The better part of a year later, after the
warm fall afternoon Nick and I passed among the shades of Worthless Pool, I make
a decision. I will take myself down to the Nitinat and try fishing the long
weekend of May.
I put my little blue dinghy, all nine feet
of it, on a long green foamy I used to use for camping. I put it on the roof of
my car and pass the rope over and down, through the car windows to the other
side and over the boat and so on. Along with me comes my $12 K-Mart special
rod, with three flies: a huge Royal Coachman; some Atlantic salmon fly; and one
made of orange and brown. I do not know how ugly these flies are and how
useless. That’s because I am nervous, having stopped being a river person for
almost thirty years. Much of that time I was married with kids and a wife whose
version of the outdoors meant walking to Dairy Queen.
So, to the water that I have so frequently
thought of as my real home, in the earlier years of my life, I return,
apprehensive, pushing doubts away. I do not know what is below where I will
launch - waterfalls, deadfalls - whatever. I do not know about the Nitinat
wind, but I will learn.
I tie a dumbbell to a rope and tie the line
to the bow of the boat. I put the oars in the oar locks, my spinning rod, the
one that after the cast, the bale sometimes does not flip back over. Twenty
five pound test line as well. Lunch. Water bottle, camera gear, tackle box,
pack sack, knife, but not a coat, no lifejacket. I swirl away from the launch
oars in the air, turning in a circle beneath the bridge, into my own
deliverance, without knowledge of what is in front of me.
When I have drifted down the half mile to
what I now know as the Stump Pool, I decide to tie up and fish from the boat just
below the fast water that turns to the left and drops into a deep pool. I will
be casting Buzz Bombs, some ancient Mepps Aglia used hunting cutthroat in the
Altrude lakes in Alberta
decades before, a Dar Dev’l, Len Thompson, red and white spoon.
I dump the barbell over the downstream side
of the blue dinghy and the line goes taut. The boat rolls over and I am flung
to the bottom of the river. I know in that instant I will die, not that I was a
father, a former husband, but the knowledge that comes in terror: I am going to
die.
Then my feet touch the bottom and I look up
several feet. All around me in the water column is my gear, fly rod going down,
oar, pack sack. And then I am angry and push so hard I come up under the upside
down boat. And I push it to shore, which sends me back down to the bottom, only
8 feet this time, where I push off again and by a slow, inch-worm process come
up neck deep and struggle up the sliding, watery gravel.
Expletives I yell, and yell again, drag my
upside down boat up the bank, finding I still have my spinning rod in my hand.
Fancy that – drowning, but with priorities: I will not lose the rod until I am
dead. I throw it down and fetch my sodden packsack, my sinking tackle box. But
I have lost some things: one oar, one fishing rod, my water, my vest.
With me shouting obscenities, my oar floats
calmly downstream on the opposite side of the very deep pool. I grab my spinning
rod and cast my Buzz Bomb across the river, trying to snag the oar. If it is
lost so am I. I run down my side of the bank until I have to wade through some
very sinky mud that closes on my thighs, casting and retrieving as my oar
slowly trundles along over the horizon. While I am shouting: %!@#%$!@#@$!@#$ -
which means spirited lament - I go up to my chest and can go no farther.
Then a strange thing happens. The oar turns
toward shore and starts coming back up of its own accord. Ah, I see why this
has happened: it’s in a back eddy and the water is carrying it up the opposite
shore. I go struggling through the mud, lifting each leg and placing its foot
down, and pulling the other, causing the first to sink in the silt from a
thousand trees felled the previous century. I am too angry to notice that each
step sinks farther than the last. I cast like a fiend, Buzz Bombs strafing the
air, breaking trees off their roots, white-coloured lead breaking the sound
barrier. More expletives. A million bombs sent flying, but not one, not one,
snags the oar, its black, plastic oarlock.
I run up my side of the river, casting. A
good hundred yards back to my sodden stuff, but the hook will not catch. The
line passes over the oar but the hook slides by. And then the oar comes to rest.
It has drifted right up to the head of the back eddy and swung so that the blade
just touches the big rock at the head of the pool. And there it stays. This is
my chance, my only chance, to retrieve it. So I turn the water out of my boat,
and like rub-a-dub-dub, three wet guys in a tub, kneel in the bow. I put one
vertical stroke down one side of the boat, then a vertical stroke down the
other. The river works on me, running me out of reach as I reach my longest
finger for the oar. The river carries me away, one stroke on one side one stroke
on the other.
Just before sinking over the horizon, I am
spared. With the luck of the forest, the maple trees with their green hands,
the elk with the velvet knobs of antlers, I am gathered up in the back eddy and
carried upstream to my oar. When I came even with it, I simply reach down and
pick it up as though nothing has happened.
