Articles

Rivertops

Rivertops are very personal things — like shotguns and toothbrushes
Photo: Chad Shmukler.

“Wild trout, unlike men, will not — indeed cannot — live except where beauty dwells.” — John Voelker

Having one’s rivers is important, like having family or a country. With rivers, though, you get to choose. I prefer mine rippling with wild brook trout, which is to say clean and secluded. And because my time and place coincide with an irruption of my species, this means my rivers must be small — headwaters really, the tops of systems known even in Boston.

The devil knows you're dead

Part 2 of a 3-part story
Photo: B. Apple Photography (cc2.0 / modified).

I probably wasn’t out long. A hundred-pound Rottweiler has a lot of poking power in his nose and doesn’t take no for an answer. Goblin poked and prodded me around. My head hurt from the hangover, my jaw was the size of a large arbor reel, and my thigh was a bloody mess.

First thing’s first. I took my shirt off and bound my thigh. Then I got in the truck and maneuvered it to hook the winch onto the trailer and dragged it roughly back to my stoop. I had a new bay window thanks to the assholes, but I would worry about that later. At least it would keep me dry for the night.

After that I got into my shed and took a pair of forceps from my waders and went inside to my fly-tying bench. Lesson 101. Leave some damn Bourbon in the bottle. I was going to have to do this the old-fashioned way – with beer. I got a Dead Guy and slammed it for the pain. Then I probed around with the forceps until I was sure the wound was mostly empty, and sopped up the prodigious blood using both of my good towels. Time to get re-married and register for new linen, I thought. I took a curved needle and some nylon gut I had and tried to pull the wound together while I was still in shock and thought this was a good idea, but it was more of a hole than a cut, so it was going to be one hell of a scar. I let the dog lick it a little to clean it out. I think the dog worries about me some, but I’m not so sure he wouldn’t just eat me if I dropped dead in the trailer. Finally, I poured a bunch of Super Glue into it and went into convulsions until it set up.

The devil knows you're dead

Part 1 of a 3-part story
Photo: Chad Shmukler

I’ve been in the valley a long time. I know where the bodies are buried. Hell, I was the pall bearer for more than a few. I don’t know if that makes it home, or if it means it’s time to be moving on. It all started in October. I was heading up to Fools’ Lake. It’s tucked into the foothills, but there’s no real trail to it, and it’s tiny, a couple of acres max, so I don’t know anybody who fishes it. But I heard there were goldens in there years ago, and I thought the exit creek might hold some spawning bulls late in the year.

The allusion of detail

A conversation with celebrated artist and guide Bob White
Artwork: Bob White.

If you’re a fan of fly fishing literature and art, you’ve likely encountered the work of Bob White. Whether through his expressive artwork, his years as a guide in Alaska and beyond, or his close collaborations with John Gierach, Bob’s name and work have become icons in outdoor art.

Colorado native trout found reproducing in new home waters

After almost being wiped out by wildfire, Hayden Creek Cutthroat trout are on the rebound
Photo: Colorado Parks and Wildlife.

A native cutthroat trout found only in the Arkansas River drainage of southern Colorado, and once on the brink of extinction, is now reproducing naturally in waters where it was reintroduced after a devastating wildfire wiped out much of its native habitat nine years ago.

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