Home Waters
For the last five or six years I have finished the
trout season in southwestern Wisconsin, in an area known as the driftless
region. The glaciers that scoured out
the Great Lakes and most of the rest of what is now known as Wisconsin never
made it there, so the topography is both ancient and unique. There are many valleys and hollows and many
of those valley floors have cold, clear streams coursing through them. Those streams are home to wild trout
populations famous for their abundance and their size. I have found it the perfect place to finish
the trout season. The fish are
cooperative, and the summer crowds, and many of the summer insects are
gone. The only problem I have with the
driftless is that it is a good four-hour drive.
However, this year the cards have been stacked against
me. By late July I knew that it was
going to be difficult to squeeze that end-of year fishing trip into the
calendar. Two weeks ago, I admitted
defeat and shifted my sights to an autumn day of trout fishing much closer to
home. Today was the day. The weather
forecast called for sharply dropping temps and rain later in the week, so it
was now or never.
I pondered the place.
Where one chooses to end something as important as the trout season
requires deep thought. The Prairie River
is good in late season and being 90 minutes north the autumn colors should be starting. The Willow is south, and the browns should be
cruising. I know a myriad of smaller
streams where the brookies will be eager and sporting their spawning
colors. The Pine has been good to me in
late season before. I have occasionally
used this last trip to fish someplace new, and that has led to happy memories
of the Tomorrow and the Embarrass. But
after much thought I knew in my heart all along where I would go. It was time to head for home waters.
Every trout chaser has his own home waters. Mine happens to be the South Branch of the
Oconto, just north of the little town of Mountain. This was the first big water I ever
fished. This is where I caught my first
big brown on a fly that I had tied. In
my younger years I filled many a creel here.
But most importantly, this is where I fished with my brother-in-law,
Ron. The in-law designation is technically
correct, but as far as I am concerned, he was my full-blooded brother. He is the one who taught me all about stream
trout fishing. Someone at work had told
him about the stretch of the Oconto and we sort of discovered it together.
I have many happy memories of fishing there with Ron;
my favorite centers on that first big brown trout I mentioned earlier. I was using my fly rod and not catching much
while Ron was filling his creel using night crawlers. That was until just before noon when a caddis
fly hatch filled the air and the trout shifted their total feeding focus. I was standing in just a couple of inches of
water at the edge of a gravel bar, casting out into the deeper pool above and
catching fish after fish. Ron, who had
been very happy just minutes before now stood upstream in a bit of a pout. With the next strike, I raised my rod and it
arced deeply, as the big brown tugged back.
It took me several minutes to guide him into my landing net, which he
nearly filled. Ron waded over to see my
prize close up. He reached into the net,
“Let’s get a good look at him!” Briefly,
all too briefly, Ron held him up to admire the large trout. Suddenly the trout twisted free, and I
watched Ron pounce again and again at the large trout that was making good his escape
in just two inches of water. One last
pounce failed as the big brown trout finally made it to deeper water and
disappeared. We packed up and drove home
in silence.
It has been 50 years since that big fish. It is 40 years since I fished with Ron; and
it is ten years since Ron passed away. I
did forgive him – eventually, for accidently “releasing” my big trout. We even got to the point where we both could
laugh about it – although it took a while.
When I packed my gear early this morning, I included
Ron’s memory. I wanted him to be with me
again. He was. I wish I could say that I caught another big
brown, but I did not. My favorite part
of this day was taking a seat on a mid-river boulder just below the
rapids. I enjoyed the morning sun on my
face and sparkling on the water. The
maples were showing splashes of orange and red and yellow. I listened to the river sing. I was at peace on home waters.
His peace <><
Deacon Dan
Photo by Mark McGregor on Unsplash
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