Tuesday, July 10, 2018

White River Reflections

Rule #8:  Always clean your guns after shooting.

June 5   This year's inventory:

Rods: 

7.5 ft.          BPS                          Micro-Lite / Fiberglass             Power: UL      Action: Slow
7.0 ft.          BPS                           Micro-Lite / Graphite              Power: ML      Action: Fast
5.0  ft.         BPS                          Micro-Lite / Fiberglass             Power: UL      Action: Slow
6.5 ft.          Daiawa                    "COSMOACE" / Carbon          Power: MH     Action: Medium
7.0 ft.          Quantum                  KVD HSX6(8?)2 / Graphite     Power: M         Action: Fast
5.5 ft.          Shakespeare             Ugly Stik / Graphite                  Power: L         Action: Fast
5.5ft.           Shimano                   FX255OA                                 Power: M         Action: Fast

---> Also, two very old fiberglass casting rods, given to me by a good friend from his late father's fishing collection.
---> A "Rummage Sale Fly Rod," 8 ft.

Reels:

Daiwa         Model Unknown       Medium              Rear Drag
Okuma        Stratus V  25             Light                  Front Drag
Pflueger      President  20             Light                   Front Drag
Pflueger      President 20              Light                   Front Drag
Quantum    XS                             Medium              Rear Drag
Shimano     Model Unknown       Medium             Rear Drag

----> Shakespeare automatic fly reel attached to "Rummage Sale Fly Rod."

Last year, I found a satchel to use as a "soft" tackle box.  It is just the right size to hold the medium size tackle trays, and I can fitin  at least four of them--with some extra stuff on top and in the side, front and rear pockets.

Earlier this season, I found a similar bag for Small Fry and got her a couple of the appropriately sized trays.


White River Reflections

Rule #5:  Never wear your pants inside your boots, unless they're rubber (your boots, that is . . . if your pants are rubber, well, there just isn't a rule that covers that!).

Wednesday, May 9 

Small Fry and I started the season today by fishing the "Fisher Ponds."  As I've explained earlier, these ponds were at one time small and very deep gravel pits--probably spring fed--maintained by my uncle.  He and his wife also built a wonderful home on the banks of these pits.

I remember learning to fish "Indiana-style" here at these ponds when we came from Montana for vacation in the summer.  When we moved back here, I fished these two connected ponds for years until my uncle died and my aunt finally sold the place and I lost my best fishing hole.  As luck would have it, the folks who bought the property from my aunt are members at my church and one day, out of the blue, they told me I could fish there again!

It's very different now.  The current owners have changed its appearance greatly.  My uncle had a kennel for bird dogs built into the entire length of one side of the pond.  He--like my grandpa and the other brothers--was a barely civilized hillbilly from southern Indiana.  To get from one side of the pond to the other, he simply stretched the longest 2 X 12 boards he could find and called it a "bridge."

To knock back the surface weeds, they invested in a "herd" of grass carp, and have applied a pretty serious dark dye [I have found out it's called "Aqua-Shade"] to keep the sun from penetrating too deeply into the water.  Also, where there once was a small john boat I used to fish from, I now need to stick to the shore--and because I appreciate the opportunity to fish these wonderful ponds, Small Fry, The Boy, and I have set boundaries--we don't walk anywhere close to their house.  We've all agreed that we should keep from intruding on their lives as much as possible.  To that end also, we only fish there during the weekdays.

We brought a couple of rods each, a couple of tackle boxes, and--of course--a folding chair for me!  My first cast was  a green and white Wacky-Worm.  Before casting, of course, I said a prayer for Doc's Grandpa.  Grandpa was one of my very favorite fishing partners--but above that, he was a treasured friend.  "Pete" and I fished together even when his grandson, Doc, wasn't available to go.  He was truly an exceptional man.  I try to start every season with a cast dedicated to him. People who knew him would probably say it would be more appropriate if I threw a lure that could and/or would never catch a fish.  Grandpa owned some of the most bizarre-looking lures I have ever seen.  Also, we spent an inordinate amount of time pulling those weird-looking lures out of the tops of bank-side trees!

