Photo courtesy of Steve Zakur |
Here’s a dirty little secret about destination angling. More often than not, the fishing is disappointing. Contrary to what you might think, there is no correlation between how much you spend or how far you travel and your actual piscatorial success. If I’m wrong and there is some obscure equation, at its core there’s most certainly an inverse ratio.
Now there are lots of reasons for this – unfamiliar waters, new populations of fish, improper gear, unrealistic expectations – but the biggest, most frustrating factor is timing. We never seem to get it right.
We’ve arrived on The Gulf in the accompaniment of thunderstorms and tornadoes, spent entire Caribbean excursions under tropical rains, and trudged Baja shores mere days before the baitfish arrived (to be followed, shortly after, by the game fish we sought). With distressing regularity, the following week would have been better or the guide’s standard line that you should have been here last week applied.
So why do we do it? Why spend the time and the money, endure the travel, only to get it wrong time and time again? Why the risk? The rote answer is that there’s so much more to such trips than the fishing. The adventure, the companionship, the locations. Nice platitudes, and true to a point, but the reality is that there’s only one good reason to keep trying. Once in a blue moon you get it right.
Last week, we got it right. Really right.
We hit that sweet spot between upper Saskatchewan thaw and spring’s choking weeds, when the ice receded and the Canadian sun rode high and the big northern pike moved up into the shallow, open bays, hungry and mean from too long in cold, deep water. We chased out rain as we arrived and observed it returning in our wake, fished in shirtsleeves, watched big, bushy poppers get crushed by toothy finned dinosaurs, and wondered what we’d done to deserve such bounty. The answer, my friend, is that we’d simply kept at it.
So why is that man in the picture above grinning? Sure it’s a nice fish, but we’d caught lots of them, lots of them, with some a fair amount larger. No, he’s grinning because he and his buddies had just hit a hole in one. Teed it up nine months earlier, aimed at a cup the size of an eighteen-foot Crestliner, and let it rip. To everyone’s amazement and delight, it went in. We timed it right.
So now I sit here, back at home, having pike withdrawals, ready to head out again to be rained on, snowed on, blown off the water, or simply to be skunked day after day for no discernible reason in some far away hell hole. There’s dues that are owed and I’m willing to pay, because someday there’ll be another Saskatchewan…
…or maybe it’s all just the timing.
10 comments:
Awesome! So fun when it all comes together. Just hit a hatch "right" locally that was years in the making for me. I was more satisfied by getting it right than by the fish I caught! Weird pursuit we are committed to!
Absolutely! Weird in so many ways, Steven. Thanks for stopping by!
looks like a ball. those teethy aggressive things are ferocious.
It was a whole bushel of balls, Len. And that ferociousness made it all the more fun. Watching them blow up on poppers was epic.
I rather enjoyed this, which is to say I like what you rote. Timing? Sure, maybe. But methinks there were other factors at play here as well: like the fish gods and Ma Nature felt like they owed you one. Glad it was such a perfect trip in all regards.
HA! The Fish Gods and old Ma Nature pretty much hate me, Kirk. I think we caught them napping.
Indeed we did. And Kirk is right. We were due... we were owed. And we collected quite aggressively. Let's do it again soon :)
This is one of those posts where I'm happy for the author but green with jealousy.
Any time, any place, Mr. Hunt. Can't wait to do it again, brother.
Kevin, I think that a light shade of chartreuse is completely appropriate. It was epic.
I have been spoiled. So have you.
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