Sunday, July 13, 2014

Flowers and Fish - June 01, 2014



The grass is green and I have been after it about three times a week. My lawn is what could be called ‘postal stamp’ in size. It is by far the smallest lawn I have ever had to tend to. What makes the ‘cutting’ experience challenging is all of the added obstacles. My bride is an avid flower gardener and yearly she adds more to the property. “You cut down my hibiscus again! I even had a metal marker there to show you where it was.” When this happens I duck my head in shame and try to move on with life. “I see that you are also getting too close to the pachysandra. I have been working on that bed for years and just now have it where I want it.” “Those vines will continue out over the lawn and swallow the cabin, if I don’t trim them back from time to time. I am sorry about the hibiscus but we have to come to a compromise on the other.” My bride could see that my sorry face was saddened, having let her down and consoled me; “Why don’t you get in the boat and go fishing? Before she could turn away I was gone.
Not only did I get out once but three times last week. I was hoping to find some perch but had little success in finding any. One evening I caught two that were not much bigger than my jig. The next day I found a school but they too where all in the six inch range. After poking about a bit I caught a small mouth bass from another spot. The area was loaded with bass! Four of them followed the fish to the boat, gliding along the bottom. The one on the hook was hefty female at about four pounds. The other smaller bass chased her as soon as she went back into the river. It looked like the small mouth were staging to spawn and selecting sites; they are back in good numbers.
Today I got out on the river a bit after 9AM, to try again. There were still no perch but it was a fine day to bob around in the sun. I tried several locations around Carleton Island, just putting along and watching the bottom for fish. I found bass in schools and a few lumbering pike attached to the bottom, looking like logs. A ship passed me and trailed off down river with a smoke stream in tow. I was surprised by the lack of wake from the big steel hulled vessel. There were pleasure boats that went by leaving bigger ones. Perhaps they have been slowed down to lessen shore erosion.
Up by Fort Haldimand the lilacs were in full bloom, clinging to a rock ledge where they have been for many years. I wonder who had planted them and if they were as old as the bygone fort. Were they from the French or English soldiers as a reminder of home? The light purple flowers grace the island in a long hedge row, as wild as the river herself. I dropped a line with a rubber minnow; it was taken by a northern pike. The taunt line began to peel off of the reel. This was a surprise; I was in shallow water and never expected a pike to be there. This was a good test for my newest ultra light rod.
My setup was intended for perch, with four pound test on a four foot rod, not a 30” pike. The graphite rod bent and did a fine job absorbing the dashing runs of the fish. I had it to the surface and was about to take a photo when it took one more dive. The jig came loose from the fish’s jaw and everything went slack. I watched the pike settle back down to the bottom where it soon blended in with all of the green surroundings. One thing is for sure from the experience; I will have a lot of fun this season with my new rod and reel. All I need now is some perch to come back…
Back at my dock the wild columbine have been blooming. I so admire them for their structure and colors. They are a unique flower that has always reminded me of a jester’s hat. Each year they rebound and each year I am always thrilled to see them. Somehow they are able to cling to very little soil on the bank, which is quit steep. There have been times when the blooms have been small and fragile. This year they are as full as I have ever seen a wild variety get… just perfect. My bride and I have been working on flower beds around the cabin. Each of has gone a bit overboard with our purchases. Who can blame us after the winter that the river saw. There is nothing like brilliant blooms to push away the memory of iced roads, broken trees and months of snow.
Driving to a greenhouse yesterday I mentioned that one would never believe a winter ever happened. “Look how green it all is now, from the grass to the tops of the trees. It is easy to forget the short winter that we enjoyed.” A cold as February stare came my way; “What do you mean ‘we’ enjoyed? I remember you mopping around the cabin with nothing to do and complaining about how stark the world looked. You even complained about having too much ice to fish on!” When we got to the green house I scooped up a variety of flowers, she grabbed some new hostas. Together we buried the long winter under the splendid table that is spring turning into summer.

Mike LaDue, Sunday, June 01, 201