Thursday, 24 January 2013

HOOKED!!!!! Game on!

Age 12, and about to have a life-changing moment that has me hooked ever since.  Hope you enjoy this follow up book excerpt from yesterday!  What has got you "hooked" in your life?  Art, music, photography, constructing things, the galaxy, hunting, travel, museums?  It's time to do more of things you love and stop wasting life's precious moments.  Time to go "fishing" for what you really love to do.

pmw


Be Safe, Be Ready!

Skipper Bruce decided to put me on one path of least resistance, a tributary near the shore that looked like a perfect spot through which fish could swim.  It was safe for me to stand on the rocks instead of having to wade out into the turbulent current of the “weedy hole” as we used to incorrectly call it.  (The “weedy hole” is actually another pool further up the river.)  Skipper Bruce was very safety conscious in everything that he did.  “Always be safe,” he would say, “Because safety must be a top priority in life.”  How right he was in times when companies placed profits above employee safety.  Many times the employees lived in fear and did not stand up for themselves, thus making unsafe decisions.  Far too often, we see people make careless decisions costing them too much, sometimes the ultimate cost - life itself.  “Work hard, play hard, but, be safe” was a major component of Skipper Bruce’s daily philosophy. 

I stepped up near the river and was ready to cast my fly.  I remember the fly well.  It was a “thunder and lightning” pattern that we bought at the local drug store in Placentia.  It was a #6 hook, average size for Atlantic salmon, containing a moose hair wing, black body with a gold tinsel rib, a yellow tail and a combination of blue and orange feather fibers for the underside wing commonly called a “throat.” 

Having ensured my safety on the river bank, Skipper Bruce proceeded to fish the major river stem in the main pool.  As a new salmon angler, I was not efficient at casting the fly across the current.  Through years of experience, I have now learned that presentation is the most important part of Atlantic salmon fishing, unlike fly-fishing for trout, where presentation is usually not as important as the fly you are casting.  Trout take the fly for hunger or territorial purposes.  Some of my fishing colleagues refer to trout as “dumb fish”.  I disagree.  No fish, like no human being, can be labeled “dumb.”  No one really knows, however, why the Atlantic salmon rises to the river surface to take an artificial fly.  It is part of the mystery of life itself, but one can speculate that “fishy” instinct underlies this tendency. 

After six or eight casts in this flow of fresh water, my rod bent over like I had hooked into a Boeing 747, and my reel started to sing like a chainsaw on overdrive!  ZZZZZZZZZZzzzzzzzzzz!!!  I was looking away as this happened but my focus immediately shifted back to the splashing and jumping in front of me.  The fresh silvery torpedo had taken my fly unexpectedly and it proceeded to muscle down the river as if shot from a cannon!  Before I had a chance to yell to Skipper Bruce, he was rushing over to see what the commotion was.  The fish made one final springing leap and the fly line and leader came back and hit me in the face.  Fish #1 was gone, just like that!  As a rookie angler, I did not have time to lift my fly rod when the hook was set.  It was both upsetting and startling.  What a rush! 

That first presentation was, no doubt, a fluke.  Whatever I did to attract that fish it worked.  What excitement to have the feel of a leaping Atlantic salmon on the end of your rod, solidly hooked and fighting to be free!  Skipper Bruce estimated it to be seven or eight pounds, a far cry from the “big” half pound trout that we sometimes angled; and a far cry from the small pan-size “sardine trout” that my brother and father often brought home. J  That day I was “hooked” to a new activity that has taught me so much about life itself and all the twists and turns we each face on a daily basis.  Do you have such an activity that has changed your life?  Now is the perfect time to get hooked.  

Wednesday, 23 January 2013

Skipper Bruce and my new fly-fishing career!

Another piece of chapter 1 of Fishing For Reality.  It was a unique experience hooking my first ever Atlantic salmon at age 12 but the scene is set below...stay tuned for what actually happened on day 1 of my new fly-fishing career over 25 years ago! Wow...where does the time go?!

pmw

 
Childhood and Youth Memoirs

Mother Nature offers a place of peace and tranquility, away from the hustle and bustle of everyday life.  Those, who can relate, know what we mean by the term “the great outdoors.”  I have spoken to many retired individuals who claim that if they could do it all again, they would make more time for fun with nature, smelling the roses along the way.  There is something to be said about Mother Nature…and childhood. 

Amazingly we can remember childhood experiences when someone made us feel super special.  With my father working on the United States Naval Base (Argentia, Newfoundland and Labrador) as a civilian, and my mother a stay-at-home Mom helping to raise my brother and me, I was the perfect protégé for “Mr. Mike”, as many of the locals called him.   

Skipper Bruce was one of these extraordinary human beings who could “hook” anyone on his solid presence, dazzling personality, charisma, leadership and unusual kindness.  As a young boy of about five or six years old, I remember driving with him in his green Dodge car, as he revved up the engine saying to the slow drivers, “COME ON! Drive it or park it! Get out of our way!”  Of course, he did this for fun to impress me.  I liked it when his voice rose as if he meant serious business.  As safety was a major concept in his life philosophy I knew it was only for my amusement. 

