Recreation and Sports > Fishing > Lifelong Angler
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Article rating : 0.00, 0 votes. Author : Ken Mcbroom
My journeys thus far have led me down many paths and with many anglers across
this great land of ours. One person that comes to mind is a man named Ed Pease. Ed
is 77 years young to date and still going strong. He makes his way to Alaska each
fall in pursuit of Rainbows and Silver Salmon. I met Ed personally after seeing him
casting a fly into one of his favorite runs. It was depicted in a watercolor hanging on
the wall of Gigglewood Lakeside Inn, a Bed and Breakfast where I was staying the
summer. Linda, the owner of the B&B informed me that the man in the painting
would be up to fish in August and that I should meet him. So I did.
I was fishing a rather large creek that just happened to be the one in the painting. I
wasn’t having much luck when I noticed some anglers wading toward me from
upstream. The nearest angler turned to work the pool above me and it was then that
I realized it had to be the man in the painting. I later learned it was the very pool
that was rendered in the watercolor.
Ed is a lifelong angler, although far from a young man, Ed pursues his passion
relentlessly. Four to five weeks each fall you can find Ed angling Alaska’s rivers and
lakes in search of something but few will ever understand many are still searching.
Whether the drift of the fly, the flowing water of the river or the strike of a Silver
Salmon as it leaps from the depths of a well known run or perhaps it’s the
camaraderie found among friends at 3 am as we all joke about bears about as we
embark on a mile long journey, in the dark, down an even darker path along a
salmon choked river or creek.
Ed walks the trail alone as he is let out while the boy’s park the truck. You can see
Ed’s hat glisten as the headlights pan across the many flies that adorn it. One might
stock their fly box with the flies that drop from Ed's hat along that trail and if the
lucky recipient actually tied one of the colorful flies they will find that the fly is not
just pretty but effective as well. As for me I tend to leave the flies where they lay just
in case its Ed’s way of getting back to the truck.
Only Ed can say for sure what it is that motivates him into such pursuits that are far
from easy for any man. Rising at 2 a.m. in order to beat the crowds after fishing till
late the night before. Then trekking a mile or more to the hot spots on a bum hip
and landing as many, if not more, big fish than the rest of us. You should try
catching several Silver Salmon in rapid succession in a swift current. Fun for sure,
tiring for surer.
Many may wonder what the lifelong angler sees in such pursuits but I assure you
that the lifelong anglers of the world know exactly for which they are searching
because they have already found it. Explaining the feeling or reasoning is usually
futile at best and many, myself included, have grown weary of trying to describe the
indescribable.
I have been informed on many occasions that as you grow older your passions
change and your priorities get shuffled. My response is that if the fueling of my fire
for hunting and fishing ended today it would take more than my lifetime for the fire
to go out.
Last season Ed was hand lining for striped bass in the Atlantic Ocean! That’s right,
he was pulling 10 to 30 pound striped bass in with his hands while trolling off the
coast of Massachusetts. This year who knows? It is the lifelong anglers such as Ed
that give me hope that my passions be as strong in the future as they are now and
that at age 77 I too can still get to the hot spots and cast a fly to a stubborn Coho
and be able to land that Coho when I hook him.
Ed said last year it might be his last trip to Alaska. He was promptly reminded that
he had made that statement for at least five seasons before and every season since.
I feel as long as the passion is there Ed will be landing Coho and tying god-awful
flies that actually catch fish. It seems that the passion, in so many anglers around
the world, is much stronger than aching muscles and joints and the only time the
pain subsides is on the water with rod in hand and a fish on the line. I hope to see
Ed again on stream where we can compare flies and tall tales and enjoy a passion
that hopefully will continue in the hearts of many well past any of our time here on
earth. To Ed Pease of Massachusetts we salute you as a Lifelong angler and unsung
hero to our cause and thanks for sharing the clear water.
http://www.ramblingangler.com
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