Sunday, August 26, 2018

Lake Orange - August 2018

Bummed and in need of inspiration?  Well, I'd say things get better, it could be worse, blah blah blah, but I don't go in for empty platitudes, because I don't believe them myself. The best you can hope for is a recounting of my evening on Saturday, which lifted my spirits significantly, albeit temporarily.  Still, wtf not?

But starting with the evening is too late.  Even Saturday morning is virtually in medias res (which I looked up, was it "en" or "in"?). Friday evening is where this tale starts, because the week ended in a deep funk, recovery from which would surely involve drinking between 5 and 10 beers, with a glass of wine and some half-melted ice cream to go along with it.  Collapse into bed was the goal, and I managed to make it, with only a few bad choices along the way.

But my beer and wine consumption was on the upper end, and so Saturday morning, when I woke at 6 AM to see the sun streaming through the blinds, and hear the birds talking about whatever minutia occupy birds (Do you like worms too, Irene?), I wondered what fresh hell the day held.

Ohhh, how I lounged, not wanting to greet the day.  I read the news at great length, to assemble the consensus view on how yesterday was and how today would be, and why tomorrow would be better (or worse, since this was the Post), scratching myself where there were no itches, sitting on the front stoop reading Steinbeck (Tortilla Flat, now) because I feel like I read too much trash.

Oh sure, I did some laundry, made breakfast, washed the dishes, brushed my teeth AND flossed, but I never showered.  Saturday wasn't a day for civility or decorum, and I didn't want to upset the status quo.

But eventually, I got off my ass, said fuck it, I'm going fishing.

But first, you have to decide where to go, what tackle to employ, should I take an ice chest in the event I catch a mess, do I need gas, and all the other decisions that some people anguish over.  Me though, I got in the car and went.  There is something to be said for having a car absolutely packed with shit, in that you are prepared for almost any eventuality that can come my way.  Not that I've  planned for those eventualities, but whenever they occur, I add whatever to my car, and then next time, I've got this.

So I headed down to Lake Orange around 3, piddled around Orange for an hour or so.  Midday fishing is sort of worthless, since the fish are all on the bottom, out of the light, eating muck and going blurp, so it pays to wait a little, same as leaving a metropolis at rush hour, fuck that.  I ate lunch, which was two cans of green beans with salad dressing on top.  That was what was in the car.

I ended up putting in the boat just before 5 and fished until 8.  I caught one keeper bass, about 14 inches, fat fish.  Well fed off of shad or whatever it is they eat in that lake.  I also caught an undersize crappie, maybe 5 small bluegills and one large (a large bluegill to me is 7 inches or better), and a white bass, maybe about 6 inches, which I'd never caught.  Noteworthy though, the world record white bass was from Lake Orange.  Mine wasn't a world record, but it was a fish.

I took out at 8, which is now solidly dusk, in part because I, mostly my back and ankles, was a little tired of sitting in the canoe, and partly because man cannot subsist off of canned green beans for long. Went in to town and bought some cheese and salami to offset the healthful nature of the green beans.  Nothing like saturated fats to improve the mood, I always say.

Got back out to the Lake and put in around 9.  For the first 15 minutes or so, the mosquitoes made their presence known.  You should see my feet and legs, covered in little red welts.  Bastards, although on the bright side, there isn't endemic malaria in the US anymore. Thanks DDT!  People who talk about all of gods kingdom are full of shit, since pretty sure they'd be fine with nuking the mosquitoes and ticks.

However, after that 15 minutes, the temperature started to drop, and the mosquitoes sort of dried up.  And then the night was there.

I long for the times in October when you go outside, and the air cuts through your sinuses, down through the built up mucous, through the trachea, and fills your lungs with oxygen, nitrogen, carbon dioxide, argon, and all the other gases that make up air in some fraction.  And then you realize, all summer I've been breathing 10% water vapor, and that shit would be called drowning if people were honest with themselves.

But man, the air was sweet.  And it knew it didn't have to do anything else to make its presence felt.  It rested.  There was no wind at all, and the water was still.  I'd say like glass, but that's a cliche and I try to avoid those.  The water was still like a bowl of fruit being painted.

And the cicadas and katydids realized how rude they were being, squawking, and they quieted down, leaving the crickets and me to make all the noise.

It's those sort of occasions that some errant spaceship, on a trip from some nebula to some planetoid, beamed me up, removed my clothes with forceps and a leatherman, and then did their best to discover the secret to human virility.