Seatbelt on, I could barely see over the dash.  Away we went to our destination.  There we were in the real classroom of life, learning about the things that matter most.  I am certain that he learned, too, because he always commented that we learn best by experience and through teaching others.  Those that teach, learn best.  When we struggle to make something clear for another we help it make better sense for ourselves.  Skipper Bruce was rarely, if ever, stuck for the right words at the right time in helping someone. 

I vividly remember that day as if it were yesterday, when Skipper Bruce and I first decided to try fly-fishing for Atlantic salmon.  Being only twelve years old, I was ready for action.  While many of my friends in junior high school were wrapped up in their girlfriends and preliminary teenage temptation experiences, I was engrossed in my other classroom of learning with Mother Nature and, Skipper Bruce.  

In some areas of the world, a fly-fishing angler can use bait, lures, and other contraptions to fish Atlantic salmon.  In Newfoundland and Labrador where I grew up, it is “fly-fishing only”, as a means of conservation.  More importantly, I see it as the ultimate challenge, hooking and landing an often acrobatic Atlantic salmon on a fly rod.  The Atlantic salmon is anadromous.  As an adult it first spends its life in the ocean, feeding for survival and its journey ahead.  When Mother Nature calls, it arrives in its river of origin to pass on the ultimate gift for future salmon generations.  The Atlantic salmon lives in fresh and salt (sea) water during its life cycle, a unique combination for a life species. 

During those early years of fly-fishing adventures, many changes were happening in the salmon fishery in Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada.  Conservation measures were implemented and pressed on everyone to help prevent future extinction of the Atlantic salmon stocks.  Simultaneously, Mother Nature had her own agenda.  The rivers on the Avalon Peninsula of Newfoundland were often low and warm; often they were closed to fly-fishing.  Nevertheless, I kept my positive attitude toward my new sport, as Skipper Bruce had told me to do so, especially after our first attempt at the new adventure.

The Northeast River just outside of my hometown, Dunville, was a raging flood on our opening day.  We had our fly rods, salmon licenses, leader material to attach fly to fly line and, of course, our new selection of artificial Atlantic salmon flies.  Skipper Bruce took me to fish a section of the river where many youth, including me, would swim in the summertime.  There was a huge cliff on the other side of the river with trees overhanging, having been washed out from the torrential rain.  I remember swimming there as a teenager, doing jumps, belly flops and dives off the main rock.  On this day though, we meant business - fishing business that is. 

When we got to the river it was evident that Mother Nature had been at work because the river was extremely high and there were many tributaries.  Here salmon could swim more easily.  Oftentimes fish take the path of least resistance.  This is a life philosophy applicable to us all on occasion: when you must, take the path of least resistance. 

We Are All Searching...

...yes indeed and the search continues.  The title of this blog is the opening line of chapter 1 in my book Fishing For Reality.  There is an excerpt from chapter 1 below; please have a read and share if you find it helpful.  Not that I have much time to write these days, but I am making time as it helps people and they often enjoy reading what I have to say, as contrarian as it may be. 

It is 2013 and the age of ideas.  Some also call it generation O...for obese.  My goal: to share ideas and stimulate your thought processes to bigger and better things while enjoying the ride in your life ship.  Life is all about the "fishing" (and the life-lesson catching) and Skipper Michael Joesph Bruce, my grandfather, said it best to me all those years ago:  "The real ship you are leading is a ship called yourself!"  We cannot say it any better than that.  Happy 2013 and happy "fishing" :)

pmw (Paul Michael White)
 
Chapter 1-Hooked…on New Beginnings

Many go fishing all of their lives without knowing that it is not fish they are after.
   - Henry David Thoreau

We are all searching.  On a daily basis we are searching for: more of the next life experience, a better relationship and improved health, more financial freedom and happiness, better friends and associates, and anything that we think will make us happy and fulfilled.   Yes, I believe that we are all searching…for something.

This fast-paced world of instant access and globalization has people online shopping, online dating, online counseling and online seeking new, better and improved living.  The career and life search is a challenging phenomenon.  In psychology these days, we say “dust off your childhood” to find a hidden talent that you never knew existed.  I recently heard one professional speaker say that the happiest in society are those who went back and found some of their hidden talents and put these to work to craft a life of success and fulfillment.  It does not have to be a new career path but maybe a hobby to pursue part time.  Imagine earning a living at something you enjoy and do extremely well!  It makes sense, doesn’t it? 

Mother Nature offers a place of peace and tranquility, away from the hustle and bustle of everyday life.  Those who can relate know what we mean by the term “the great outdoors.”  I have spoken to many retired individuals who claim if they could do it all again, they would make more time for fun with nature, smelling the roses along the way.  There is something to be said about Mother Nature…and childhood. 

Tuesday, 1 March 2011

Breaking New Ground!

'Welcome to the wild world of the blogosphere, Whitey' I say to myself.
Good to be on board, not that I have much time for writing, but nothing ventured, nothing gained.
Happy March everyone - spring will soon be here in Canada.  The birds will be chirping, the snow and ice melting, and the rivers raging...flowing to the sea in anticipation of summer's trout and salmon upstream migration.  Mother Nature just can't be beat - get out there and enjoy it.

pmw