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One That Snook Up On Me.
by Bob Bellon
“When is a fishing trip
more than a fishing trip?”
Sounds like the start
of one of those Batman episodes where he faces that twisted green nemesis
“The Riddler”. Any non-fisher would consider the question frivolous, responding,
“who cares!”. A logical, practical person might labor over the statistical
math and pronounce that “the value of said trip would be determined by
the number of fish related experiences......”! The pragmatist would say
“a trip is a trip”, while the pessimist would cry “who cares anyway?”
No such philosophical
notions were crowding my thinking one early Saturday morn this past March.
What I was thinking was that I had been working A LOT! It had been well
over a month since I wet a line. Circumstances beyond my control had taken
their toll on my recreational hours for far too long now. I committed myself
to abandon church, the family and the beckoning seventh day of work that
lie ahead. I decided it was time to revisit the best flat in my portfolio.
The process began
on Friday. As always I picked up the paper strictly for the purpose of
reviewing the weekly tide charts. I know that I am not the only angler
who affects the proficiency ratings at work on Fridays by plotting the
weekend from these charts. Sunday morning looked good! Saturday I worked,
further justifying my decision to fish the next day. I pondered whether
to fish a little, local spot that had done very well for a friend. It was
just ten minutes away. That would allow some time for errands and eating
better and it would humor the household. Yeah, it was a much more practical
idea (and we all go fishing to be more practical, right?!). It was what
the responsible man would do, I did something else! I had to! First off
that spot is 300 feet off a major thoroughfare, behind a Hyatt, full of
jet skiers and on the landing path for the local airport. That’s not what
I go fishing for, even if it will do in a pinch. Instead I resigned myself
to travel a short 55 miles to my favorite flat from the season past. It
is a lovely secret place, hidden from the road side, too shallow from the
bay side. It is rarely visited by but a few airboat and jet ski tourists
and even fewer anglers. Quiet is what I was longing for and this was the
time I had first found this flat a year earlier. It fished well in the
spring last year, so we would go see about this year.
Saturday night we
performed that Equipment Ritual. We do it every trip but the one we perform
before the first real outing of the year is a “High Holy Day”. It is the
revisiting of the routines from seasons upon season past, all form and
shape of memory visit at this time and some illusions of what lie ahead
dominate the script. In spite of all that I still got through the
checklist - flies, lubes, leaders, water, etc., pack the lunch, fill the
tank and fast to sleep.
Another common phenomena
of this first outing of the season came to visit, the “Christmas (Island?)
Syndrome”. You know where you can’t get to sleep for an hour or two dreaming
about what might be under the tree (mangrove, of course) the next morning.
Then comes the big joke, where you open your eyes and know that the 5AM
alarm ring is a long way off. The roosters are all sleeping as you cock
an eye to the dark window and guess its 4AM. The light goes on and right
you are, you’re way too amped to sleep so you leave earlier than early.
The ride that morning was familiar and sweet. Something about driving in
that hour before the light of dawn, when you can smell and feel the day
better than you can see it, brings the memories of a hundred other mornings
roaring in. Long unseen friends came rolling up beside me and for an hour
I let them come and go, their fond memories giving me all the company I
needed for a solitary hour’s drive.
I pulled into my
old parking spot, slipped out of the truck, into the waders and unto the
flat like it was a waltz I’d performed for ages. Sliding off to meet the
peace of the day you never know what lies ahead, but I had an old friend
named Scott and a new sweetie called Fin Nor with me. They would assist
me with the challenges of the day. Walking both light in spirit and gear
we waded through the deep spot at the old wooden bridge pilings and out
onto the mile long flat.
The first part of
this flat is a sand bottomed, slightly deeper bowl with random patches
of grass. Lots of ladyfish have started us off here in the past. Today
it was quiet, the breeze steady but mild. There was no nervous water so
I picked the edges as my first target. After two I saw a surface disturbance,
from the shape of it I guessed it was a turning fish on the chase. Being
nervous about whether this flat would be as grand as it was last year I
was glad to see fish. I was anxious to reconnect and rekindle my passion
for this old friend. Pulling off the slack, I prepared to cast my golden
home tie to the mark. Then I stopped for a calm moment. Something was missing,
there was a void. At first I could not put a finger on it but in a flash
it was apparent. What I felt was nothing, and it felt good. Except for
this fish, that wind, the drag setting, my stripping technique there was
nothing on my mind! As Dr. King(fish) might say I was “free at last, free
to cast, free at last!”. I took a deep and sobering breath and just before
I began my cast my mouth opened and whispered softly, “ give me this first
one and they all go free today”.
