<h2 class="nobreak">DOWN STREAM</h2></div>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</span></p>
<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</span>
<p class="ph1">DOWN STREAM</p>
</div>
<p><span class="xlarge">I</span>F you have ever known fishing, real
fishing, not the guide-book kind, where
you “whip” streams for fancy fish that
bite mainly in fancy—there will come a
day in late July when it will be necessary
for you to go down stream. The
excessive heat and humidity which has
been killing you off by inches and
other people by wholesale for weeks
will suddenly vanish before a cool, dry
northwester, a gladsome reminder to
the New Englander that there is such
a thing as winter after all; thank
Heaven!</p>
<p>You know that the drought diminished
waters still fizz out from under<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</span>
the dam and purl into the pool below
the roadside where the sunfish congregate
under the water weeds. Beyond
this they prattle down the meadow under
banks where the hard-hack stands pink
and prim, where the meadow-sweet loves
the stream so much that it bends
toward it and half caresses, and where
the meadow grasses in complete abandonment
whisper of it in every wind
and bend down and surreptitiously kiss
it as it dimples by. Farther down
where the woodland maples troop up
to meet it and the willows sit and
bathe pink toes in the current is the
big rock, under which the current has
dug a sandy cave in which linger big
yellow perch, ready to rush out and
snatch the worm that comes floating
down stream. Here you will hesitate
but finally pass on, for there is a lure<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</span>
which you cannot withstand in the deep
pool farther down.</p>
<p>Because you are wise with the remembered
wisdom of boyhood, you have
left at home the expensive rod and reel.
Just back from the swamp edge is a
birch jungle where young trees stand
as thick as canes in a Cuban brake.
Here you find your pole; as large as
your thumb at the butt, tapering,
straight, clean and strong, fifteen feet to
the tip. Cut it and trim the limbs from
it and bend to it your ten feet of stout
line at the end of which is a hook
whose curve is as big as that of your
little finger nail. A cork that would fit
a quart bottle will fit your line if you
gash it with your pocket-knife and slip
the line in the gash. It will hold
wherever you put it, yet you may slide
it up and down at will. For the pool<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</span>
you should put it three feet from your
hook, for you will wish to “sink” that
deep. Wind a wee bit of lead about
your line an inch above the hook, then
pull out your bait box and select a fat
angle-worm. Break him in two in the
middle and string him on the hook so
that the point is just inside the tip of
his nose. Now you are ready for what
adventure may lurk under the bubbly
foam of the surface.</p>
<p>A willow and a maple lean together in
loving embrace over the entrance to the
deep pool. Above, their arms stretch
toward one another and intertwine; below,
their roots meet under water and
sway down stream, forming a slippery
steep down which the amber yellow
water, singing a happy little song to itself,
coasts into the amber black depths
of the pool. Black alders stand cooling<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</span>
their feet all about the edge.
Crowding them into the water are the
great oaks and maples whose limbs
yearn above the pool till they shut out
the sun. Along one side the current
has cut deep to the rough rocks and
the water flows black and swift. On
the other the back-wash circles leisurely
and the bottom shallows to a bank of
sand where the sunfish build their nests
and the fresh-water clams burrow and
put up suppliant mouths to the food-bearing
current. Inshore it lifts to a
sand bar, where you may stand and
swing your pole without interference
from the surrounding trees.</p>
<p>All day long the brook sings itself to
sleep as it slips down the slide into the
slumberous depths of the pool. All day
long the vivid green dragon-flies flutter
by with vivid black wings to bring<span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</span>
luck to your fishing, and the red-eyed
vireo pipes his sleepy note in the trees
above. And all day long you shall catch
fish if you will but bait your hook and
drop it in. First you will thin out the
sunfish, for they are the most alert and
gamy of all. Talk about trout! You
should try landing a half-pound sunfish
on a gossamer tackle and a very slender
pole. The sunfish is the <i>Lepomis gibbosus</i>
of the ichthyologists and is a close
relative of the rock bass, and just as
game. He has been irreverently dubbed
“pumpkin seed” in some places, from
his shape, which is that of a pumpkin
seed set up on edge. Here in eastern
Massachusetts he is just plain “kiver,”
which is the old-time uneducated New
Englander’s pronunciation of the word
“cover,” given him, no doubt, because
he is round and flat. He is as freckled
as a street urchin and as lively. He
has business with your bait the moment
it drops near him, and the bobbing cork
will show that it is he by the jaunty
vigor of its bobs.</p>
<div class="figcenter"><ANTIMG src="images/i096.jpg" alt="" /></div>
<p class="caption">The way of the “kiver” is this. There is a single, snappy, business-like<br/>
bob, then another, then three in quick succession</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</span>In fact, if you have learned the ways
of the down-stream country you will
know every fish that takes your bait
long before you have brought him to
the surface from the amber depths, just
by the way in which he bobs that floating
cork. The way of the “kiver” is
this. There is a single, snappy, business-like
bob, then another, then three
in quick succession in which he drags
the cork half under. If you strike just
at the right time during the succession
of three, when the line below is taut
with the strain of the float against the
pull of the fish, you shall have him.
