Monday, September 4, 2017

Sonnet About My Spinner



"Dear Ms. Fishergarten,

   Thank you for submitting your manuscript, 'Sonnets of Terminal Tackle,' to the Nouveau Po-ette Publishing company. As a small publisher, we continually seek to promote talented new authors.

   Sadly, that does not include you.

   It is not clear from your submission whether you have ever read, much less studied, poetry. We point to this example:

Ode to My Spinner at Spinney Mountain
Oh Spinner
How did you end up in the net of my
Cupholder?
You were just dangling there
All feathers and glittering spoon,
At the end of
The 12.84’s line,
Dangling over the chair and
Cupholder
Yet not touching them,
Not even freaking close
You piece of junk.
Was there some unseen vortex
Coming from the cupholder net,
That sucked you in
Something
That devours terminal tackle,
Just to hear me swear
A lot?
Because that net sure never held
My Gatorade
Nearly as well.
And now, there you are
The last of our spinners
Somehow twisted firmly in the net
By each of your treble hooks.
Must I cut you out?
And render the cupholder
Bottomless,
Never again to hold a Gatorade,
No, nor even a Pepsi,
Nevermore.
Oh Spinner.

   Frankly, we sincerely hope that you can take to heart the words of poet Paul Valery: ‘A poem is never finished, only abandoned.

   We are returning your manuscript. Enough said.

Respectfully,

   The Publishers and Editors (and also assistants and other staff, so don’t try to contact them either)
   P.S. 'Cup holder' is two words.”
Cupholder has many words, none of them nice.












   “So,” FisherSpouse asked, digging through the tackle box. “Hear anything from the publisher yet?”

   Fishergarten shut down her email and watched storm clouds gather over Vega Reservoir, because, fishing.

    “It sounds promising,” she said. “They just want a small revision.”


   “Well, have you seen our spinners?” he asked, still digging. “I haven’t seen them since Spinney Mountain.”

   “I’m sure they’ll turn up,” Fishergarten said, carefully balancing her Gatorade in the cupholder of her chair. 

   FisherSpouse yanked a package out of the tackle box and held it up over his head like Braveheart brandishing a sword.

   “Hah!” he said. “I knew I’d bought some more.”

   He wandered off to a peninsula surrounded by a rocky shore.

   “You’ll never catch anything!” Fishergarten hollered. “You’ll only snag your new spinners!” 

A spinner magnet

   FisherSpouse looked over at her. “I got one,” he said quietly. Out in the water, something splashed. “Hand me the clamps,” FisherSpouse added. Expertly, he reeled in the fish, unhooked it, swished it back and forth in the water and watched it swim away.

   Eagerly, Fishergarten grabbed the 12.84, and cast. Reeling in her lure, she felt it grab something. Fighting the pull, she lifted an object from the water. Neatly threaded on one of the treble hooks was a tiny lock-shaped object.

   “Hey, look what I hooked,” she said excitedly to FisherSpouse. “It’s hand-crafted, I swear. It has a loop on the top and see how the sides look shaped, possibly with some prehistoric tool. You know ancient peoples must have walked this way once.”


   “It’s a rock,” FisherSpouse said. “Or maybe someone’s old sinker.”

   Fishergarten carefully unhooked the artifact and placed it gently in the net top of the tackle bag. She would have it appraised, once it was professionally cleaned.

   Determined, she cast again and the hook caught almost instantly. Quickly she reeled it in, anticipating more objet d’artifacts. She placed her catch gently on the shore. 

   “What’d you get?” FisherSpouse asked.

   “I’m not sure,” she answered. “It looks like … well … a crab inside a crab?

   “That’s interesting,” he said.

   “It’s gross,” she said. “How do I get this thing off my hook?”

   “Well,” he said, examining it. “Doesn’t look like you caught any cartilage. Just pull it off … no -- pull down … no, not like that. You have to rip it. Jeez. Keep pulling. OK, there you go.”

   Fishergarten was feeling a little sick. She likely had snagged the handiwork of ancient crustaceans, but it was still disgusting.

   Somewhat less eagerly, she cast a third time. To her right, FisherSpouse landed another fish.

   “That’s two in one hour!” he crowed.

   Sourly, Fishergarten started reeled her line. This time, she had something heavy. She pulled mightily and her catch bounced onto shore. Her carefully de-barbed hook was stuck in the hole of a rock.


   “Yeah, there’s a lot of porous volcanic rock up here,” FisherSpouse said encouragingly. “But just look at how you got that hook so perfectly in that hole of that rock. That’s good fishing.”

   Fishergarten looked at him.

   “I’m a little tired of history,” she said finally. “Probably, we should get off the mountain now.”

   “But –” FisherSpouse looked stricken. “We can’t leave yet. I only caught two.”

  A short time later, driving into Collbran, Fishergarten reviewed the day.

   “I caught a lot,” she said. “But not any fish. I think, yes, I think it was just a bad spot. Too many rocks.”

   FisherSpouse shot her a glare.

   “And next time, I won’t use a spinner,” she added. “They’re great for unearthing artifacts, but not so much for fishing in rocks. I’m going to need something that floats.”

   What about you, FisherFriends? How do you keep your spinners out of the rocks? Go ahead and spill your secrets in the comments below.

Tuesday, June 27, 2017

Blog Reboot




Dear Ms. Fishergarten,

Thank you for renewing your domain for this blog site. We appreciate your business, and here at Google Blogger, we are happy to take your money for no apparent reason.

Yet we do take pride in the fact that we can offer our vibrant and vocal community this forum for blogging. That entails actually writing something. On a regular basis. Not just on the (very) rare occasion when you feel like it. And throwing up a photo once in a while is, frankly, not blogging.

True, it’s not that you will ever exactly overwhelm our servers with prose and resulting reader comments, especially since analytics show only those who self-identify as your family read or respond to your work. But think of it like this. Would you buy a fine tackle bag and not fill it?

In short, how about we see a little action here?

We remain ready to assist you, if you ever use your blogging space. Ever.

Sincerely,
Google Blogger Customer Service


“Well,” Fishergarten said to FisherSpouse as she shut down her email. “Looks like Google is noticing my blog. Maybe they’ll move it up in their highly competitive SEO sorting.”

FisherSpouse didn’t look up from the reel he was spooling.

“Maybe.” he said. “If you ever write anything.”

Always one to appreciate constructive feedback, Fishergarten gently reminded him: “I’m so sure! What do you ever read besides Field & Stream and the 2017 Colorado Fishing guide anyway.”

But thinking back, Fishergarten could faintly recall hints of her neglect in the last months.

“Mom,” FisherDaughter said in exasperation. “I try to tell people about your blog, but when you don’t actually write it, I spend most of my time telling them you’re not dead.”

And then there was FisherSon, whose passion for fishing means he is generally located in Colorado’s wilderness only by coordinates and only when he hits that elusive 3 foot-by-3-foot spot where there’s a cellular signal.

“… gave up blog? … Fish anymore? Thought … dead or something.”

Or from Non-FisherSon: “You have a blog?”

And so, Fishergarten sees that by many measures, posting once every nine months does not mean one blogs. After much soul-searching and introspection, possibly 45 minutes’ worth, she sees that she must start to practice careful discipline and commitment. At some point.

For now, Fishergarten believes she can best contribute to the fishing community with the following warning: