“Let’s meet back here at 9:00, just before dark,” Todd shouted over his shoulder as he dropped onto the path at the end of the backcountry bridge and disappeared down Wigwam. Mac and I followed, but turned upstream instead. The sun still sat high overhead so we had plenty of time before rendezvous.
But after a mile or so of fast, skinny riffles with scant holding water, we threw in the towel, found an old wildlife trail perched above the river, and bushwhacked our way back to the bridge. A hot day, by Canadian standards, we dropped the waders and penguined our way around the truck for a while; had a bite, a beer, and a quick nap, then tried to decide what to do next. There were still a few hours before Todd was expected.
“Let’s take Todd's truck and drive down that old service road to the turnout just above the canyon floor,” Mac suggested. “Shouldn’t take more than a half-hour to get there. We can fish that switchback for an hour or so and get back here by 9:00”
Seemed a good idea, but...
“What if Todd comes back early?” I wasn’t quite sure how he’d react to find that we’d left him stranded in the British Columbian outback.
Mac thought a minute, and then smiled. “I know. We can leave a note on the windshield.”
Now I’d heard, and gone along with, some pretty hairbrained ideas over the previous several days, but this took the cake. Really? Leave a note on the windshield?
“That’s the dumbest thing I've ever heard, Mac, and you know it.”
“It’s just gonna blow off when we turn on the wipers to clear the dust as we drive.”
--- o ---
Note: Look for more upcoming content related to our ten days of wandering around British Columbia, Alberta, and Montana at Hatch Magazine. Special thanks to the fine folks of Fernie, BC for their terrific hospitality. We sure had a blast.
4 comments:
I agree -- it was a dumb idea. Instead, why didn't you didn't you drive to the new spot & then one of you take the truck back & leave it there for him?
Good try, Howard. But who'd keep the keys?
Fantastic! Ha! Love the "penguin" thought.
Thanks, Michael. It's an image that's hard to shake. :-)
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