Otherwise your cork will lift from the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</span>
water with a humorous snort and you
will hear little trills of derisive laughter
in the song of the stream cascading
down the willow root chute. It will be
safer not to try him on the three bobs,
but wait till the cork begins to bore
into the water and glide off across
stream, showing that the sunfish has
made up his mind that it is a worm, a
good one, and one that he really wants.</p>
<p>The mother sunfish just at this time
of year has her nest in the sand at the
upper end of the bar, in shallow water.
It is a circular depression which she
has scooped out and from which she
has carefully removed all pebbles and
sticks. Here she has laid her eggs, and
here, day and night, she stands guard
over them. If any other fish comes
along, even of her own kind, she will
chase it away with a brustling courage<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</span>
which is like that of a mother hen defending
her chicks. So, after you have
caught the freelance sunfish of the
pool, those which have no family
cares, do not drop your bait near her
nest, for if you do she will dart out and
take it, and it is a pity to have the
brook lose her. She has made her nest
in the one shallow spot where the
bright sunlight plays, and you may
see every dapple of her lovely sides as
the light glances on them. Her every
fin quivers as she floats there, slowly
turning from side to side, her bright
eyes roving in search of enemies to her
offspring. She is a whole torpedo boat
of mother love and pent-up energy, and
so let us leave her, for she makes the
whole pool seem homelike and hospitable.</p>
<p>The yellow perch will come next to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</span>
your hook, his tawny yellow sides
marked by bands of dark green, his
back a darker green yet, and his fins a
rich red. He is the aristocrat of the
pool, his family being one of the very
oldest in the fish domesday book. He
lies in deeper water than the sunfish,
and his bite varies from a gentle nibble
to a good strong succession of pulls
which finally end in the cork going
down out of sight altogether. Yet
when he is at the bait you shall not
mistake any motion of that bob for the
ones made by the sunfish. The perch
has a daintier, more gentlemanly touch.
It is sure and strong, but it lacks the
roistering vitality of the sunfish. It is
an aristocratic bite, and you will recognize
it as such without clearly knowing
why,—which is proof of his aristocracy.
You will recognize it, too, from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</span>
the elegance of his figure and the
chaste beauty of his attire. He gleams
in the sunlight. His yellow and green
markings are as vivid as those of the
sunfish, yet arranged in exquisite taste,
and he is dapper where the other is
bourgeois.</p>
<p>Sink a little deeper now, for it is
time you caught horn-pouts. The horn-pout
is also “bull-head,” and, irreverently
I fear, “minister,” because of the
severity of his black attire, which is relieved
only by a white vest. But horn-pout
is the best name, for his horns
stick out fierce and straight from either
side of his gills like the waxed mustachios
of a stage Frenchman. They
are sharp as needles and set as firm as
daggers in their sockets. When you
outrage the dignity of a horn-pout by
pulling him out of the water he waggles<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</span>
these fins of dagger-bone and
makes a peculiar grumbling sound with
them. It is as if he said, “What!
what! What’s all this? Who dares
disturb my comfort?” Then when you
reach to take him off the hook he flips
that nimble black tail of his and jabs his
dagger into your hand. It makes an ugly
wound, and the boys claim that it conceals
venom; a sort of poisoned dagger.
