Spring Creeking

I live on a famous river in the West. It slithers across the entire state of Idaho, past the end of my driveway, twists and turns, drops into the abyss of Hell’s Canyon and eventually flows into the Columbia River before it reaches the ocean. Where I live, there are also thousands of springs. Water burps, drips, seeps, cascades, erupts out of the desert floor and volcanic stone. I’ve always found springs to be magical and mysterious and to find one large enough to fish is the ultimate gift. The water runs cool and clear all year, every year. It is never stagnant. Some springs are so fresh they are void of aquatic life — they’re too pure, too sterile an environment to support aqueous life. To find a freshly birthed spring that holds trout is a treasure. It’s the time of year where a wet wade on a local spring is my favorite way to end the day. It’s refreshing for the body and mind and as the sun leaves the sky the water comes alive with the twilight sounds of bugs and birds. I shut my eyes and listen. I stand knee deep in a wild symphony and I conduct that fully dimensional sound with my rod. Cast. Cast. Cast. And now the nighthawks crooning and the rising scent of wild rose on the breeze and the flip of a small rainbow trout on the edge of a seam. Riffles are percussion. Willows are woodwinds. Geese are the horn section. Mosquitos are piccolos. The spring is the melody and everything sings along.

It’s Still Good

7I9A04127I9A03887I9A05017I9A03727I9A04497I9A05097I9A04997I9A04607I9A04857I9A04537I9A0457We fished the Methow River early in the day yesterday and it was like no other day we have spent on the river here.  We launched the boat around 6AM and immediately caught cutthroat.  I think we were somewhat shocked by our success because this is a difficult river to fish.  We usually catch a few fish each and have long, dry stretches of quiet, dead water.

Yesterday, all day long, the river was fishing hot!!!  Or maybe I was offering up perfect presentations.  Or maybe those fish simply loved all the hoppers I brought home with me from a fly shop in Missoula.  I don’t know.  I felt touched by the very hand of God, and if you recall, Jesus was a fisherman, too…and I’m pretty sure that when he wasn’t using nets he had a fly rod in his hands.

And so it went.

The fishing was good.

The fishing was good yesterday, but even when the fishing isn’t good, the fishing is still good.

Even when you’ve lost all your best flys to lunkers and trees, it’s still good.

Even when you realize you forgot your spool of tippet and you have to tie onto your leader, it’s still good.

Even when it pours for seven hours and you can’t feel your feet, it’s still good.

Even when you manage to make two bird nests of your line in a span of three minutes, it’s still good.

Even when you’re hungry and your stomach is gnawing on itself, it’s still good.

Even when everything you catch is six inches long, it’s still good.

Even when you snap a rod tip, it’s still good.

Even when your birddog falls out of the boat and terrifies you by swimming towards you and eventually gets sucked under the boat in a line of thick whitewater, it’s still good.

Even when you don’t catch a single fish, it’s still good.

It’s always and forever good.

That’s why we do it.

Because it’s good, and because it lets us sidle up to nature, watch the hawks, eagles and osprey, feel the sun and wind and rain on our faces, watch the moose swim through deep water, see the white-tailed deer bounding, and of course, if we work hard, we get to gently handle something that is royal and pure and glorious and worthy of a good fight.

I caught a cutthroat, yesterday, that made my arm ache and gave me a bruise on my stomach where I wedged the butt of my fly rod while I was walking that thin line of letting him run and reeling him in — it hurts a little when I laugh and the memory of him flashing silver in deep water each time he turned his back to me and made a run for freedom will hold strong in my mind and heart for a good long while.

Robert, well, he caught the king of the river and we all bowed down.

Natives: A Guilty Pleasure

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IMG_1209IMG_1232IMG_1240IMG_1254IMG_1264IMG_1329IMG_1325IMG_1362I have a guilty pleasure, here in the Methow Valley, I call it backcountry instant gratification.  Let me tell you about it.

