No pictures this week, just a story to tell........
One of the things we love about coming up here
is the people. Each week a new group of fisherpeople come in from various parts
of Canada and the United States. Over 1/2 of them are returning customers while
the remaining are new. Seeing the returning customers is like a reunion of
sorts. We get to visit and catch up with what each of us have been up to
throughout the year. This past week we met people from northern Minnesota,
Ohio, Windsor Ontario and Iowa.
The subject of this blog is a lone fisherman
named Ed. Ed is a personal injury lawyer from Iowa who drove 14 hours for two
days of fishing. Since he had never been up here before I offered to take him
out both days. He was looking for the full adventure package and he got a lot
more than he ever expected!
Taking someone fishing like this may sound like
all fun and games but it is actually quite stressful. He drove a long way to
get here and his expectations were high. For our first adventure I planned a full
day of walleye fishing on Onaman Lake complete with shore lunch on a remote island on the lake.
Well….. the best laid plans got off to a rocky
start. Our hour drive to the parking area was uneventful until we got within 100
yards of our destination when I heard an all too familiar noise coming from one
of the jeep tires. I stopped and look to see a ½ flat tire on the rear of the
jeep. I quickly jumped in the jeep and made it to the parking area. Rather than
spend valuable fishing time changing a tire I told Ed to grab his rod and we
would worry about it later.
After the mile and a ¼ walk to the lake we
jumped in the boat and headed to my favorite hot spot. The same place we made
the video a few weeks ago. It was dead calm on the lake…. no good. After an
hour of fishing we had one fish and I am internally panicking. I need to get
this guy on the fish!!!! Spot #2 near pelican island, same thing….. no fish. By
now we are two hours into our fishing trip and have 2-3 fish to show for our
efforts. I keep telling Ed that it is just a matter of finding them, once we do
we will be catching them like crazy. So we move to a point that I have done
well at in the past. By now the wind and clouds have rolled in so our once calm
and flat lake has turned into white caps and rollers. Challenging for boating
but good for fishing.
We pulled up at spot #3 and started catching
fish almost immediately. Over the next hour we caught about 24 walleye
averaging 20-22”’s. Finally I can start to relax, we are on the fish! We kept 3
for shore lunch and after a time headed to an island to cook them up. We arrive
at the island, tie up the boat, cut up the potatoes and put them on my portable
stove while I cleaned the fish. There is nothing better than a shore lunch
right on the lake, it was fantastic!
Lunch done, I start cleaning up and bring
everything over to the boat to load up and…… no boat. I look downwind and see
the boat drifting down the lake bobbing in the waves about 300 yards off the
island! I run back up to my duffle bag I had unloaded our shore lunch gear from
and grab my life jacket and start running for the lake. Ed says “What are you
doing?” Putting on my life vest I replied that I was going to get the boat.
Picture if you will…..Life vest on, take pants off
and pull the rip cord on my life vest which activates the automatic inflator.
Within seconds a huge yellow life vest inflates around me. So there I am standing
on shore in my underwear with this silly yellow life vest on headed for a boat
300 yards out on a windy lake. What choice to I have? Doing my best Michael
Phelps imitation I leap in the water and swim as fast as I can….. for about 50
yards…..then I turn on my side and do a side stroke for the next 50 yards
pretty soon I am on my back doing the back stroke totally exhausted. After the
next 50 yards I figure I must be gaining on it so I roll over to see the boat
still 200 yards away! The wind is carrying it much fast than I am swimming.
Undaunted I carry on until I just can’t swim any more, I look at the boat,
still no closer, I look at the island… it is now 200 yards up wind and here I
am too tired to move… floating like a huge yellow bobber in the middle of this
lake.
Decision time… do I continue after the boat? Do
I head back to the island? The only way to catch the boat is to wait for it to
hit shore about 3 miles across the lake.... and I am not sure if I have the
strength to swim back to the island. Luckily common sense kicked in and I turn
around and head back to the island. At this point I can only lay on my back and
scissor kick and stroke with my arms. Waves are crashing over my face but I can
tell I am making headway. It is then I realize I am still wearing my hat. Why
am I wearing my hat? Oh well….. I carry on… I am thinking we are here for the
night and someone will come look for us tomorrow. We have food, water and fire,
it is not going to be fun but we will survive. But how will they find us on this 28,000 acre lake?
I finally make it to where I can touch bottom
but don’t have the strength to stand up so I continue swimming and just off
shore I beach myself on a boulder like a sea lion on the Oregon coast. A sea
lion wearing a yellow inflatable life vest that is. Ed is standing close by
asking if I am alright but I just hug the rock trying to catch my breath. I
look up and what do I see headed in our general direction? Another boat! Ed
takes off his shirt and starts waving it and I stand up to make the yellow vest
more visible. I am not sure what they thought when they saw a shirtless man
waving at them and a pantsless man standing in the water….. anyone with common
sense would have probably turned around and headed the other way but they came
over and we directed them to the boat which they promptly retrieved for us.
Ends up they were a husband, wife and two kids group from Windsor Ontario who
were staying at Pasha Lake as well. They are now our new best friends!
Soon we were all packed up and back in the boat
laughing and catching fish. For something that could have turned out horribly
bad in many several different scenarios it could not have turned out much better. We must have caught more than 30 fish each averaging over 20”’s and a
story to tell on top of it!
At the end of the day we arrived back to the
jeep, changed the tire and headed home.
The next day we headed to Northwind Lake. It was a great and much less exciting day where
again caught about 30 fish each and Ed caught his first blue walleye. And guess
who we ran into on that lake???? The Windsor family who rescued us the day
before! We invited them to have shore lunch with us, afterall, it is not like
they did anything for us…. Mark and Deb are a great couple and we hope to catch
up with them on our journey east next summer.
At the end of day 2 Ed said he had some of the
best fishing ever and an adventure of a lifetime! Another successful mission….