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  • Wadefishing story

    Glowing footsteps



    Five am; dark, before pre-dawn. A light wind out of the south barely stirs the hair on my Irish forearms. The black water is mirror-flat. Mosquito Island stretches its two-mile reef to the north. Only a couple hundred yards of its spine show above the glass, barely accented by a thin sliver of moon.

    Standing behind my pick-up, looking out over the oyster-shell covered flats, I sniff the air with dilated nostrils. She's here. I can smell her. Her scent is an incongruous mixture of strawberries and freshly mown grass. I breathe deeply of her intoxicating aroma. My pulse quickens, for it's for her that I've come.

    Gathering rod, landing net and floating basket, I stride toward the still water with a purpose. I hesitate as I reach the water's edge. To make a sound now is to ruin the perfect stillness, and alert her to my presence. Slowly, softly I extend my left foot and slip it into the warm liquid.

    As my foot tentatively touches bottom, green fire erupts around it. The tiny, bioluminescent sea creatures flame in protest at my intrusion. I slip my right foot beneath the still water and it glows the same green as it makes contact with the sand.

    Slowly, I slide my feet along the bottom, each movement punctuated by silent bursts of verdant, ethereal light. In stead of lifting my feet with each step, I slide my feet along the sand so as not to step on a ray, the patient predator who insinuates his flat, round body into the sand and waits for the small, hapless, unwary bottom-dweller to offer itself in sacrifice. The ray and I are old acquaintances and as long as I obey protocol, he doesn't present my with the gift of his barbed, toxic spine.

    As I skate silently along the sand and shell, the bottom drops away and the water deepens. Small wavelets which radiate out before my legs are minute signs of my unwelcome presence. In the clear water, my glowing footsteps belie my intrusion into this alien world. As the water rises to my waist, I halt, smelling the salty air once more. A small black tip shark cruises past, his dorsal cutting a silent track through the mirror-flatness three feet in front of me.

    A splash off to my left draws my attention, my ears attuned to the smallest sound.

    I can still smell her, and look for the tell-tale signs of nervous schools of finger-mullet, her favorite quarry.

    My reel sings as I cast my lure toward the vicinity of the splash. It lands audibly in the inky water and floats on the surface. Concentric rings spread from its impact. For a slow count of ten, I let it rest there. Then, twitching just the rod tip, I make the lure "walk the dog" back toward me.

    Each tiny, almost imperceptible movement of the rod makes the lure change course. Once, twice, thrice, stop. Splash, splash, hold. I don't want a discernable pattern, and bring the lure back to me in as erratically as possible. Chills race up my arms as the slight breeze freshens, stiffening the hair.

    The lure is sitting quiescent twenty five yards out when the water beneath it erupts.

    Fighting the initial instinct to raise the rod, I count to two, then set the hook on her, and the battle is joined. My rod doubles over as the drag on my reel screams and the adrenaline surges, causing a rush through my scalp and the hair there to stand erect. I can tell she has weight by the way she peels line from the reel.

    Careful to let no slack in the line, I fight her. I can feel her desperate head-shakes. She runs left, right, then turns to run straight toward me in an attempt to gain slack in the line and throw the lure. Wise to the tactics of her kind, I crank the reel handle furiously, allowing no opportunity for her to spit the hook. She turns and makes another run, but she's tiring and I know the fight will soon be over.

    Gradually, I bring her to me and slip the net beneath her. She's a full thirty six inches, the biggest sow trout of my life. My trophy, and there is no one to witness this but she and I.

    As she wallows in the net, helpless, and regards me with a large, yellow eye, I realize that to keep her would be a great injustice. She'd fought an heroic battle, and in defeat, awaited her destiny with silent dignity. With a quiet "Thank you" to this valiant lady, I lower my net and watch her swim away. She deserves better than a fillet knife and some fiberglass wall-mount.

    Maybe one day I'll get to fight her offspring. Farewell, dear lady. May you never feel the sharp spine of a hook again.

    In the east, the first hint of gray touches the sky as I cast my lure...

    Mark
    Last edited by wesleydnunder; 04-06-2009, 10:05 PM.
    What are the facts? Again and again and again--what are the facts? Shun wishful thinking, ignore devine revelation, forget what "the stars foretell", avoid opinion, care not what the neighbors think, never mind the unguessable "verdict of history"--what are the facts, and to how many decimal places? You pilot always into an unknown future; facts are your only clue.

    Robert Anson Heinlein

  • #2
    i still have yet to catch my trophy, i kept my first 25incher, let go around 3 25-26s more later that year...

