Father Water, Mother Woods Read online

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  Everything was done by feel, the feel of the line, the feel of the hook. The snag was a large triple-hook with a heavy sinker wired to the bottom of it with stovepipe wire, bung on the end of a steel leader and thirty-pound test line. All of this had to be done by hand because only one hand was available and it was impossible to use a rod and reel with one hand.

  The hook had to be swung in a large arc upstream to where the water pounded out of the spillway, a looping arc just above the water, back and forth and back and forth, all with the movement of the arm and body while hanging onto the chain-link fence, out over the roaring water with the fingers clawed into the wire of the fence, always further and further until the hook and sinker drop just exactly, almost delicately, at the precise point the water exits the turbine.

  It was here, fighting to get into the shredding turbines, that the mass of fish congregated, pushing and driving, rolling belly-over-back so thick there seemed to be no water between them.

  Here the hook drops.

  Just perfectly here.

  Too deep and it falls below the seething fish into the rocky bottom of the spillway and is swept back beneath them; too shallow and it slides over their backs.

  Perfect.

  Once in ten, once in twenty tries it can be done right. Lean out, and out, so far as to nearly fall, then swing, again, again, and then finally, at last, the perfect toss.

  The hook drops into the roiling mass of fish and water and begins moving back through them.

  And it is here that practice, wisdom, patience, knowledge pay off. If the hook is jerked too soon, it won’t be in the right place, will skid off the side or back of a fish and come up with nothing but silver scales stuck to it.

  All by feel. The hook moves back through the fish and where it is, what the hook is doing, must be felt.

  The line is wrapped around the hand, sometimes with a cheap cloth glove to keep it from cutting and the fingers cut off the glove so the line can be felt. The line leaves the hand out over the back of the index finger, lies across the finger so the movement of the hook can be sensed.

  There are differences so subtle they cannot be told, cannot be taught—tiny bits of knowledge, of feeling, as fine and pure as those of any neurosurgeon.

  The hook moves, bumping off fish, rolling down their sides, scraping; and all of it comes up through the line across the finger.

  Until the hook nudges, ever so gently, into the nose of a fish, directly into the center of the nose. It hesitates slightly, seems to bounce, sends a live signal up through the line across the finger, and exactly then the hook must be jerked upward, with a sharp short motion, to set the hook into the lower jaw of the fish.

  If one in twenty tries brings the hook into the right place, it is another one in twenty that the hook hits the nose right, lines up correctly, and angles the right way to allow the hook to set in the bony plate of the lower jaw.

  The effect is electric.

  The fish runs, cuts across the current so the power of the spillway is added to the power of the fish. If it is a large sheepshead or walleye, it is bad enough—the sudden lunge all comes into the hand wrapped in line. But if a northern pike is snagged, and set—twenty or more pounds—it can be nearly fatal. Not only is the line around the hand the only connection, the other hand is the only bond with the fence, and if the fish cuts out across the current, catches it right, swings back downstream, it pulls sideways at the hand so hard it is almost impossible to hang on and boys caught by surprise have been snatched from the wire and into the spillway to drown. But if it all works right, if all is perfect, there is the fish. Eight, ten, twenty pounds of northern or walleye or sheepshead or carp on the bank, swung out and wide with the free hand to land on the bank to be unhooked. And then the line is thrown back out, swinging, further and further.

  Every bit of it completely illegal. It is the worst time to take fish, when they spawn, and once and sometimes twice a day the game warden comes by with a knife and cuts the lines and lets the hooks fall into the water and tells us if he catches us there again he will arrest us, but we know he is only saying that to scare us and when he is gone second hooks come out, or third or fifth—however many it takes.

  There are too many things against the fish for them to win.

  If they were just to eat, the fish, if they were just for food for the table for the boys, it might be all right to take them with snag hooks when they run, but it is not.

  There is the whole winter against them, a whole winter of cold and dark, and so the fish, the running of them into the power plant, comes to mean more than just food.

  It means the end of winter, the beginning of spring. The whole town talks of it.

  “Are the fish running yet?” they ask. “Are they moving at the dam?”

  And everybody wants to taste it, taste the spring with fresh fried fish dipped in batter and eaten with the last of the potatoes from the year before, taken up from the basement where they’ve been stored, and fried all crisp in butter with salt and pepper; or to strip the eggs from the fish into a frying pan with butter and fry them until they look like scrambled eggs.

  The town lusts for the fish, and the boys who work the snag hooks are from poor families. There is no extra money, often no money at all, and so the fish became a part of how the boys live.

  As soon as a fish was landed, a large one, the boy would run the two blocks from the dam to the center of uptown and hit the bars.

  The Joliette Lounge, the Lumberjack Corner, the Woodsman Cafe and Beer Hall. Carp and suckers were not worth as much as the other fish and could be used only for smoking, which was good enough, if not the full freshness of spring, but northern pike and walleyes, if they were large enough, brought top money.

  A nickel a pound.

  Work the bars. The fish hanging on a piece of wire or twine; hit the front end of the bar, dark, smelling of stale beer and sweeping compound on the floor to soak up the spit and spill and puke, bars with grimy mirrors and no stools, only places to stand, with men leaning on their elbows, drinking from the tall brown-wet bottles—hit the front end and hold the fish out like a prize, a contest won.

