ArticleTrader.com
  

 Main Menu

  Home
  Member Login
  Forum
  Submit Article
  RSS Feeds
  Contact Us
  About

 Services

  Article Distribution
  Link Building

 Tools

  ArticleMS
  Directory Tracker

 Categories

  Automotive
  Business
  Computers
  Entertainment
  Finance
  Food
  Health
  Home and Family
  Internet
  Legal
  Science
  Self Improvement
  Shopping
  Society
  Sports
  » Bodybuilding
  » Extreme
  » Fishing
  » Golf
  Technology
  Travel
  Writing

88 users online.



 
  » Category Sponsors
  Get Your Link Here - Limited Time Bargain at only $11/month!

Home » Sports » Fishing » A Day too Full to Fix
Article Stats:
122 Views
733 Words

Get Html Code
PDF | Print View | Post to your Site

A Day too Full to Fix

Submitted by ryanbell
Wed, 27 Feb 2008

A day too full to fix with the weekend upon me and I’m closing a week with no sleep and the evasion of stress. A good friend and I headed to southern CT’s coast for a business meeting with a fly shop owner that a local guide/ friend set up.

Fish stories and business talk wrap up a new friendship with a group of guys, as the windiest, wettest, and coldest rod casting demo of 06’ took place, we finished our business.

My travel companion and I followed a friend and guide a little north up the coast to a spot we were supposed to fish in the early morning on the right tide before anything took place.

Lack of sleep combined with a burnt out body from a crazy work week, broke my will to start the day with good fishing. Causing me to settle for the worst time and conditions the day could present this point near the mouth of the river
My motto: “you can’t catch a fish if your not fishing” sometimes you just can’t catch a fish.

On water we had never fished. We followed instructions from my local friend and fish guru and began our mile walk to the end of this point near the mouth of the river. With a beautiful 40 degrees, rain, 30 plus mph windy day on our plate, We headed out to fish southern CT. In the past, my luck and skills haven’t always matched up to my local waters where I guide. So far work has kept me off the water, and night fishing is not yet rockin’ and rollin’. Fearless of the warning that we are fishing the wrong tide and will not catch fish , we charge to the point; “ there are schoolies, we’ll still get into some fish” .It may not be the countless numbers the morning bite produced, but fish none the less.
5 casts and the phone rings, my local buddy asks “did you get fish yet?” “No” “told ya” he says, “wait until 6:30pm when the tide starts to change. It already 3:30 and I have to be off the water at a quarter to 6. As I get off the phone, a few minuets later a hit, and a fish! First Striper of the season. It came much later than I’m used to. Work has also kept me off Martha’s Vineyard, and I’m not booked with client until May.

There’s a light at the end of this dark tunnel. We are sure to catch more fish. Two hours pass and neither of us have had a single hit.

Meanwhile on the south side of the shore, gulls are working the heck out of this cove. Barely able to fly in the wind, they are a bitter sweet reminder that the fish are there, but not near us. At this time my gut starts to tell me that it’s time to leave, not for food , but the small still voice that says “its over, your not getting one more fish” This voice has lead to many great days of fishing, and has also ended some bad ones.

Is this way too much work for one small fish? This is for a guy who spends most of his time throwing 16 inch eels at 2:00 am to catch cow bass. I’m cold, tired and run down. My friend has had a hard second year of fly fishing. No steel heard for him this winter, skunked today. I look over with concern that the crack in the joy of fishing might have set in on his face. All I see is a big bright, red, wet wind beaten smile. “you wanna go or keep fishing?” he said. I’ve gotta go it’s two and a half hours home and I still have to meet this guy about a fly fishing thing.
It’s not always about the fish or even the time on the water. It ‘s about getting out there when the rest of the world is not and beating a path through the jungle of life to get your sliver of escape in. Weather its one hour or a twenty hour hard core run, stop, Listen to Your Passion, its always worth it.

About the Author

Ryan is a guide along the Connecticut coast, he runs Connecticut fishing charters there.


Source: ArticleTrader.com
Creative Commons License

Comments

No comments posted.

Add Comment

Your Name:


Your Email:


Comment

Enter the code shown

Visual CAPTCHA

 Top Authors

 1 stickystebee (3066)
 2 alien82 (2756)
 3 kajuba (2254)
 4 limalan88 (2204)
 5 sverdlow (1712)
 6 juliet (1683)
 7 AnthonyF (1244)
 8 artavia.seo (1138)
 9 MarkeD (1098)
 10 isolvum (1019)
 11 cj (939)
 12 IC (935)
 13 jkhbraveheart (847)
 14 lets_j2top@ya.. (825)
 15 Osborne (797)
  » Member List

 Latest Forum

» Need help please :-)
» Need help!!! site loading problem
» How to set the home page shows that 100 articles
» anyone having problem with website loading half way?
» SQL Query
» x Dejavu : db article_state table

 Distribution

Article Distribution

  
  Affiliate Program 2Checkout.com, Inc. is an authorized retailer of ArticleTrader.com

1.51s