Monday, April 22, 2013

SPRINGS END



                                                   
 
Ya, I guess it's over.
But don't look now. Here comes another torrential rain event, with
a cold front behind it. But is that all the fish we have? Is the tank dry?
Midwest Fly Fishing Magazine had a nice piece and interview with a
Biologist from the Great Lakes Region. No names please. But the person
had reported to the article that Pennsylvania stocks well deep into
almost the headwaters of their streams, with a 98% return rate.Marked
and tagged for proof.  We (Ohio) stock in the marinas, or within a quarter
mile. Are return rate....50% of those fish were of Ohio strain use.
So is are 50% here and almost done? I guess we'll find out.
 
(PIC. AND FISH-KEN KLINGER) 
HERE
 
 
GONE.
 
But until September, theirs a lot to look forward to.
 
 
The cool and transparent waters of the Clear Fork.
 
 
And of course the YOUGH.
 
Ya, I know Fall means a day closer to winter, But nothing beats
Another Buckeye ass whipping on Saturdays and a fresh run of
STEEL.

Saturday, April 13, 2013

THANKS APRIL,THE STEEL OF SPRING



                                                                  

            Spring, to most being a sign of new life. A new beginning.Warmer temps, sun. To a Steelheader,complete opposite. A sign of death. The beginning of the end for what was another year complete of chasing chrome.    

            And just when it gets warm, old man winter hits ya with a burst of reality.

 Just like that, the whole scenario goes in your favor unexpectedly. I was just hanging up the fly rod and hand washing the waders when I heard on the radio a mass cold is expected to hit starting Thursday, with potential localized flooding. As quickly as my ears heard the news, I started to re-arrange  everything I just accomplished . And I couldn't have been happier .   





    So my friend had gone out east that Monday to fish because of higher water and a way better push of fish and it really payed off. The picture of the massive spawning colored male at the top was just one of the several they caught that day.   

                           




                    Bob and Ken and experienced much of the same as a friend and I had experienced the day prior.        
  Timing is prime right now. And with a not so great spring run last year thanks to mother nature, it's really a sigh of relief. 








Coming home that day seeing the blue skies and feeling the warm temps instantly i got in the "yard work" mood. Instant transition. Bitter sweet I guess.









                              

Not ten minutes in the door, I get a text from my wife who's already enjoying the weather...18 hours away. And as she's telling me how nice it was all I could do was think about the seasons end. Which is not far away. Ya, Florida's alright. I could be a beach bum. For sure. Flip flops and cargo shorts almost year round. But then what? What else do you have? There's really no changes? Right? I mean, doesn't that get old? Am I an idiot? I guess that's for you to decide. Then again I live in an area that's not changed or hardly adapted to any new type of culture. Let's face it. To the west they call it "slow-hio".
      Growing up in an ethnic family who speaks  foreign still and going to church at a young age when the pastor hymns more than he talks like a bad opera isn't exactly "new age".
 Watching your father and grandpa work most of their lives away because that's what they feel is necessary and completely normal is about as blue collar as it gets. Example:
     My Mother's Father was just 88 i believe when he found out he has a aggressive form of cancer. That's it. No turning back, lights are dimming. What would you do? What would you be doing at 88? Is he enjoying the last of his days on this shitty planet? nope., He's still running his music store on Memphis and Ridge in Old Brooklyn. And every Tribe home game he's walking around the stadium playing in his 3 pc. Polka band until the 8th inning.
  My Father, offered a mngmt position. Nope. He would rather still be working with his crusty old hands in his trade. WHY? It's repetition. It's all they know. It's what we do in the Great Lakes. The rust belt.
  And sadly, I become what I hate. It's all I know as well. I graduated, got a trade and the rest was history.          

                                                  

                                         
                                               But i wouldn't change it for the world.