Sorry, nevermind, sudden inexplicable tangent. Back to where we were:

It's those sort of occasions that make me wish I could be stealthy. When it's truly quiet, every swish of the paddle in the water, every burble of the hull splitting the water, is an indecent, perverse intrusion into nature.  But no matter how I try, even if I cleanly put the paddle in, and cleanly pull it out, and only apply power when it is submerged, it seems like the noise is unbearable, and that everyone within a 10 mile radius is going to be pissed at me.  Everyone sitting on their front porch, enjoying the evening, saying to their loved ones next to them "Nice evening other than that asshole on the lake."

But it's not that bad, just when you are in the boat, it seems bad. It's still not as bad as the experience of paddling around on a lake in the middle of January, where there isn't any ice on the water, there is no wind, and there are no bugs or birds to provide background.  Even more silent was, a few years ago, i went over to Mountain Run Lake, sometime January, and it started to snow, first intermittent, then steady, then heavy.  The snow muffles sound like nobody's business, a more peaceful time I've never had, and probably never will until I drop dead.  No fish though.

And the moon was up.  Given that I recently auditioned for the part of Tom in Sylvia, I'd hope you'd forgive me if I waxed sentimental about the moon.  And its not really sentimentality.  I know the moon is just a ball of rock, tethered to earth by gravity, as are we all (I tell you, I just chuckled, since it occurs to me if I was reading this, I'd say, what a load of bullshit.  But reader, you are probably unblemished by the toxic cynicism that makes up my core, so maybe you won't think so.  You'll have to tell me sometime.)

I don't know if I ever told you, probably did and don't remember, that I went to see the eclipse that passed over Tenessee last August, but I did.  Even though I know the moon is a ball of rock, when it went away, I wasn't really able to comprehend.  I recommend it, 2024 is the next one in mainland US.

But the moon was full, and was bright.  Even when the occasional cloud occluded it's luster, it still provided enough light to fish by.  And I did fish some along the dam with a jig, moved uplake and fished with topwater plugs, but the fish weren't hitting.

But it was just so nice, I paddled back and forth the length of the lake a couple of times.  I didn't take out until about 11:45.  Minus the crickets, I had the whole place to myself.

Oh oh!  I almost forgot, there were also bats flying around, mostly when the mosquitos were out, but I saw the odd one flying around afterwards too.

In truth, the experience is probably indescribable.  I found it transformative, and it lasted me a day or two.  If I was capable of telepathy, such that I could give you a sense of what the experience was like, I'd beam it over to you.  In the meanwhile, this will have to do.

Anyway reader, the only thing we can hope for is that the misery occasionally gets punctuated by relative peace.  I hope this gave it to you.

Monday, September 4, 2017

September 4, 2017 - Lake Pelham

Today was a beautiful day, sun shining, warm but not hot, breezy but not windy, every environmental parameter seemed to be set to the ideal labor day weather.  I drove out to Mountain Run Lake, but there were so many people I ditched to Lake Pelham.

The town has constructed a new ramp and has kayak/paddleboat/canoe rentals, and consequently, there were a lot of people there as well.  It's understandable that the Lake Pelham regulars are pissed off about the change.  However, if you take the optimistic view, theoretically by having more people enjoy the lake, the overall well-being of the community will increase, and therefore there will be fewer jackasses ruining life for the rest of us.

Yeah, I don't believe it either.

Regardless, there was still some wildlife to photograph, like this sandpiper:

And these egrets:
I also got some pictures of a bald eagle, but they didn't turn out too good.  None of the pictures are that great, actually, mostly because I'm using a 500mm focal length mirror lens, which has pretty limited depth of field, from a canoe, with a monopod.

But there didn't seem to be much hope for fish at Pelham, so I took out, ate some dinner, and went over to Mountain Run Lake.

I caught three crappie on curly tails, and a few bass, a couple of which were ~10 inches.  


Sunday, September 3, 2017

September 3, 2017 - Mountain Run Lake

Put in at Mountain Run Lake to fish, but I took my camera along in the event there was anything worth photographing.  And there was!

Green heron
 Cedar Waxwing
 Immature bald eagle


Fishing was slow though, caught nothing on a curly tail, caught some small bluegills on poppers.

