My Love For Smelting By Thomas
K. Remington
It seems that everyone I know and probably everyone that
you know, has a love for something. I would suppose that lacking in a
love for something or even someone would create a sense of uselessness
or one of no purpose. Thankfully, I have passions for many things. Love
and passion for hobbies, activities or I suppose inanimate objects comes
in several shapes and forms. For some people, a true love of sports, for
example, runs their lives and renders them useless in other ways. Those
would be the extreme cases. A passion for your job, although I have
never been able to understand that myself, is something that shouldn’t
be allowed to fall into any of these categories because I consider the
word “job” to be one of negative relativity. So, let’s forget about
that. I am talking mainly about hobbies and things of the sort that
occupy one’s “spare” time like hunting and fishing, or reading and
exercise or jumping over 35 school buses parked side by side on a Yamaha
Enduro dirt bike! Did I say that?
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Rainbow Trout
My love for smelting would be comparable to jumping the
35 school buses or playing in traffic on the Ventura Freeway on a Friday
afternoon. Sorry, but I have never been able to muster up a love for the
sport. I’ve tried. I find it fascinating to learn of the quest of the
little guys (and gals; I need to remember my political correctness)
working so hard to find that perfect place to spawn and produce more
little guys. The most of them will never live long enough to find their
way back to where it all began. |
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Perhaps it all started way back many years ago when I sat down at the
table one night for supper; in Maine it’s called supper so stop
laughing. Placed before me was a plate of fresh smelts prepared
wonderfully by my mom. They were breaded in some concoction of cornmeal,
flour and specially selected herbs and spices. Yeah, right! Who am I
kidding? I’m trying to make the entrée sound exquisite. Actually it
wasn’t bad except for two things. If you don’t want to hear about this
anymore, I suggest you stop now and return to the home page.
The two things that perhaps were what caused me to not like smelts and
in effect smelting itself were the heads and guts. The smelts still had
the heads and the guts in them and to make matters even worse, I watched
unbelieving as my dad ate them that way, including the bones!
Have you ever tried taking off the heads, cleaning up the guts and
de-boning a pan-fried smelt? As dexterous as you may be, it is an act in
futility. I do need to clarify one thing before I proceed. I have never
been one to eat much fish anyway. I am deathly allergic to all forms of
creatures that come from the sea and I am sure that doesn’t help in my
desires for fresh water species either.
But let’s put the eating aspect of it aside for a few moments and
discuss the other elements of this strange sport and see if we can
determine exactly what it is that would make me not enjoy going
smelting.
Most of us work for a living and I am no exception. That, for the
majority of people is a 9-5, trying-to-make-a-living thing, and when 5
p.m. rolls around who in the hell wants to go out and be up the rest of
the night looking for little fish swimming up small streams? Well, I
suppose many people but I’m not one of them. Only the die-hard smelt
lovers are the ones who venture into the wilds of the cold, damp nights
in search of the elusive smelt. Let’s not kid ourselves either. It’s not
so much that you are up most of the rest of the night trying to get a
robust “2 quarts” of smelts after sometimes driving 150 miles, it is
what you do while you are awake during that time that kills you. Not to
get off the subject here but I can’t help it. Does anyone else have a
difficult time understanding why we measure quantities of smelts by
quarts? I know I am not the brightest leaf on the tree but isn’t that a
liquid measurement? Why don’t we measure them by weight or numbers?
Never mind.
Let’s face it! Some of us require very little sleep and some more than
what would be considered average. I am somewhere in the average to
perhaps a little more than average and therefore have a difficult time
pulling an “all-nighter”. So when trying to decide whether or not to go
out smelting for the night, this factor weighs heavily.
Not to sound as though there is nothing good about smelting, I can think
of one thing I did enjoy when I went. This was at a time when I used to
smoke and while I was outside freezing my ass off, I could smoke all I
wanted and I didn’t have my wife and two kids whining at me about how
smoking was going to kill me. Little did they know that smelting was
what I thought would really kill me.
