Notes from the Dockside
By Mike Yurk
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About this ebook
Mike Yurk
Mike Yurk has been writing about the outdoors for over half a century. He has written for several newspapers and published over a thousand magazine articles in regional and national publications. After a twenty-year career with the United States Army, taking him around Europe and the Middle East as well as the United States, he returned to his home state of Wisconsin where he lives with his angler wife Becky, and is working on his next book.
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Notes from the Dockside - Mike Yurk
THE FIRST CAST
The first cast is filled with hope and promise. It is the beginning of a new day. It is the start of another fishing trip. In some cases it might be the opening of a fishing season.
One year on the opening day of the fishing season in Bavaria, I was fishing a pond at Bamburg. My son, Todd, and I were fishing a small, muddy point that jutted out into the pond. It had not been my first choice of spots but one of the few that were open when we got there after driving over an hour from home.
Todd was using the old standby, a night crawler and I was fishing a spinner. On my first cast the spinner jolted to a stop and I felt a fish surge off for the center of the pond. It put up a short but spectacular fight that had the fish flipping out of the water by the time I finally pulled the fish up on the bank. It was a foot long rainbow trout.
A few minutes later Todd had a fish. It was a wonderful beginning to the season and Todd and I ended the day with a half dozen trout that ranged from twelve to fourteen inches. And it all started with the first cast.
The first cast can at times be the indicator of good things to come. Several months after our opening day in Bamburg, we had moved to Minnesota and in early October Todd and I went on our first fishing trip in our new home state.
It was a glorious fall day. We had blue skies overhead with a light wind that ruffled the surface of the lake. It was Indian summer warm. I had heard of this lake from one of the guys that worked with me. Todd and I were going to fish it for the first time.
We motored across the lake to a rocky point that protruded into the lake from a marshy bay. We started on the marshy side of the point and on my first two casts I caught two bass. As we rounded the tip of the point I flipped my crankbait out across the point. I had the bait halfway back to the boat when it just stopped. I pulled back to set the hook and nothing moved. I would have thought that I was snagged but I finally felt movement as a fish just slowly moved off as if it was completely unconcerned with my bait in its mouth. The fish turned out to be a muskie; the first I ever caught.
We rounded the point and on the other side Todd caught a twenty seven inch northern. At that time it was the biggest fish Todd had ever caught. He was a very happy young fisherman.
Another time some dozen years later, Todd and I were fishing for bass at a lake in Wisconsin on a hot summer day. As we pulled up to the first point where I always start on this lake, I told Todd that I needed to check out a new bait on a reel that I had just fixed. My first cast was just going to be an experiment. On the first cast I caught a bass. In fact, on the first seven casts I caught six bass and missed a fish. It was the beginning of the day and we caught and released over sixty fish. After that day the bait I started the day with became one of my favorites and I knew that reel was in fine shape.
But there are times that the first cast can give us false hope. You catch a fish on the first cast and you say to yourself it is going to be a great day. But that doesn’t always turn out to be the case. Two of my fishing buddies, Arnold and Doug and I were fishing for smallmouth bass one late summer day. Arnold had never used a tube jig before. I briefly explained how a tube jig worked and Arnold cast his bait out.
I was still rigging one of my rods when Arnold yelled that he had a fish. It was a foot long smallmouth. I mentioned that it didn’t take long for Arnold to get the hang of that tube jig and with him catching a fish on the first cast it meant that we were going to hammer fish. We fished for several more hours and Arnold never caught another fish and Doug and I caught only another half a dozen fish and felt lucky to get those.
But more often then that there are no fish or even a strike on the first cast. The first cast leaves us in limbo; questions still unanswered. It is still a good day. It might be another couple of minutes or maybe an hour before the first fish. We might catch lots of fish yet and perhaps only a few. But a new day of fishing has dawned with that first cast and that is always a good thing.
There will always be anticipation with the first cast. That is the way it should be. There should be wonder and excitement to fishing and that adventure always begins with the first cast.
THE RULING
It was an ugly summer sky. It was early evening and my fishing buddy, Doug, and I were fishing a lake not far from home. Above us a black cloud swirled overhead pulling a bright gold cloud into it. Behind it the sky was lime green.
Doug and I were fishing for about an hour. He had one nice bass and I had missed a strike.
We looked around. The land was quiet, eerie quiet. And there wasn’t any wind at first and then we could feel a cool blast of air blow across the lake.
This isn’t looking good,
Doug finally said.
I had to agree. But I hated to leave. I had not caught a fish yet and I did not want to be skunked. The sky looked as bad as I had ever seen it and I had to admit that the situation was getting dangerous.
It was time to leave; fish or no fish. I reluctantly turned the boat towards the landing. I hated to leave before catching a fish but it seemed foolhardy to stay any longer.
By the time we got the boat back on the trailer and had secured the last strap on the boat the wind had begun to whip around, churning the dust on the road. Within a mile up the road, rain pelted down, drumming on the top of the van. Dark skies made it black as if it was nightfall already. When we hit the first little town on the way home, their street lights were on and waves of rain washed across the road.