Saturday, August 12, 2017

August 12, 2017 - Mountain Run Lake

Went fishing at Mountain Run Lake, ran across this:


That is a truck tire with a snapping turtle that got stuck in it, died, and decayed.  Because snapping turtles have spent 49.9999 of their last 50 million years of evolution without having to deal with assholes pitching rubber donuts into the water, it's not a surprise  that he wasn't prepared for this contingency.

And this was a big turtle, as big as any I've ever seen in this lake.  This turtle might have been 30 years old.

And he might have sat there in the muck living his miserable turtle existance for another 70 if some fuckwit didn't throw a truck tire where it doesn't belong.  I know Culpeper citizens have this grand tradition of littering, but come the fuck on, people.

Saturday, July 22, 2017

The great bufocide of 2017

Went fishing at Lake Orange, got there around 5, took the canoe off the roof, and a thunderstorm hit.
I took refuge and waited out the storm.  By the time I put in finally it was about quarter 'til 7.  Of course, not 15 minutes after I put in, another storm blew in, and I took shelter in a cove, tied up the canoe, and sat under the canopy, watching the rain fall on the water. While I sat there, I cast a curly tail into the cove, and caught what I believe is a warmouth.

Finally, the sky brightened and it turned into a nice evening, but there were no fish to be caught.

As I took out, I saw a toad sitting there at my car, who hopped away.  I should've realized then what was to come, but I don't have the gift of foresight.  Driving along the road, hundreds of toads were hopping around on the asphalt.  Stupid creatures, not realizing the import of a 16 foot strip of mysterious black rock running through the woods.  And of course, me, in a 4000 pound car, bearing down on them, engine racing, exhaust spewing unburned hydrocarbons and monoxide, tires inexorably turning over and over again, squishing toads by the gross.

Actually, I drove slowly, hoping to give the toads time to hop out of the way, but I must have run over at least 10 despite my precautions.

Which leads to the title of this post. When I was younger, american toads were in the genus Bufo, but according to wikipedia, they are now apparently in the genus Anaxyrus.  Consequently, my title is taxonomically incorrect.  I wish scientists would leave well enough alone; don't we have enough science by now?

Sunday, February 26, 2017

Uplocking vs Downlocking Reel Seats

Let's start with the stipulation that every generation of humans represents an improvement on the last, on average.  That's why 20,000 years ago we were getting eaten by pterodactyls and therefore today we have ICBMs so if those fuckers come back, we're prepared.  Advancement in technologies should never result in a reversion in this model of humanity's evolution.

Today, as basic proof of this fundamental principle, I will contrast uplocking reel seats, which my father prefers, and downlocking reel seats, which I prefer.

Here is a picture of a reel mounted to a rod with an uplocking reel seat.  Take note of the following defects and shortcomings inherent in this design:
  • There is an inch of seat extending back beyond the reel, ready to snag your shirt sleeve, the line you have stripped off, anything in reach really.
  • Because the reel is mounted forward of the butt, it serves as a less effective counterweight to the force at the rod tip exerted as you cast than if the weight of the reel was closer to the butt, further from the fulcrum that is your hand.    A downlocking seat locates the reel closer to the butt, easing casting.
  • When putting the reel on the rod, you have to hold the reel up into the upper ring while you tighten the lower ring, while gravity is waiting for you to fumblefinger the operation and drop the reel on the ground.  The lower ring on a downlocking seat holds the reel in place while you tighten the upper ring down.
  • Aesthetically speaking, it looks like shit.


It wouldn't be fair for me to not acknowledge the flaws of the downlocking design as well, so here goes:
  • Because there isn't the unnecessary protuberance below the reel, when you set the butt of the rod on the ground while threading the line through the guides, the reel sits on the ground.  This can be mitigated by making sure the reel is sitting on grass or leaves instead of sand or concrete.  Although, an extra inch of butt isn't going to save you anyway.



You might be asking then, if downlocking reel seats are so great, why aren't currently produced rods using them?  It's because assholes are in charge of the world. 

Thus concludes my objective analysis of fly rod reel seats.

Monday, November 7, 2016

Fall Crappie Action

Been a while since I've posted anything.  No real reason to do it, I've got no compelling interest in educating a fucked up world, and have no real pride to buck up by bragging about success, or modesty to maintain by complaining about my failures.  Ultimately, this is a waste of time, so why bother?  Goes for most of life, really.

Anyway, some pictures.