When I regain the other bank, I open my
pack sack and water flows out. I take out my camera and the water runs out; it
and my flash and all the film have been ruined – requiring purchase of others -
in the first millisecond after my open-mouthed face hit the water. And then there
is another long list of curses. My tackle box I empty and later, the water leaves
a red crust of rust over everything. My lunch is something left to bloat in the
sea for weeks. The banana squashed. Coca Cola disappeared.
I shiver in the weak sun that still to this
day, a decade later, is cold, on this north-facing corner. The haunted trees
weirdly cry with their load of moss, tons of baggy green fat. It crosses my
literate mind that perhaps I can retrieve my no name K-Mart special, the one
with line guides I affix with electrician’s tape, with the reel that grinds out
the line at the best of times. It does not need a drag. The rust does that well
enough on its own, since the day I was 13 and laid my handful of change on the
counter.
I row out into the river, look down the
shifting lenses of water. Way down there is my rod. Out goes the dumbbell –
over the front end - and it tethers me back and forth in the current. The spinning
rod tip with its Buzz Bomb goes down, down, down, and I try and try to latch
onto the fly line or the rod or any damn thing. To the eagle and mink and
otters and elk, to the cougars, there is a screaming human on the water, like
Jack Nicholson in The Shining, making fists and groaning when the hook misses
the line. Twenty minutes and more, until, can I be so lucky, the fiddly line is
snagged.
When I pull on it, more and more comes up.
When I get the fly line in the boat, I have to pull, hand over hand, the
backing from the reel, until every yard is sitting in a pile beside me. Then the
reel end of the rod lifts from the gravel and comes to my hand.
And, now, I hear it. There is something
else, a presence in the wilderness of rock, water and stump. I can hear it
coming up the valley and turn my head to capture it. The tress complain as
their limbs brush their neighbours. On this day, I have little knowledge of the
river that will become mine, and it will be years later that I realize the wind
comes every day there is sun. By noon the wind breathes up the 20-mile lake and
then the 20-mile river. Thirty miles an hour it comes, until the sun sets and
it forgets about blowing for the day.
Sitting on the shore in my yellow, canvas shirt,
I do not know what is in store. But I can not go up-stream, only down. So I swing
out, feet in the water in the bottom of the boat, and the first wind brushes my
face. Here I am drifting down, oars in the air, watching the trees do their
version of tossing like broccoli, bending into and out of faces. My oars hit
the water and I cannot understand why the water should be pushing the blades
down stream. Until I realize the wind blows so hard it is blowing me up stream.
In my cotton shirt and bare legs and wet
crotch, I begin to row, sitting backwards, passing feet-first down stream. My
afternoon becomes this: row and row and row and check the trees to make sure
they are not going downstream; the big firs with their coats of Spanish moss;
the big maples with leaves as large as platters; the ferns exotic as peacocks;
and, my fear, as I get colder and colder and my shirt will not dry.
The bones in my limbs lose their purpose
and my muscles become numb. The hairs on my arms blow from little red centres
of puckered flesh. I pull over to rub myself, run up and down the bank arms
around myself. I stare into the implacable, not-there eyes of the forest,
thinking of The Heart of Darkness, Kurtz. His civility was stripped in a jungle
that doesn’t care, as it throws more beauty at your feet than you can imagine.
My feet are onions in wet runners, my legs
white, their fur of black hairs rising. I am not able to stop shaking as I row
down the river, to what end I have no knowledge but down into the wilderness
farther away from where I know not that I am, not having thought to bring a
map, or look at one in advance, knowing only that there is a pull out somewhere
down in the wilderness. Tree leaves come free and fall around me like rain. Fir
needles are red tide around the boat, migrating up stream as I row and row down,
hunched in the boat in my wet yellow shirt.
Where the river makes white noise, I raise
my oars and look at a log in the knee deep water beside me. When I see a fish
dart from the log, I rise up in my seat to see it better. And then when I am
just passing the log, so close I could touch it with my oar, the log transforms
it self into a moving being and makes the water boil. The log moves away,
steadily toward the opposite bank, and I realize that it is a fish, the biggest
fish I have ever seen in fresh water, and the river moves on carrying me with
it. In my innocence I do not know this is the first Pacific steelhead I will
ever see, my teeth rattling against one another. A log. Mistake a fish for a
log. From here it seems long ago.
My day ends with my boat pulled over to the
gravel bank where a car shakes itself along the wash board road above me, and
dust comes up like a kind of intelligence. My eyes perceive this is the road
beside the river. Had the car not gone by, I would not have seen that there is
a road above me, so hidden is it within the second growth jungle that is
rainforest. I would have missed there were telephone poles along the bank and
passed beyond the last place for me to get out of the river. And if I had kept
going, I would have never come back because the river would have taken me all
the way to the lake in the distant white that is stars looking up from my cold
wet yellow canvas shirt. As it is, I turn left and walk the rutty miles back to
my car, it having to be upstream after all and thus there is no point turning
right and down the road. So long ago, it seems, the dust on my runners, the
dust on my knees, my eyes on the gravel in front of them. One step at a time.
2,273
Words
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