I think we got out at the right time,
I told Doug. He agreed.
But it still bothered me that I was skunked. We had only been out for a little over an hour and had fished only a portion of this small lake.
Then it dawned on me. If in baseball they can call a game prior to the fifth inning because of weather it is considered a non game to be played later, then why could we not do the same thing in fishing? As we were driving home, with my van being rocked by the wind and rain, I brought it up to Doug.
We talked it over and made a ruling. If you have fished less than half of the time and water that you had planned on and the weather forces you off the water and you have not caught a fish yet then you can not be skunked. The time is not counted as a fishing trip therefore you can not be skunked if you did not catch a fish. It seemed perfectly reasonable to me.
LANTERNS AND STOVES
It seems that I have spent an inordinate amount of time in my life with lanterns and stoves and I never seem to get them to work right. Something always seems to go wrong with them.
When I commanded my last company in Germany my First Sergeant had this beat up, old lantern that we always took to the field with us. It seemed to work great. My tent was the command tent and my First Sergeant, the Operations Sergeant, my Lieutenant and I slept in it. As was our custom, the first person to get up in the morning would light the lantern and our stove and put a pot of water on for coffee.
One morning, on our last field exercise together, the First Sergeant got up to light the lantern. The lantern was hanging from a rope on the center pole of the tent. He lit the lantern and it flared up as it normally would. But usually in a few seconds the flame would die down and then you could adjust the lantern to get the most light from it.
I was about half awake and watched as the First Sergeant was trying to adjust the flame but this time it did not seem to work. Fire started shooting from the top of the lantern and would not die down. The First Sergeant began to curse as he attempted to put out the flame but the blaze continued to dance out of the top of the lantern. He tried to blow it out but that would not work and then he tried to untie the knot but the flame was so hot that it would not let him do that either.
This was not looking good. This whole tent could go up. I rolled over and reached under the cot for my helmet. At night before I went to sleep, I would throw my wallet, knife, glasses, flashlight and anything else that was in my pockets in my helmet that I set under the cot.
I reached for my knife, opened it up and handed it to the First Sergeant. He grabbed the knife, cut the rope and burst out of the tent, throwing the blazing lantern as far as he could. There he stood outside the tent in his underwear cursing and swearing. Then he looked around and saw the entire company formed up for breakfast at the mess tent and they were all watching him. With all the excitement going on the Lieutenant never woke up.
Stoves can be just as bad. Another time when I was in the field I lit the stove and set the water pot on the stove and stepped outside the tent. I was watching the company setting up. The Operations Sergeant was huddled around a hood of a truck with a handful of other sergeants looking at a map. He looked up and yelled to me that I had a fire in my tent. I turned around to see the top of the field table on fire. Oh shit. I raced in and quickly put it out.
The stove had a small leak in the fuel hose. I did everything to fix it but every now and then it would leak fuel and ignite and of course set the top of the field table on fire. Now I should have gotten another stove. That would have been the prudent thing to do but for some reason I kept hanging onto that old stove.
On my last deployment to Turkey, I got up one of the first mornings that we were there and lit the stove to get the coffee going. I noticed fuel leaking from the side of the stove and it began to spread across the top of the field table and then it flared up into flames.
With that, the Platoon Sergeant, still in his sleeping bag looked up and said use water, sir.
I tried to blow out the flame which normally would work and then I would wipe up the fuel and all would be good.
This time it didn’t work but I kept trying. The Platoon Sergeant said again, use water, sir.
His voice was a little louder now.
I tried to blow it out and the flame spread across more of the table. Use water, sir
he said again and this time he was louder yet.
But I felt it was just a minute or so before the flame would go out and all would be fine. I tried again and still no luck. By this time the entire table top was on fire. This time the Platoon Sergeant screamed, You got to use water.
With that he jumped out of his sleeping bag and grabbed a plastic bottle of water and doused the top of the desk. The flame was now out. A couple of minutes later I tried to light the stove again and it worked fine after that.
We had water all over the plastic ground cloth and it was always squishy after that which made walking around the tent in stocking feet a bit unpleasant. Once again, the Lieutenant never woke up. He seemed to be always missing the excitement.
But my Platoon Sergeant was traumatized. Every morning after that, when I got up to light the stove, he would get out of his sleeping bag and sit on his cot with a bottle of water in hand. We never had any more trouble with the stove after that but my Platoon Sergeant wasn’t taking any chances.
GOING TO THE BOAT DOCTOR
It is still winter outside. There are snow drifts on my front lawn and the temperature is below freezing. It seems like a long way from spring yet. But I am beginning to think about spring and fishing.
It is time to visit The Boat Doctor.
I will be leaving for a ten day trip to Mexico in a week and when I get back I am hoping that I can get out on the river for walleye fishing. By that time the weather should be better and I do not want to be wasting time having the boat worked on. So I will now pull the boat out and take it to The Boat Doctor for its annual spring check up.