I might add at this point before all you positive, “I love smelting
freaks” leave my story because you think I’m just a downer. Writing this
story is actually helping you guys out. If I can convince a few hundred
fence sitters that smelting really isn’t much fun, then there will be
more room on the brook banks and more smelts for all of you to enjoy. So
stay and finish reading and stop groaning. I’m doing you a favor!
We have already determined that being up all night stinks and perhaps
eating smelts all intact might roll your stomach. What else can we think
of? While out in the boondocks, because that is the only place you can
find smelts, you may get hungry so you stop at the local convenience
store (or do you remember The Brown Owl) on your way out of town to pick
up some nourishing foods to take with you. You will stock your cooler
with things like: Twinkies, beer, potato chips, beer, a Slim Jim or
eight, beer, Little Deb’s snacks and beer. While you’re getting stuff,
you probably want to grab a “family pack” of the King of Beers (I know I
always shared my Bud with my “family”).
Once you and your buddy arrive, the fun begins. The first thing you
discover is you have forgotten you rubber boots. You didn’t forget your
waders because no one in their right mind would go wading for smelts
anyway so you have deliberately left them home. All you have on are
sneakers so you know immediately your feet are going to be wet and
nearly frozen all night long. Of course you are half-smart because you
remembered an extra pair of socks to put on after the night’s fishing.
You quickly march down to the brook’s edge and begin scanning for
smelts. You travel out to the mouth and back up-stream for some distance
to discover the same thing the other 238 smelters had found out before
you arrived – nothing! Time to break out the Budweiser – you and 238
others – and wait and drink and wait and drink.
By now it is 1 a.m. and you hear some drunken man yelling, “I think the
(*^%*&^ things are starting to %*&^ run now!” Everyone dashes to the
brook to see this awesome spectacle. 229 of the men fall into the brook
and the other 9 begin cussing them out because they are going to mess up
the run. While all this is going on, two guys have put on their waders
and have lit their Coleman Lantern and are wading out into the mouth of
the brook to “draw” the smelts in. The fighting begins. “Get your &%@*&^
ass out of the pond! Your screwing it all up!”
And so the night goes. By the time you go and retrieve your net and
buckets and get down to the brook, it is total mayhem. Your flashlight
batteries are about gone so you can’t see. Your feet are already soaked
up to your knees and now you have lost one glove. Your teeth are
chattering up and down faster than a woodpecker pecking to get a bug out
of the old pine tree and every time you try to get your net into the
brook, the guy behind you yells at you to get lost. You unproductively
dip anyway and lose your pack of cigarettes into the brook. It’s good
that they float for quite a while but not so good because you have to
chase them down stream.
Other than that, all is going extremely well – I still have a 6 pack of
Bud left. It’s 2:30 a.m. now and still no smelts. People are dipping and
as they get their limits they nicely deposit all their trash in the
woods and along the banks of the brook and pond and head home. You look
around and you and your buddy are the only ones left. Finally some peace
and quiet. You both scour the brook looking for some smelts and between
the two of you you come up with 5 fish. What a night!
Tired, cold, frustrated and mad you head back to your truck with gear in
hand. It’s too late for another beer cause you have just realized you
have to be at work in 3 hours. You scrounge around for one last Slim Jim
and a Twinkie for the ride home. Your buddy (who of course hasn’t been
drinking) drives and cranks the heat up as high as it will go. It acts
just like a potent sleeping pill and immediately your head begins
looking like a fishing bobber bouncing up and down on a choppy lake.
That action continues for some time trying to stay awake. You feel a bit
sick to your stomach from all the nutritious foods you have consumed and
you’re still soaked. In between nods, you say to yourself, “I must be
crazy! Why would anybody do this to themselves?”
You awaken to another noise that you don’t quite recognize and look over
at your buddy. “Did you say something?” you ask. “Yeah!” your buddy
says, “I heard someone talking tonight that probably the smelts will be
running up at Mill Brook by tomorrow night. Want to go?” “Sounds like
fun to me! What time you want to leave”
By Thomas K. Remington |