    Comment


    • #3
      wow that is a star winner for sure...a fish of that size should weigh over 12 pounds... that is truley a once and a lifetime fish for anyone....
      210 gallon tank...empty.....wait till you see what is coming

      Comment


      • #4
        Now thats what I'm talking about!
        200
        200
        200
        150
        135
        75
        55
        55

        Trophs & Petros ONLY

        Comment


        • #5
          i am thinking you should of kept her... you could have a new boat and what ever else you wanted for free...i am sure that was a state record.. you could have gained any sponser that you wanted a fished for a living instead of working like the rest of us stiffs... anyway great story
          210 gallon tank...empty.....wait till you see what is coming

          Comment


          • #6
            awesome story. You def. have a very creative mind. I enjoyed reading that and the suspense that i got in reading it. Thanks.
            I love my Fahaka "Peter" puffer.

            Comment


            • #7
              Originally posted by tattoo View Post
              i am thinking you should of kept her... you could have a new boat and what ever else you wanted for free...i am sure that was a state record.. you could have gained any sponser that you wanted a fished for a living instead of working like the rest of us stiffs... anyway great story
              i think record now is at 38...

              Comment


              • #8
                tattoo, I wasn't entered in the STAR tournament at the time and the Tackle Time tournament hadn't yet begun. You may be right...if I'd kept her I may have reaped some big rewards but, at the time, it was enough to know that I'd netted her and I felt more than a little pity for her as she lay in the net. Since then, I've caught several trout up to 33" on topwater.

                Thanks for the kind words y'all.

                Mark
                What are the facts? Again and again and again--what are the facts? Shun wishful thinking, ignore devine revelation, forget what "the stars foretell", avoid opinion, care not what the neighbors think, never mind the unguessable "verdict of history"--what are the facts, and to how many decimal places? You pilot always into an unknown future; facts are your only clue.

                Robert Anson Heinlein

                Comment


                • #9
                  33.75in long and 13lb 9 oz is state record according to texas parks and wildlife
                  210 gallon tank...empty.....wait till you see what is coming

                  Comment


                  • #10

                    Where are YOU fishing???? I need to go there! Im assuming Baffin since thats where all the big mamas are.
                    ADA mini-m planted
                    ADA mini-m riparium
                    ADA 30-C nano reef
                    ADA 90-P community Tanganyikan
                    ADA 120-p overflow Full reef in progress
                    Eheim 90cm SA biotope
                    110g Peacocks

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Originally posted by screename View Post

                      Where are YOU fishing???? I need to go there! Im assuming Baffin since thats where all the big mamas are.
                      A place just off the Texas City Dike which, since Ike, is only accessible by boat now. It's called Mosquito Island and is now just a reef with a shell hump that sticks up just above the water at high tide. In early summer there are some big sows that move through there. I normally catch my big trout of the season there between mid-June and mid-July at night or early morning before dawn.

                      Mark
                      What are the facts? Again and again and again--what are the facts? Shun wishful thinking, ignore devine revelation, forget what "the stars foretell", avoid opinion, care not what the neighbors think, never mind the unguessable "verdict of history"--what are the facts, and to how many decimal places? You pilot always into an unknown future; facts are your only clue.

                      Robert Anson Heinlein

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Accessible by kayak?
                        ADA mini-m planted
                        ADA mini-m riparium
                        ADA 30-C nano reef
                        ADA 90-P community Tanganyikan
                        ADA 120-p overflow Full reef in progress
                        Eheim 90cm SA biotope
                        110g Peacocks

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Originally posted by screename View Post
                          Accessible by kayak?
                          It is right now, but they're supposed to close skyline drive (the levy) to give the folks repairing the dike a staging area for vehicles and equipment. When it gets closed, mosquito will be a boat only spot.

                          Mark
                          What are the facts? Again and again and again--what are the facts? Shun wishful thinking, ignore devine revelation, forget what "the stars foretell", avoid opinion, care not what the neighbors think, never mind the unguessable "verdict of history"--what are the facts, and to how many decimal places? You pilot always into an unknown future; facts are your only clue.

                          Robert Anson Heinlein

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Originally posted by wesleydnunder View Post
                            It is right now, but they're supposed to close skyline drive (the levy) to give the folks repairing the dike a staging area for vehicles and equipment. When it gets closed, mosquito will be a boat only spot.

                            Mark
                            hey, national take-a-chef-to-fishing day is coming up

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Ive always wanted to hit mosquito up but always got sidetracked. I still need to accomplish my 2 big fishing goals of the year.

                              1. 20" slam 1 red, speck, and flounder all at least 20"
                              2. 6' shark from the beach.
                              ADA mini-m planted
                              ADA mini-m riparium
                              ADA 30-C nano reef
                              ADA 90-P community Tanganyikan
                              ADA 120-p overflow Full reef in progress
                              Eheim 90cm SA biotope
                              110g Peacocks

                              Comment

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