We caught fish.
More than that,
We made stories.
Stories that we’ve told over and over.
Stories that make us laugh with every telling.
Stories we will continue to tell, over and over,
As long as we’re here to tell them.
Stories that will keep you with us forever,
Now that you’re gone.
Some true.
Some with a kernel of truth.
Some we’ve made true in the telling.
It’s hard to remember which are which any more,
As if it really mattered.
We gathered together tonight and told them again.
Set aside the vises, the hooks and the feathers,
And, instead, tipped a glass or two.
Told the stories one more time.
Laughed with you as if you were here,
When, in truth, you were.
In the stories.
It may have started with fish,
But not a single tale tells of the catch.
They tell of falling overboard,
Of getting shit-faced,
Of putting our foot in our mouths at the worst of times.
They tell of broken rods, bent transoms, and anchors tossed overboard unattached.
Too many are poop or fart stories, I'm embarrassed to say.
Funny at six and at sixty. Boys will always be boys.
They make us laugh at our ourselves and we deserve it.
No one is spared,
For they are our stories,
Yours and ours.
Yes, we caught fish.
More than that,
Much more than that,
We made stories.
Tuesday, July 25, 2017
That Reminds Me of a Story...
Labels:
Heartstrings,
Poetry
Thursday, July 13, 2017
Wednesday, July 12, 2017
Tuesday, July 11, 2017
10 Steps to Catching Carp
Step 1: Find carp |
Steps 2-4: Cast to carp |
Steps 5-7: Scream at @#$% picky-ass carp (and guides, and Gods, and everything else) |
Step 8: Catch carp |
Step 9: Release carp |
Step 10: Be bad |
Labels:
Beaver Island,
Carp
Monday, July 10, 2017
The Photo Bin: 2Q2017 - Beaver Island Suspects
Scott Thompson: That Feeling |
True story (and I say that because around here one can never be sure), I had a dream last night that I was flying to Alaska to fish. At the end of my commercial airline ordeal, as I awaited the arrival of the Beaver to take me on my final leg, I discovered that my duffle was half empty (or half full, I never know which) and I stood on the tarmac trying to decide if I had been robbed or had simply forgotten to finish packing before departure. The latter seemed more likely.
What was packed was my camera, and, despite the tender care that my luggage had undoubtedly received in the hands of the gorillas in Delta’s baggage management division, my unprotected Nikon had bounced around in all that unfilled storage space such that the lens now looked like a half-crushed PBR can. The poor thing was toast and it occurred to me that it was going to be a long, boring week on the water. Never mind that I had no wading boots or shirts to wear (I remember those things specifically as missing), I was not going to be taking any pictures.
Steve Martinez: The big man's in the boat |
Obviously, this glut of photos has been playing with my mind, even in my sleep. More specifically, trying to figure out how to trot out this pile of material without completely overwhelming the reader and cooking my laptop’s motherboard in the process. (I’ve heard it’s poor little cooling fan kick in during this past week’s marathon Lightroom sessions with startling regularity).
I’ve landed on the idea of groupings of five. A series of posts, each containing five images, that revolve around some theme. I have no idea what those themes will be. We’ll just have to see as we go along. As for how many there will be, we’ll just have to see that too. (You can tell that I’ve given this lots of thought.)
I fear more anxiety dreams are on the way.
Alex Landeen: Looking to the sky (and the man on the platform) for a little rain relief |
Prepared or not, I’d better get started. Ignoring any coherent chronological sequencing of the events and images from the past three months, interspersed in this post has been a quick rogues gallery of my companions from our just completed carp adventure on Beaver Island. It’s a bit of a cheat as they have already been posted on my Instagram feed (yes, I’ve fallen down yet another social media rabbit hole), but for the sake of efficiency…
Kevin Morlock: Can't keep a good guide down |
For the photo barrage to come, my apologies.
Cameron Mortenson: The Man and His Island |
That goes double for the mugs in this gallery.
What is a Photo Bin?
Labels:
Beaver Island,
Friends,
Photo Bins,
Photogaphy
Thursday, July 6, 2017
Warning: Impending Photo Dump
Where to begin?
When you last encountered this intrepid blogger he dropped a two-month-old pile of South Andros photos on you, then disappeared. Again. Now there's a three month hole in these pages. Three months of nuthin'. Well, it's not because nuthin's been going on. Quite the contrary, the past several weeks have been a whirlwind and the spinning has yet to stop.
As you can imagine, the picture pile's grown to monumental proportions and something needs to be done with it. So hold on to your seats. Here it comes. I'm taking advantage of the passing of the eye of this storm to do some catching up, photo bin style. Not sure exactly how to approach this except to dive right in.
The dump begins on Monday.
You've been warned.
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