  “How much?” Beery breath, weaving men unshaven, hard to see in the dark of the bar.

  “A dime.”

  “For the whole fish?”

  How drunk is the son of a bitch? “No—a pound. He’s a good one, go twelve, fifteen pounds.…”

  “Hell, kid, he ain’t ten.”

  “Come on—he’s an easy twelve.…”

  “Ten.”

  “Eleven.”

  Laughter, other men cutting in. “Hell, Swen, buy the damn fish.…”

  And he bends. “All right, eleven pounds, a nickel a pound.”

  “A dime.”

  “That’s it, kid—take a nickel or nothing. Feed it to your cat.”

  “I don’t have a cat—seven cents.”

  “Damn, kid—all right. Six and that’s it.”

  “Six. Times eleven pounds. That’s sixty-six cents.…”

  And at last the money, the pay, and then back to the dam at a run to find a place on the wire and unroll the line and start swinging the hook out and out to feel it come back, while another boy takes another fish to the bars to make money.

  Sometimes riches—more money than can be imagined. Sometimes a huge fish—twenty pounds—and a drunk that forgets all the rules and pays the full dime a pound.

  Two dollars.

  Sometimes more—five, six fish in a day taken on the snag hooks at the dam, and a good day, the best day of all, the best day ever, earning nine dollars—a full day’s pay for a grown man working for a dollar and a nickle an hour, which was the wage then, when boys made only two dollars and fifty cents and sometimes only a dollar a day doing mean-grunt work from sunup to sundown on the farms.

  Nine dollars. Nine incredible dollars in one day to be jammed tightly into the pocket and hoarded and hidden from the larger boys and spent slowly on secret pleasures.

  Ca
ndy, malts for a quarter and hamburgers, more candy until the belly bulges and then the next day back once more to the dam and the swinging hooks and the roaring water.

  Spring and first fishing.

  Working the Ditches

  Snagging fish below the dam was the start of spring, but there were other, different beginnings as well.

  The country around the town was flat farmland, the richest in the world, it was said, soil so black you could see into it the way you see into a black marble, but flat, absolutely flat with no hills.

  And no natural drainage.

  The snow melts and the fields stand in water and mud and would stand that way into summer because there is a clay base down a couple of feet that won’t allow the water to sink except for the ditches.

  Somewhere in the past, in times before we were born, great projects dug ditches for miles and miles to drain the farms—some ditches thirty miles long, straight through the farmlands, with side ditches heading into networks of fields, so that on an aerial photo hanging in the feed store, flyblown and greasy, the ditches look exactly like the canals of Mars.

  The fish do not know these are drainage ditches; they think they are creeks. After a time, some of them would nose up the ditches, in the spring when the runoff water was pouring out, push further and further up and lay eggs, and the spawning ground was imprinted on the new fish and then still more new fish until the ditches became an accepted spawning area for thousands and thousands of them.

  Walleyes and northern pike run first, and because the snagging at the dam is going on at the same time, they are not bothered.

  But after the walleyes and northerns come the suckers, and by that time the snagging at the dam is over. Then we would take spears or bows and work the ditches for suckers.

  It was not easy. Using a spear with eight or ten tines it seemed impossible to miss, but the fish could move sideways, or appear to, and many times they were not where they seemed to be when the spear was jabbed. After a bit, a technique evolved—and for some reason it had to be relearned each year. The spear had to be held with the point in the water just over their backs and pushed forward and down almost delicately—too far and the spear would hit the rocks lining the bottom of the ditch and bend or break; too little and the spear would not penetrate far enough for the barbs to take hold.

  Shooting them with a bow was also tricky at first. There were no fish arrows then to buy in the stores, and no money to buy them if they had been available. Bows were of lemonwood with fiber backing and arrows were homemade from cedar shafts that cost a nickel each and turkey feathers. A small hole could be drilled through the front of a field point and a tiny nail put through the hole and bent back to make a barb, then a forty-pound test fishing line was tied from another hole in the point back to the reel on the bow. The “reel” was a plastic water glass taped to the bow so that it tapered down to the front. The line had to be carefully wound on the glass each time, one wrap laid precisely next to the last so it would spin off (this was before spinning reels as well, which can be used now) without making the arrow fly off sideways.

  It was all very involved, and if a shot was missed it might take five minutes to get ready for another one. For that reason we liked to get very close before shooting, and finally one boy found that you didn’t need the reel or line at all. The ditch was shallow, and if you shot down, the arrow would go through the fish and pin them to the bottom.

  There was no limit on suckers.

  Gunnysacks were carried on a cord around the neck to drop the fish in when they were speared or shot, working up the ditch in the spring sunshine, walking in the icy water until our legs were blue—nobody could afford hip boots or waders—when we would stop and build a fire and warm feet and legs, working the ditches that way until the sacks weighed sixty or seventy pounds.

  When the sack became too heavy to carry we would stop and use a pocketknife to gut all the fish, then continue on until even with gutted fish the weight was too much and the fish would be loaded on bicycles as a burro would be loaded, huge bags on the sides and top to push the miles home.

