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MILK
and COOKIES
Early spring is the time for my annual sojourn to Wisconsin
to fish the many spring creeks in the southwestern part of the state with my
friend of many years, Virgil Anderson of Mt. Horeb. On the first day of my visit we decided to fish the Blue
River. The Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources state in their fishing
guide that 20-inch browns are not uncommon in the Blue and many other streams as
well. If the Blue didn’t pan out there were several other streams not far
away. We fished for nearly the entire morning and only hooked one
fish. Virgil got an adrenaline rush when one of those not uncommon 20-inch
browns chomped onto one of Chip’s Gitters. After being on a few seconds it got
under some logs and broke off. We decided to go back to the car and take a break
and spend the afternoon on Castle Rock Creek. Arriving back at Virgil’s Cherokee, we placed our rods
carefully on the roof. Virgil opened the back and pulled out a couple of folding
chairs. It was time to enjoy Wisconsin’s favorite fisherman’s refreshment,
milk and cookies. Well…not exactly. After a long morning of fishing and walking a few miles, the “milk and cookies” went down pretty well, so well
that we had another round. Amply
refreshed we put the chairs back
into the car and headed merrily for Castle Rock. As we were about to turn on to the county road that would
take us to Castle Rock a milk truck went by in the same direction that we were
going. “I’m going to pass that truck before we get to that steep
hill ahead”. We got by the truck just at the base of the hill and started
a steep ascent on the narrow road. Virgil glancing in the rear view mirror
remarked, “That guy behind us is flashing his headlights.” “I won….”. At
that instant a scraping sound came from the roof of the car followed by the
sounds of clink, clink behind us. “Oh Fiddlesticks!” we both yelled at the same instant.
Well…not exactly. I turned in my seat as Virgil hit the brakes. $900 worth of
Orvis fly rods were lying in the middle of the road, and that truck was about to
trash them. Lucky for us the truck
driver had seen the rods on top of the car and anticipated that they would slide
off going up that steep hill and was able to stop in time.
Except for a couple of minor dings to the reels, the rods were undamaged. We were fortunate. We were not the first fisherman to drive
off with rods or some other item on top of a vehicle. A friend of mine did it
late one evening when moving from one fishing locality to another. When he
realized what he had done the rod was no longer on top of the car. He drove back
and forth over the route that he had taken but never found the rod. The lesson here is never to put anything loose on top of a
vehicle. Most quality rod manufactures guarantee their rods for 25 years, no
questions asked. If the truck behind us had trashed the rods we could have
returned them to Orvis and they would have repaired or replaced them, but there
are no guarantees that cover lost rods.
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