The weather is highly variable in southwestern
Virginia, but a few things are for certain. If it’s gonna’ get cold and spit,
pour, or dump snow it’s gonna’ be in February, and I’ll be holed up, sleeping
late in my on-campus apartment with no school or possibility of fishing to busy
me. And even after the weather has departed for the end of the month, or some
surprise visit in March, and left a legacy of ice, my two-wheel-drive won’t be making
it to the river, and the brown trout will be having a jolly old time in the
runoff in the mountains without me. It’s a peculiar and uniquely frustrating
situation to live through—like a bad trip, if you’ve got the right fascination.
Photo by Matt Reilly |
Annually, upon this occasion, I find myself waking in
a gray morning without intention. A sense of urgency reaches me through the
gloomy face of winter. Water levels are up, dirty, and like the dingy chaos of
a river coursing with runoff, there is a haze in the air that obscures reality,
clouds the known. Finned legends emerge from enigma.
There is a spring creek that rises just off the
college’s property that is of little consequence and hop-across proportions
until it feeds the pond in front of the cafeteria. I walk past it several times
per day, and rarely notice the water in it. But when snow or rain hit hard, the
water comes up, brown and frothy, and it catches my unyielding fancy. Only in
the direst of circumstances does it become a destination.
I abandon my living quarters without breakfast or any
gear, but for a fly rod and a streamer of black and purple—something that can
be seen in brown water—and head for the creek.
The raging current has worn away the banks a few feet,
greatly increasing its size and creating an almost unending succession of
undercut banks, accentuated by the roots of trees on the lawn, now exposed.
I’ve forgotten how rocky the bed is, but the roiling current, full of soft,
almost still, pockets of water, reminds me.
There is no one in sight, but why would there be? It’s
early morning and there are no classes, no cafeteria hours, no reason to leave
bed. No reason but a spring creek and a burning, bordering on desperate, need
to tangle with the unknown.
My first cast is directly upstream, to the near bank.
The fluorescent fly lands in a slow pillow of water, inches from the dirt. A
hard jerk-strip, and the fly jack-knives headfirst under the bank, below a
tangle of roots. A second brings the fly back into view, and I watch it suspend
there among the turmoil.
Excited by the performance of my fly in the water and
the ease with which it’s imparted action, I send a similar second cast to the
opposite bank, upstream. For a second, it sits motionless in a micro-eddy,
shielded from the ripping current, but a subtle twitch brings it closer to
being swept away.
Just as the current begins to grab the fly, a wake and
surge of energy grabs the fly and straightens my fly line. A paddle tail erupts
recklessly from the rolling current, as the fish points its nose down into the
creekbed and struggles for leverage to get upstream.
When it achieves the perfect balance and finds water
to surround its tail, the fish blazes a trail upstream, slicing through the
flooded river like a bird through air, taking to the air several times, and
coming down into the narrow channel perfectly every time.
As I chase the fish upstream, my line goes limp. Like
it changed its mind, the fish reverses course and begins charging downstream.
This time with twice the speed. I reel like mad to maintain tension on the
fish, but as it approaches my position on the bank, I can sense the leader
heading for the surface.
In a moment of supernatural confusion and instinct, I
pull my net from its holster fastened to my back. The fish takes off mere feet
from me, and comes crashing down into the rubber basket of my net. I drop to my
knees to submerge the fish in the net, and behold its majestic novelty—a brown
trout of 22 inches, or 24, or 26.
Pleased but still frustrated, I push away covers and
lumber into the kitchen. Snowed in. A late breakfast is a good breakfast, I
figure, and crack some eggs in a frying pan—the kitchen a refuge from the
frozen windows and tile floor. I’ll spend the day tying streamers to target
browns when I can finally get on the water. Something black, with some purple
for contrast, maybe. Or perhaps something bright, to catch their interest. □
*Originally published in The Rural Virginian
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