  The suckers were not only for direct cooking and eating.

  An old man—forty at least—had a smoke-shed set up on the edge of town. If you helped him, he would smoke your fish for half of them.

  The suckers had to be split the long way down the back with a sharp knife and coarse salt hand-rubbed into the inside meat. Then they were hung over poles in the smoke-shed and a round-the-clock fire had to be made outside in the firepit. A buried stovepipe carried the smoke into the smoke-shed from the hardwood branches that were burned.

  Hours turned to days turned to weeks—or so it seemed. The sucker run in the ditches lasted at most two weeks but it seemed much longer.

  A constant procession of boys and bicycles moved from the ditches back into the old man’s smoke-shed, and it did not matter that he was using the boys’ work to get free fish, did not matter that we spent days with eyes burning from the smoke, spent days sitting in clouds of smoke, days and nights stoking and damping the fire to keep the smoke moving evenly through the racks of fish, did not matter that he kept half and maybe more than half to sell in the stores and at church suppers and to an endless line of cars that came to buy from him.

  None of it mattered except the fish.

  When they were done, when they were all shot with arrows and speared and gutted and carried and salted and smoked and at last were done, it was worth it.

  First tastes were compared, measured against each other the way wine is compared.

  The meat is soft-hard, gentle-leathery golden-brown, the color of caramel and deep honey mixed, and simply has to be eaten.

  It comes off in strips, tastes delicately of salt and smoke—not of wood, but the taste of the smoke so that it seems that the forest itself is in the meat of the fish; a bite is like being there in the woods, a bite is part of a memory.

  Except that the meat, the work in the meat, is too expensive to eat—the way farm workers cannot afford to eat the meat they grow and must instead eat venison and sell the beef and pork for money.

  The fish must be sold, the work in the cold ditches must be sold.

  If the taste of fresh cooked fish means spring to the town, the taste of fresh smoked fish means luxury.

  Everybody wants it. There is no problem selling—we could sell ten times as much as we get. When we start down the street with the gunnysack the people find us, hunt us.

  “How much?” they ask and it is not like in the bar with the snagged fish. No dickering.

  “Fifty cents a side,” we say. “Flat.”

  A nod and money. Half a fish, half a dollar—a dollar a fish, which sounds good, but to get a fish, one fish in the sack to sell, is a day at the ditch, another fish for the old man, nights working at the smoke-shed for the old man, and then … then to not eat the fish.

  To not eat the fish.

  To take a taste of the smoky-salt-golden-meat and then not eat the fish.…

  Impossible.

  It takes four, five fish to get just one to sell. Dreams of money, of wealth, die with a taste, one taste.

  Pepsi for a nickel a bottle, two Pepsis and sit on the back porch of the apartment building while they drink and fight inside, two Pepsis and sit there and eat strips of smoked fish cut and washed down with cold Pepsi, eat until even the hair is greasy with it and every cat in the neighborhood is there with you, sitting there eating the fish in the spring sunshine and reading a Zane Grey western or an Edgar Rice Burroughs science fiction novel.…

  No, not riches from selling the fish. Other riches, but not money from selling. Only fish to eat, to sit and read and eat.

  Sometimes a dogfish is snagged or speared or shot. They are like an eel, long and wriggly with a fin that starts halfway down the back to wrap around the tail and up the belly. Most throw them away, consider them rough fish, but the old man at the smoke-shed knows a recipe, has secret salts and seasoning and smokes them. It is oily
, almost greasy, and hard to eat at first—the first bite. But after that there is something there, some new edge of taste and we sit with the old man outside the smoke-shed and eat the dogfish—peeling long strips to lay on coarse bread and eat with strong hot tea sticky with sugar while the old man tells, weaves stories about fishing, smuggling booze across the Canadian border during Prohibition, stories of wild runs at night while federal agents shoot at the night-boats, glamorous stories of ugly things.

  Spring ends there.…

  Not in the ditches with cold blue legs, not at the power dam swinging the snag hook to bump the noses of the rolling fish nor in the bars hustling the drunks nor selling the smoked suckers on the street nor hiding on the back porch of the apartment to drink Pepsi and read and eat but there.…

  At night by the smoke-shed eating the eellike dogfish and coarse bread and drinking hot tea, listening to old stories from the old man and petting the dog that eats all the bones and skin and heads from the smoked fish and is so fat his legs cannot hold him up for more than a few minutes at a time.

  There.

  Spring and first fishing end sitting by the smoke-shed on the soft nights as the buds turn to leaves even on the hardwoods and the stars lose their brittle winter look and take on the soft shape of summer, and the dog lays his head in a lap to beg and to be petted.

  There it ends.

  And summer begins.

  First Strike

  In reality it is not possible to draw an exact line and say here one kind of fishing becomes another, just as it is not possible to draw an exact line in any part of life to separate it from another.

  Summer fishing came in so many different forms, became so many different arts, that there must be a start to it, a beginning and a middle and an end just to be able to see it.

  The start was where the river passed a smaller stream that entered the river by the Ninth Street bridge.

 

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