We didn’t just fish the Rogue River when I was growing up, although it was the most frequently enjoyed. Probably because it was great fishing at that time, but also because our two acres ended at the river bank. It was an easy walk from the back porch, fly rod in hand, an old fashion wicker creel over one shoulder, down across the pasture, through the willow and alder trees, and to the upper reach of about four-hundred yards of ice cold riffles. In ten years, I don’t remember anyone other than me and Dad ever fishing that stretch. I did see one drift boat one time one summer out of ten summers. But that was all. We didn’t own the riverbank in below the house, but it served as our private stretch of river for most of ten years. (I’d love to find a place like that again.)
Dad wore hip boots, top drawer back then, but he wouldn’t let me wear any. He was afraid I’d fall, get the boots full of water and then he’d have to watch the strong river current wash me away. I’m not sure I ever heard of any local person dying that way, but my dad was a great student of land mines, the kind life can bring the unwary.
No, no boots, but it didn’t keep me out of the water. I’d wear my tennis shoes, wade out until the current was almost strong enough to sweep me off my feet, and then go to fishing. It was cold, but a few minutes in the water would numb my legs and the pain would go away.
I remember once when a big fish took my fly and raced downstream, pole bent, line stretched, reel singing, and I took a step downstream into a small hole in the gravel. That time I just swam…one handed…fishing pole in the other hand…toward the bank until I could get my feet under me. Dad always said he could get another fly rod, but he couldn’t get another son. So if the choice was hang on to the pole or drown, he rather I just let go of the pole.
I didn’t let go that time…and I landed a nice fat eighteen inch Rainbow trout. In looking back, I’m pretty sure it was one of the summer half pounders that filled the river in July way back then. They call them steelhead now, so I reckon I’ve been catching steelhead since I was about nine years old.
One week-end Dad decided on a change. He said we ought to try Hyatt Lake and fish for the large mouth bass that lived there. It was a fair sized meadow at one time…maybe four miles long, and when the dam was finished and when the Corps of Engineers began filling the pool, no one bothered to cut the trees out of the margins of the meadow. What was left was a ghost forest of dead, white snags sticking out of the water along the edge of the reservoir, and big old buckskin logs floating in amongst the snags. Ugly as sin, but wonderful fishing.
We loaded Dad’s little WWII quarter ton jeep with a big tarp, our bedrolls, the old grub box (which I still have), put our fishing poles and tackles boxes in the boat, hitched the old heavy McKenzie River boat behind the jeep, and headed for the lake…about fifteen miles east of Ashland, Oregon on the Greensprings road to Klamath Falls.
There was only one other boat on the lake when we got there, so we had it pretty much to ourselves. We set up camp, and then Dad backed the drift boat into the lake and we went to fishing in amongst the snags and logs. I think I was about ten years old, and I loved it. There we were, just me and my dad.
In the last hour before sunset the lake was mirror calm and we got into the bass. We’d cast a redheaded Heddon plug in against a log, let it sit a few seconds and then give it a crank, let it pop back to the surface, and repeat. About every third cast the water would boil and we’d set the hook on a nice bass. We fished until the sun set and Dad decided we might have trouble finding camp in the dark. It was hard enough to see camp in full daylight.
Dad cranked up our old Evinrude five-horse outboard, I pulled the stringer of live fish into the boat, and we threaded our way through the snags back to camp. Dad said to tie the stringer off and leave the fish in the water. Said we’d tend to them in the morning. Being a kid, I had to count the bass: seventeen bass with a couple running about five pounds each, and a couple more running about four pounds. I had caught about half of them, so I was pretty puffed up.
We got a fire going and Dad fixed a near perfect supper…0ne I copy now and again in my old age…home raised beef steaks, bread and butter, and fresh milk from our milk cow Queeny. If you have never had that kind of supper, you don’t know what you are missing. Maybe the open campfire makes a difference, but whatever it is, it’s a prime supper.
We laid our bedrolls on the front half of the big canvas tarp and pulled the other half up over our heads. Snug it was.
Come morning I trotted down to the lake to clean the fish. I couldn’t believe it. The fish were gone. I was sure I had tied the string up good and tight. I thought maybe a critter had dislodged the chain, but I wasn’t sure that made sense, but I’m sure I didn’t want to think I had messed up.
I walked back to the breakfast fire and told Dad. He laughed, said to get a long pole and work the boat out among the snags. The fish couldn’t have gone far.
I spent a frustrated half hour, and then there they were, kegged up against a little upright snag that stuck up out of the water. Looked like half the bass wanted to go right and the other half pulled to the left. (You know, you just can’t get a stringer of fish to cooperate. Good thing.)
We cleaned the bass, broke camp and headed home before they spoiled. When we pulled into the yard, I rushed into to the house with our bucket of bass to show Mother. She said, “That’s a fine kettle of fish.”
Rod
I don’t know if this qualifies as a blog. Maybe not, but I’m running out of old timers to feed my stories to, and my grandkids are busy with their own lives, so I’ll just tell my stories this way. Thanks.
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