Sunday, January 17, 2010

Hope or Insanity

Inadvertently in December I had planned a meeting for this Friday morning in Morganton. How could I have possibly known that the Arctic grip my southern mountains had been under for over a month would loosen that very day, with a hopeful forecast of sunny and sixty degrees. How could I have known that my meeting would go spectacularly and at noon I would have a fly rod in my trunk and be wide open to hit Wilson Creek. OK, maybe I did put my gear in the trunk the night before, but never the less, it looked like the fish gods were smiling.

Ice lined the boulders of the gorge section and flat shallow pools boasted massive thick sheets in the deep shadows where the sun couldn't penetrate and the nip in the air reminded me that it was still January. As I pulled off at the ancient mill ruins two old piscators, complete with cigars walked by me. I stopped and rolled down the window, "Gents, how are you today?" "You don't look like your goin fishin, look like your supposed to be on a sales call." He responded. I smiled, "you haven't seen what's in the trunk" we chuckled as I eased by. The location and nature of the large stream with easy casting and not much need to wade around makes this delayed harvest on Wilson a veritable mecca for the more senior or otherwise unoccupied immobile casters of Western NC. And they were out in force.

They say hope springs eternal and they also define insanity as doing the same thing and expecting a different result. I'll let you decide which applies. The fish seemed to be stacked up in the big deep pools and I spent most the afternoon at one deep hole watching nice trout swim around my various bottom bouncing offerings avoiding them with disdain. It doesn't take much of that before you stop "fishing" and start hypothesizing why the fish aren't biting while you switch flies and techniques. "Waters just too cold" came the answer from a big rock above me in a distinct country accent which belied the decked out fishing gear. So we chatted and lamented our luck and analyzed the reasons we hadn't caught anything. I was surprised when he told me these fish were acting like the bull trout he'd fished for in Idaho. "Oh yeah, where abouts in Idaho?" Big Creek was the response. I was simultaneously surprised and disappointed. I didn't think Big Creek was that well known, certainly didn't expect to run into someone on Wilson Creek who'd been there. Come to find out he's got a place out there and has fished it many times. His favorite section is below monument where the river snakes back and forth a lot. He also said people float it and that we could float the whole thing down to the middle fork. Camp at the confluence and then you'd float the middle fork out about 20miles to a take out.

So, the day wasn't a total loss and I admit that I'm insane, I've never caught a fish in January, probably February either, but I'll probably try again next year when the weather clears a bit and the corner office feels more like a coffin. In fact I'm already trying to justify going tomorrow. Maybe insanity springs eternal.

5 comments:

Pablo said...

My O My, can you believe that? What in the cuss was that fella from ID doing in NC? Let alone blabbing about Big Creek? wow, what a small fishy world in which we cast.

The Gov'na said...

I'm going back tomorrow. Can't leave it alone.

Pablo said...

serious? you are a sick man. I talked to HOndo about going out tomorrow.. exercise in futility there.

Anonymous said...

I'll get out and fish with ya. I'm insane. Did a suicide day trip to the Green and caught nothing but 35+ mph winds.

Pablo said...

That is insane Rook! man o man. well, I didn't get out today. not that 10 deg weather is that inviting.