There are a handful of little lakes that are relatively easy to get in and out of in a matter of hours and on days when I set out to be at work in the studio…but the work just won’t stick…or I realize after a few hours that I don’t actually want to be there and I need to be outside instead…I can start out as late as 2PM, head for one of these trailheads, charge the path into the lake, fish for an hour or two, and be home again before dark.  I call this kind of backcountry excursion instant gratification because for just a little work, a little sweat, a little steep hiking, I can have an alpine lake in the high country all to myself and thereby the space I need to breathe again.

It’s a little miracle.

Yesterday, around 2PM, I realized I needed to go fishing.  I mean…I really needed to go fishing.  I popped a bag and fly rod in the truck, loaded all three pups, grabbed a snack out of the mess hall kitchen at the base and headed up and out to a trailhead where I shouldered my pack and whistled as I walked up to one of my favorite instant gratification lakes in the North Cascades.  I fished for an hour and a half or so, caught 27 beautiful little cutthroat trout, threw sticks for the dogs, listened to the birds, felt the sun on my skin and rested.  Then I shouldered my pack, pointed the dogs for home, picked a few mushrooms and made my way down the mountain again while singing the full score of the “Sound of Music” — I noticed a lot of fresh bear sign on my way in and wanted them to know I was coming.

Work is good, but play is good too…and sometimes work is play but let’s keep things simple here.  Yesterday was a play day for me and I don’t regret a moment of it.  In the studio, I am bare rooted right now.  I catch glimpses of inspiration but haven’t been able to slow down enough, post-relocation, to really delve into any ideas.  I have a last minute photo shoot to take care of tomorrow, a portrait shoot on Sunday evening, friends coming to town in the early part of next week and there is also the slight unsteadiness that comes with the fire season and never really knowing if I’ll see Robert at the end of the day or not weighs on me a little, as it always does.

After yesterday’s instant gratification excursion, I’m feeling more grounded and it’s not surprising.  I have always found that tethering myself to my surroundings, establishing myself in my new habitat, going out and reintroducing myself to the land is the best way for me to settle into life again after an upheaval.

Now let’s talk fish.  Aren’t those native cutthroat gorgeous?  What sublime colors.  I take great delight in catching large fish on the fly but there’s something so tenacious, wild and glorious about catching alpine trout.  They fight terribly hard (despite their diminutive size), take to the sky in righteous acrobatics and the way they take a fly in the first place is such a tiny, vicious and joyful movement on their part.  These guys look small and cute but they are total killers.

They’re little, but I feel such a profound, lightning tug on the end of my line when these fish take a fly in their teeth.  I find myself laughing aloud and smiling constantly while I’m fishing for them.  Their joy, freedom, fire and wildness is contagious.  Being connected to them through a long, thin line is positively electric — I know their small, important power, if only for a little while.  It’s an honor.

It was hard to leave that lake yesterday.  I kept telling myself, “Just one more.”

A Vision Of Trout — And An Orvis Partnership

IMG_9314I cannot believe my ears and mind were able to isolate the sound in the first place.  It’s a miracle that I heard it.  I was running on a single track, my footsteps driving me forward through the woods in rhythmic, soft thumps.  The wind was in the scrub maple and aspen, the dogs were crashing through underbrush on the hunt for voles, chipmunks and grouse.  In the swirling ocean of sound around me, I heard a still, small noise — the soft licking tone of a trout nose breaking the surface of water.  I stopped as soon as I heard it, my upper body and knees objecting to inertia, and I slowly turned my head to the right, to look down into the clear, cold waters of City Creek.  My eyes adjusted to the play of shadow and light on the surface of the water and there, in the rapidly moving translucence strewn with twigs and last summers leaves, I saw the speckled back of a native cutthroat trout, busy with the calm and stabilizing flutter of fins and tail; treading space and time.

