The More, The Merrier By A.
Sayward Lamb
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Fishing trips
are not always “strictly fishing”, because more
often than not weekend or extended fishing trips,
involve several friends or family members who want
to get in on the act. I remember a story about an
older bachelor who finally married. When he returned
from his honeymoon trip, several of his buddies were
curious to know what he had already learned about
married life? When they inquired, his response was
brief and to the point. He said: “Expectations far
exceed realization!”
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As near as I can tell, fishing isn’t much different. We get all excited
and make plans for weeks or even months in advance. This would be fine
except we get everyone around us involved, whether it is our immediate
family or close friends. We just don’t quit talking about what we are
going to do or what we can expect from our trip. Will the accommodations
be adequate? Will we be “roughing it” in some remote spot, or are we
going to splurge on something fancy, such as a rustic cabin with a
luxurious outhouse that doesn’t smell to high heaven in the heat of
summer? In the end, all these things are really irrelevant as long as we
have a little time for fishing and a lot of time for socializing. No
doubt, a few of us go on fishing trips to fish but often times our
wives, who enjoy going on these trips, had rather sit around and “do
their thing” rather than sit out in a boat trying to catch fish.
Come evening the ladies and even some men, are ready to sit around a
camp fire and enjoy the jokes and other funny stories that make “a laugh
a minute” all evening long. There is always someone who wants to cook
something on the grill or outdoor fireplace and there are generally
plenty of hearty appetites to consume it all. If it isn’t comfortable
sitting outside, then we move inside our campers or cabins where often
times, card games take place. They are lots of fun and also can be
noisy—up to the point of interfering with the beauty rest of others in
nearby campsites.
Most serious fishermen believe in the old adage: “Early to bed and early
to rise.” This never happens on many family-type-fishing trips. So
fellas, better plan to socialize and leave the fishing for another time
and another place. I’m not trying to imply that family fishing trips are
not fun, because they are. I can hardly remember going on a fishing trip
that wasn’t fun, except the time when one of my close fishing buddies
talked me and my wife in to going on a weekend fishing trip. We played
cards every day and sometimes in the evening, and I don’t recall the
word “fishing” was ever mentioned while we were there. You can bet your
boots that now when I get an invite from him to go fishing for a
weekend, I ask a few silly questions like: “Are we going fishing?” Do I
need to bring fishing poles?” “Are you taking any playing cards?”
Several years ago Milt Inman and myself organized a fishing trip up to
northern Maine. We decided this would be a “men only” expedition and
invited several of our family and friends from in and out of state for a
weekend of fishing. Before we knew it, we had about a dozen fellows
going on the trip. It took more than a few phone calls to coordinate all
the necessities. We had plenty of provisions and it didn’t take long for
Milt and I to realize that we were doing much more cooking, washing
dishes, and policing up our area, than we were fishing. To make things
worse, the weather did not cooperate and it was rainy throughout most of
the weekend. I remember someone saw me cooking while I was wearing my
pullover rain shirt (that came way down to my ankles). For the rest of
the trip I became “Friar Tuck”. Some of the members of our party forgot
that this was not a catered trip and somehow seemed to forget that they
were supposed to help with chores and picking up around our area. Try as
we might in as polite a way as possible, we never did get our point
across. As a result, we learned that we had exceeded our numbers of
fellows needed to make it enjoyable for all, and since that time we have
slimmed down the number of people that we invite on our fishing
excursions.
One year my wife and I were invited to go on a fly fishing trip to far
northern Maine. We drove to the Canadian border, near Fort Kent, and
from there went southwesterly to some remote ponds with very primitive
campsites. The other couple who invited us, both were fishermen, but my
wife was not interested in fishing. As a result, whenever the three of
us went fishing, either at the pond where we camped or ponds nearby, my
wife stayed in the camper with our Brittany dog.
I was surprised one day when we got back from fishing, to find my wife
upset because some other person had driven in and parked his vehicle
nearby, beside the pond. Then the man simply sat outside, apparently
enjoying the beauty and solitude for several hours. I asked her if she
talked to him and she said, “No I didn’t dare to even open the camper
door. I felt very uncomfortable being here all alone, and I want to go
home.” I suggested that the dog was with her and would have protected
her. That statement fell on deaf ears and before the week was over, we
had to head home leaving our friends there. I felt like a fool but in
the interest of good marital relations, I felt that was the only thing
for me to do. To make it worse, we were catching some fairly respectable
trout in those remote ponds. Fortunately, our friends were very
understanding and that is the only time I ever aborted a fishing trip
ahead of our planned departure date.
Last year my wife and I went camping during Memorial Day weekend at
Cathedral Pines Camping Area in Eustis, Maine. My son Jim and wife Chris
also went with their camper. Jim and I had made plans to do some
fly-fishing on some of the ponds in that area during the weekend. I
brought my canoe on my trailer and Jim had a trailer hitch on his truck.
We planned that he would tow the canoe to the ponds we wanted to fish.
His problem was finding some free time away from his children and
grandchildren who also were camped out there. That, along with other
things that came up, made it impossible to go fishing until the last
evening we were there. We didn’t arrive at the pond until nearly seven
o’clock, which meant we had less than two hours to fish. Just as we were
launching our canoe, another young couple came on to the landing. They
told us that the trout were rising and that they had caught some fish.
Soon we had our fly rods all hung up and paddled out onto the pond. Sure
enough, the trout were rising and it wasn’t long before we were hooking
our flies into some nice trout. I believe that at that time, both Jim
and I wished we had been able to be fishing earlier in the afternoon.
But it was not to be, and we did enjoy about an hour and a half of good
fly-fishing.
I guess the point that I have tried to express with my words is that
sometimes our plans don’t work our exactly the way we planned. Still we
should be thankful for having family and friends to participate in our
fishing trips, even if it means less fishing for those of us that love
to fish. The memories of good times together will mean more in future
years than all the fish you didn’t catch. So I say, “The more, The
Merrier” and as far as the fishing goes most of the time: “Anticipation
far exceeds realization!”
By A. Sayward Lamb |