Our boat is stored in the garage. Since the final fishing trip last fall the boat has become a repository for all sorts of things that need to be stored during the winter. There are boxes with stuff for my wife’s rummage sale, other boxes that need to be thrown out, the third back seat of the van, some tools and other odds and ends.
My buddy, Scott tells me that I should be ashamed to be abusing my boat that way. I tell him that I do feel guilty but with only a two car garage there is little that I can do. My wife’s car is in the other half of the garage and my van is parked outside. I do have priorities. The boat always comes first before any car or truck.
Before I can get the boat out I need to unload all the junk that has been thrown in it over the winter. When I do this, I apologize to the boat for misusing it and beg its forgiveness.
There have been times that ice and snow covered the driveway. There is an incline in my driveway to get to the road and I wonder, when it is still icy and snow covered, if I am going to get up the driveway dragging the boat. But I have always managed to get to the road.
One year I drove to the Boat Doctor in the middle of a blizzard. At stop signs and stop lights I got some very weird looks from people in the cars and trucks that pulled up next to me. I know that they thought I was nuts but what better time is there to take your boat to The Boat Doctor.
When I see the Boat Doctor I tell him that I will pick the boat back up in a couple of weeks. I tell him that the boat must be stored inside one of their buildings while I’m gone. My wife, The Bass Queen, would never forgive me if something would happen to the boat while we were gone.
I talk to the Boat Doctor about new batteries and a tune up to the engine. And don’t forget to check out the electrical connections. It seems that I have more problems with electrical gadgets on the boat then anything else. Also I ask him to look after the trailer.
As I leave, I always feel bad when I leave the boat behind. But I will be back soon and then we will go fishing. Besides the Boat Doctor will take good care of it and make it better.
NUMBERS
I got this comment off the internet. It was attributed to that social commentator, critic and comedian George Carlin. If he didn’t say that, it sounds like something he would say.
It was on how to stay young. He said, Throw out nonessential numbers. This includes age, weight and height. Let the doctors worry about them. That is why you pay them.
There is much truth to that. Numbers seem to dominate our lives in today’s world. Everyone wants to know your social security number and telephone numbers. And today most homes have multiple telephone numbers with cell phones and pagers and other gadgets.
There are way too many superfluous numbers floating around our heads. We need to get rid of those numbers and concentrate on the important ones. Such as how many days to the opening day of fishing season? What are the limits? How many days can I go fishing this year? How far is it to my favorite lake? How many fish do I need for a fish fry? How many dozen minnows will I need when I go walleye fishing? How many cases of beer will I need when I do my fly-in-trip to Canada? How many spinning rods do I need to have when I go fishing? How deep is the lake? At what depth will I find fish?
These are important numbers. Anything else especially phone numbers, is completely unnecessary. And let your doctor worry about your blood pressure.
THE PACKERS IN PANAMA
The town square of Los Santos, which in the interior of Panama, is a mass of people; most of them are drunk. It is Carnival time which is Panamas version of Mardi Gras.
We had gotten there a couple of days earlier after fishing for peacock bass at Lake Gatun. A buddy of mine, Ted, is married to a girl from Panama and we were staying with her parents in the town of Los Santos.
It occurred to me, as I looked over the swaying, dancing, singing throng of humanity that covered the town square that Ted, my wife, The Bass Queen and I were probably the only people for many miles around that spoke English as our native language.
About every hour or so the dancing reached a new level of frenzy as two trucks, with bands with horns blaring and dancing girls, at opposite ends of the square began to drive slowly around the center of town. Everyone, jumping up and down, arms around each other and passing bottles of assorted alcoholic beverages, fell in behind the trucks. Fire trucks were staged along the route and would hose everyone down with water. It was a hell of party.
Three weeks earlier, The Bass Queen and I and some other friends watched in Wisconsin as our team, the Green Bay Packers beat the New England Patriots in Super Bowl XXXI. Outside it was cold and drifts of snow covered the lawn.
But now in Panama we did not have to worry about the cold and snow. I was wearing a Packer baseball cap. I had worn that cap when we had been fishing for peacock bass and I was still wearing it for the big party in Los Santos.
I am walking across the town square being jostled by the multitude of people all jammed together, dancing and singing and drinking. I am about halfway across the square, looking for Ted and The Bass Queen, when I hear someone bellow Hey, how about those Packers?
I look around and then hear it again. It is coming from a young man sitting on a stone curb alongside a sidewalk. I walk over and tell him that I am from Wisconsin. He laughs and tells me that he is from San Diego. I guess that there are four gringos in Los Santos. His girl friend was from Los Santos and he was there with her, visiting her family.
I think that it truly means that the Green Bay Packers are the world champions.
OVERLOOKED
It was one of those spots that I have passed by for years. It is an acre or so pond of water that is connected to one of my favorite lakes by a small, shallow trench. It is tough to get into and by late summer it seems to be a weed infested, smelly pothole. Sometimes in the early spring, shortly after ice out, I have gone in there and found bluegills in the shallow water.
However, by the opening