The horn-pout bobs your floating
cork usually twice or three times, a
very different bob from either that of
the sunfish or the yellow perch. It is a
steady, solid down pull each time, taking
the cork half under water. Then he
takes hold in earnest, and the float goes
steadily down and out, as if this were a
matter of no child’s play, but meaning
something that is solid and substantial
on the other end of the line. Oftentimes<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</span>
this is true indeed, for the black-coated
one may weigh a pound or two
and double your birch rod into a good
half-circle before he lets go his grip on
the water.</p>
<p>When you get down to the horn-pouts
you have fishing indeed, but all
the time the climax of your day’s career
is lurking down in the cavernous depths
where the stream has gullied far beneath
the ledge, for there, as thick as
your wrist and three feet long, weighing
a pound to the foot of solid white flesh
and muscle, is an eel.</p>
<p>The eel is the strange misanthrope of
the brooks and fresh-water ponds. You
may peer into the sunlit shallows and
see the other fishes at their work or
play. They are companionable. If
you will live on the pond edge you may
train the minnows, the sunfish, the yellow<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</span>
perch even, to come up and eat out
of your hand. I have watched a big
horn-pout lumbering about in the shady
depths for an hour and seen him carefully
inspect a hookless worm which I
had dropped to him, before he ate it,
noting with glee the gravity and self-importance
with which he finally decided
that it was all right and that he would
confer a favor upon it by swallowing it
whole. Yet never once have I seen or
laid hands on an eel in fresh water.
There he goes his own mysterious way
among the rock crevices and along the
mud of the ultimate depths. The other
fishes of the brook travel in schools; he
goes alone. They were spawned up
stream; he was born on the sands of
the fishing banks, a hundred miles off
shore. He came up stream as a young
eel squirming through dams that shut<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</span>
out other fishes. When the time comes
for him to go back he will go back the
same way, waxed fat indeed, but still
unseen, devious, self-possessed, and uncannily
shrewd.</p>
<p>That he may live to go back he inspects
carefully the worms which may
drop into the cool shadows where he
lurks. When he is about to take your
bait you need to be keen to know what
is going on, for he suspects you, and
your least untoward motion of rod or
line will cause him to slip back like a
shadow into his cavern, and there will
be no bite from him on that hook after
that. You will say that it cannot possibly
be a bite; the bob simply stops and
the hook has no doubt caught on a snag
on bottom. If you are not wise enough
to know better you will pull up here lest
you lose your hook, and in so doing you<span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</span>
will lose your eel, for he is simply testing
you. He has hold of the very bottom
of that hook, below point and barb, and
if you pull you pull it out of his mouth
without hooking him. Then in cynical
glee he’ll wag himself deeper into his
cavern beneath the stones, and that is
the last of him. You may fish the pool
for a week before he will forget his
caution and try another angle-worm. If,
however, nothing rouses his suspicions
the bob will gradually sink lower till it
is more than half submerged, hang there
for a little, give another sag downward,
and so by degrees be drawn cautiously
under. Your eel is cannily carrying the
hook down into his cavern, where he
may finish his meal at leisure. Now is
the crucial moment. He must not be allowed
to get in among the stones, for
even if your strike hooks him he will<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</span>
twist himself desperately around them
and then twist the hook out. A steady
quick pull and you feel him on. Then
indeed you “give him the butt,” as the
fly fishermen say gloryingly. Your lithe
birch rod bends in your hands till the tip
is near your wrist as you lean desperately
back with all your strength. The
hold of a three-foot eel on the water is
tremendous. Until he tires a bit it is
almost as good as yours on the birch
pole, but steadily, inch by inch, you draw
him away out into the pool, where the
fight is a fair one. Now his head is
above water and his great lithe body
whirls like a propeller beneath. Again
look out; for when he leaves the water
it will be as if he shot out, and you
are liable to go with him, backward into
the bushes, where he will tie your line
into ten thousand knots, break out the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</span>
hook, and run for the brook as a snake
might.</p>
<p>At the moment he leaves the surface
you slow up. Up into the air he shoots
and drops till his tail welts the ground
at your feet. Here let him wriggle at
the end of the taut line while you break
a stout alder switch with one hand, and
as you drop him to earth belabor him
with it. This will stun him quicker than
anything else, and you may then deal
with him as you will, only be quick
about it, for he is very tenacious of
life.</p>
<p>Then, if you are a true fisherman, you
will wind up what line is left you and
go your way, for the pool has no more
foemen worthy of your steel. There will
be but one eel to a pool, and to go on
catching sunfish would be insipid indeed.</p>
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<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</span>
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