I gasped aloud to myself!  It was a nice little fish, I estimate it was eight inches in length which sounds like nothing to write home about, I know, but allow me to tell you about City Creek.  City Creek is a spring creek that flows, year round, off the West Bench of the Portneuf Valley.  It runs cold, clear and bright, as spring creeks do.  At its widest, it might measure four feet in width.  While there are some deeper pools on it’s course, it is, for the most part, roughly three inches deep.  It is precious to me because Robert and I are the sole owners of water rights to this creek and its waters have fed and grown our property here in Pocatello since it was first established as a fruit orchard 117 years ago.  Our water rights are historic and deeded to our property.  Water rights in the West are a holy thing, people use to kill each other over water here and there’s still a lot of fighting that goes on regarding every drop that comes out of the sky and off the mountains in the interior West.  The water is our lifeblood, our livelihood, the thing that dictates the quality of our existence in many ways; it’s also the stuff we stalk in search of some of the most beautiful critters on God’s green earth: trout.

Beyond the actual implications of basically owning the water in City Creek, I view this water as one of the crown jewels of our home.  The West bench rises up from our property here in Pocatello and I view the mountains I see out the front windows of my home as my front yard — a space I play in every single day and take great delight in exploring.  To have seen, for the first time in my seven years of life in this valley, a native trout in what I consider to be my creek, was nothing short of a miracle.  A miracle!

Furthermore, just past our home, City Creek plunges off a nine foot tall cement wall that was installed in 1965 to help control flooding in the heart of Oldtown.  This is the other reason why seeing this fish shocked me out of my skin — it’s old stock.  I consider it impossible for any fish to have recently made its way up City Creek from the Portneuf River!

As I stood there on the bank of my creek and looked down into the water at my miracle trout, I heard him rise to kiss the air a few more times and marveled at the music of the sound that plucks at the heartstrings of fly fishermen and fisherwomen around the world.  Is there any music quite like trout rising up against the thinness of the sky to simply touch the air with a blunt nose or slurp a bug off the seam that stitches the heavens to the waters?  I think not.  It’s a sound I live for, it’s a sound that drives me mad, it’s a sound that calms the senses.  I crouched down and stayed there, watching my fish skitter about the shallows, until he hit a splashy pocket of water beside a large stone and was carried away by the current, down the mountain, closer to the sea.  I sighed aloud, stayed there a while longer, in the absence of time, in the shade of the woods, on the edge of a trout home, on the narrow and rippling shoreline of a speckled life lesson.

Eventually, I picked myself up off the creek bank and kept on running up the trail, passing in and out of light and shadows, feeling my skin warm in the sunshine as the wind combed my hair.  I was thinking hard about that trout and pulling forth the life lessons and truths from his appearance in my life that afternoon.  I thought about how steadily that fish approached life no matter the strength of the current or the depth of the water.  He simply navigated, to the very best of his abilities, the waters he found himself in.  I thought about persistence, longevity, survival, simplicity, legacy and as always, the notion of home.

My feet carried me higher up the mountain, into the arms of the wind and the warm spice of the juniper stands.  I felt my mind relax as I fell into the space and calm that comes to me when I run big distances — the place where the world around me seems to pause and pulse with delicate details and infinite opportunity, the place I physically, emotionally and mentally break free of my shackles.  I covered many miles, pushed up and over switchbacks built of mafic rubble, entered deeper into the sunshine and bluebird sky, and somewhere along the way I felt my true, free-self, gently press up against the smooth surface of the world around me and I know I made that same music the trout makes when it reaches up to touch the sky.

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I’m pairing up with Orvis for the next while to help them celebrate women and men who love the outdoors.  They are currently holding a photo contest with plenty of great, quality prizes.  You can enter images in the contest with your Facebook, Instagram or Twitter accounts using the hashtags #orvis and #findyourpause .

The photo contest is for USA-icans only and is open until May 20th — so hurry up, submit a few photos and get inspired for the summer months and that good old outdoor living.

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