- September 19, 2024
-
Reid Auger
We were hiking in to the water we wanted to fish. Hot. August in Colorado can get that way. Itās amazing to be at 9500 ft and still feel oppressive heat.
āHow are things in your world?ā
āCanāt complain, Iām here arenāt I?ā
This is one of the classic beginnings for a hike into some off the beaten path water we often seek to fish on GFW.
These times are like Gold.
The conversations that naturally result from walking together offer a richness thatās hard to find anywhere else. We catch up, we bullshit, we seek advice, we make fun of each other, and we laugh. It is one piece of a long weekend that brings us closer. Strengthens friendships.
There is also a desire in us to find water that isnāt packed with fisherman. We like our space. We also know that some of the best fishing experiences take effort to ensure we get what we want.
So, we hike.
Inevitably, there comes a point where we stop. Usually because stretched out before us is a section of water that presents itself like a Red Carpetā¦stunning to the eye of a fly fishermen due to the knowledge that it contains the structure and contours that offer fish a plenty!
And with the increasing excitement that comes from the imagination of standing in the middle of that water, casting and hooking fish in every direction, always comes āThe Dilemmaāā¦stop and fish it or keep going?
Conundrums like this are as old as timeā¦Izaak Walton famously contemplated the idea of what brings more richness to a manās life: material āgoodsā or the experience of a day fishing on a river?
Henry David Thoreau followed suit with Walden, telling the tale of arguably the worldās first Dead Head, choosing to find a spiritual reckoning by giving up his possessions to live a simple life of self-reliance. Iām sure if he had kept one material thing, a phonograph, The Grateful Deadās āRippleā would have been blaring from the windows of his āsimpleā cabin.
The point is that we are faced with philosophical dilemmas regularly. And although making the decision to fish a stretch of water NOW or keep hiking deeper into the wilderness may not hold the same value as the life contemplation that Thoreau and Walton offered, it is still a complex decision that can make or break the āfunā factor for a day on the water.
Life is muddled with predicaments. And choices arenāt usually black and white. They force us to contemplate the āwhat ifs.ā I donāt like the āwhat ifā worldā¦usually, Iām more of a realist. Most of the time simplicity makes logical sense; however, Ripple is a great tune! And worth listening to on the regular. Sorry, Henryā¦Iām not giving up the record player!
When we are faced with the āRed Carpet Dilemmaā on GFW, there is always someone who will plummet down the bank and take full advantage. They just canāt help themselves. Itās too good to pass up.
However, when this scenario presents itself, I like the more musing option.
I know I can keep hiking and enjoy the conversations that ensue. I know I can keep walking and laugh some more. I know something positive will come from that time spent with one or more of my closest compadres. For it is in these moments that, selfishly, I become a better human.
Iām pretty sure Iāll catch fish. And even if I donāt, I can revel in the joy of knowing that one of my best friends did because they didnāt pass up that Walden like beauty of a stretch of water.
That kind of thinking would undoubtedly make Isaak and Henry proud. It certainly makes me feel that way.