This was one of the most remarkable days I've had fishing with the Fry!  On her second cast of a bronze Rapala Floating minnow, she caught a large,  I think 3 year-old, bass.  I caught my first on the next cast, but then got a tangle on my reel.  By the time I got untangled--in about 10 minutes--Small Fry had caught 6 more bass!  After that, I was catching fish about one every 5 or 6 casts, but she kept up her "every other cast" pace!  In just about 25 minutes, we had 11 fish--all great eating size.  So, we stopped.  We didn't have enough ice or a cooler to keep things fresh, so that was all we could do.

We filleted and cooked all of them that night and they were just delicious!!  I am, once again, extremely pleased to be married to a woman who will let me clean fish in the kitchen.  In fact, I was going to pan fry them on the gas grill on the deck, but couldn't get the oil up to temperature and so had to even cook them in the kitchen!

All but one of the fish was female, with roe.  None of them had ANY food in their stomachs.  I think there is no doubt that the strikes were hunger-inspired.  Neither of us saw any nests, so, though it's odd, I don't think the fish have spawned yet.

Some things we are going to consider for the future:

1.  We're going to choose one of our many coolers to designate as a fish cooler.  The folks who own the Fisher Ponds want every fish caught to come out of the water--either to be eaten or thrown away.  If, though, we happen to catch a truly large bass, we'll throw that back.
2.  We need to keep on the pond at least once a week so we can better ascertain its rhythms.  To figure this out, I need to start my season earlier--even in late winter, as soon as the ice is gone.

Tuesday, May 15, 2018



November 15, 2017


Yeah, you know that when you have to include the YEAR in the date of a new post, you've neglected your writing!

To be fair, though, this blog has been largely a site based on outdoor observations and activities--and this past year or so has been a strangely interior time.  No qualification there; it's not good or bad, it just is.  Physically and otherwise, I have been inside until just recently.

And, as is usually the case now, it's my kids that have dragged my aging ass back into the woods and along the river.  Adam has continued his interest in shooting, and though he has moved a little over an hour away, we have been out several times.  In fact, just two weeks ago, we hunted my ex-wife's uncle's wood lot (only in Muncie is such a thing possible!).  Getting to the lot was challenging.  Normally, I can just drive my truck out to the site, about half a mile from the road.  But the field surrounding the lot, this year in soy beans, hadn't been harvested yet, so we parked between a derelict combine and the shell of the house trailer my ex's grandmother used to live in.  We soon found out that a field of beans is like a lot of things, very different when you're in the middle.  From the road, a field of beans looks like a mist rising from the dirt, almost fragile, and the stalks appear to be . . . oh, maybe a foot, foot and a half tall.

No.

In fact, soy beans are bristly.  They hold on to your pants like they NEED them, and they're about waist high and tightly spaced.  Fortunately,  we were not the first explorers to encounter this jungle.  Deer, and maybe people, but judging from the pointy halves of the tracks, certainly deer--had carved out a relatively easier way to pass through the field.

We didn't have any luck, but it was certainly fun getting out in the woods with Adam.  I wish so much that I had access to better hunting area to share with him.  This coming season (2018--2019) I'm going to make a concerted effort to expand our possible areas.  So far, we have:

1.  The aformentioned ex-in-law woods--although, this is a much bigger woods than the small part we have hunted so far.

2.  Sue Fisher's "ravine" area.  The only way to make this a reasonable place to hunt would be for Adam and I to work on the lot with some machetes or some similar "instrument of destruction."  As it is, there is almost NO way for a man to be quiet making his way through the tangles, and when you add another person, and it's amazing we saw anything living!

3.  Though I have not hunted it, Adam and I can shoot squirrels at the Monroe Township Conservation Club.  Last year, I saw a guy parked close to the rifle range and as I was driving by his truck, he came out of the woods with a handful of squirrels.  He explained to me where the majority of the squirrels were to be found (frighteningly near the target area of the rifle range).

And, that's pretty much it.  I don't own a shotgun with which I could take rabbits--or even deer--so right now, squirrels are about all that's on the menu.  I think I could kill a deer with my .357, but if you ask anyone who has ever seen me shoot a handgun, the overwhelming consensus would be that I'd need to sneak up to about ten feet away, and even then--it'd be sketchy!!  So, to use the .357, I'd have to mount a handgun scope on it--and I don't have the money to do that any time soon.