The loop rolled out
perfectly. The wind lofted the fly and leader at an angle that did not
spook the fish with slap. Three quick pulls put the fly in front of his
last known position. I saw the water bulge as he turned - strip, strip,
“make it look like its fleeing”, pressure, strip again and lift and WHAM!!
- “he’s on!!” The fish went up on it’s tail and did that impersonation
of a spirit walking on water sailing effortlessly on its tail while vertical.
He went down and up and up and down and OH NO! -its a snook! I could
see the line on his side as he glowed silver in the early morning sky.
None of us had ever taken a snook on this flat before. Minutes later he
was in one hand and two feet long! I thought about breaking my promise,
for some time I thought. In the end I realized that offending the fish
gods was not the way to start a season-long relationship with this lovely
place. As the snook swam off he grinned (or grimaced) and I smiled for
keeping my promise.
For the next hour
I slowly waded up the flat. The sand spots in the middle of the journey
were promising but quiet today. No mullet jumped, no bait sprayed, no birds,
no bulges - so I walked. At the top third of this bayou there is a little
island with oyster bar fingers on either side. It is a good spot to find
reds and trout and as I approached it I became aroused. An anomaly was
occurring! As hard as I might try I could not name the change, I could
not see it, it was not a smell, it was....FISH!! It was that intuitive
jolt nurtured by years of conversing on a line with them. I felt fish!
The water was knee
deep, the grass was predominate but short, the wind was at my back, it
was time. Swish, swish - 70 feet fly out. Strip, strip - 7 inches come
back and wham! He’s on! Tug, tug, and 7 seconds later - he’s off. O.K.,
no problem, let’s do it again. The next cast was a repeat of the first
including the early release. I could see a whole school of gold-sided reds
in front of me. No time to cry over spilt nuggets, take a deep breath and
think! Let’s strike a little slower, sink a little lower, let’s do it again.
Eighty feet flew out and a few strips later a gorgeous 18’ drum was on
and soon at hand.
For the next hour
and a half I hooked up and landed 13 more reds. Two were well over 30”s,
none were under 18”s. I watched them turn on the fly and flash that copper
color. The bigger ones used half my backing. Short 40 to 70 foot casts
were all it took to hook onto these feisty friends. The same chartreuse
clouser went through three rounds of shock tippet changing and fed all
the agreeable opponents. During that afternoon on the flat I wound up with
a total of 22 redfish landed, a few others lost. At one sand-hole I hooked
6 fish on 6 consecutive casts. It was the kind of day you dream about the
night before you go fishing. All the fish went back, as they do on most
days. I gave up, out of sheer exhaustion, and turned to finish the hour
long walk back to the truck. On the way I whispered a reverent “thank you”
and the wind seemed to answer “you’re welcome”. As it did I remembered
the promise I had made earlier and how well rewarded I felt for my act
of integrity. I laughed at myself, as I came up on the spot where the first
red was played, for waxing poetic. Was it really the Master Caster who
gave me this day or Miss Fortune or Lady Luck or Sir Cumstances. Whatever
the reason it was a great day of fishing and that was enough to know. What
more could an angler ask for. As I settled into my denial of divine
intervention I let one more cast rip out to the pale sandbar. It fell to
the side of the bar and half way back the line straightened abruptly. A
strip strike put me onto what I hoped was the last Red of the day. In a
few seconds it was obvious that this was no Red. I had hooked and landed
a 19” trout. Just when I thought there was nothing else that could improve
the day I was presented with my first flats Triple Play. The only one,
I was later told, seen on eight years of fishing this flat. I was humbled
again.
Half way back up
the bayou my hips began to ache some but a smile persisted. I passed the
spot were integrity snook up on me earlier. I smiled even wider. When is
a fishing trip more than a fishing trip? Its when that day on the water
feels more like living than the hundred days that came before it. It’s
when all we need to be completely happy is a good cast, fair winds, tight
knots. When the thousands of seconds chasing fish add up to one thin permanent
smile that won’t come off your face even when you’re aching and tired.
That is why we are anglers, thank God, and maybe its why its time we snook
out again!
You can the author, Bob Bellon at:
ffbob@gte.net
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