miller taught us to do in Boy Scouts. But I didn’t tell
Laura that. After all, she had waited for us.
We
finally caught up with Cindy and Sara, who wondered what the heck had happened
to us. Then we proceeded up the hill, a perfect hike on a perfect day followed
by perfect fishing in the perfect place that we all call home.
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