<h2><SPAN name="topic8" id="topic8"></SPAN>Trout Fishing in the Berkeley Hills</h2>
<p>Since the days when Izaak Walton wrote The Complete Angler, men
have emulated his example, and gone forth with rod and reel to
tempt the finny tribe from dashing mountain brook or quiet
river.</p>
<p>We, being his disciples, thought to follow his example, and
spend the day in the Berkeley hills whipping the stream for the
wary brook trout.</p>
<p>April first is the open season for trout in California, but
owing to the scarcity of rain we feared the water in the brook
would be too low for good fishing. Providence favored us, however,
with a steady downpour on Wednesday, which put new hope in our
hearts, and water in the stream; and we decided to try our luck on
Saturday afternoon, and take what came to our hooks as a "gift of
the gods."</p>
<p>Accordingly, we met at the Ferry Building, fully equipped, and
took the boat across San Francisco Bay, thence by cars to
Claremont, and from there struck into the hills. The wind blew cold
from the bay, having a clear sweep up through the Golden Gate, but
as soon as we began to make the ascent our coats became a
burden.</p>
<p>It was a hard, tedious climb over the first range of hills, but
upon reaching the summit and looking down into the valley we felt
well repaid for our trouble, as we gazed in awed delight upon the
magnificent view spread out below us like a panorama.</p>
<p>The valley stretches out in either direction far below us, as if
to offer an uninterrupted flow for the mountain brook through which
it passes. We counted twelve peaks surrounding the valley, their
rounded domes glowing with the beautiful California poppy, like a
covering of a cloth of gold, while below the peaks the sloping
sides looked like green velvet. Here and there pine groves dotted
the landscape, while madrones and manzanitas stood out vividly
against their dark-green background.</p>
<p>Orinda Creek, the object of our quest, runs through this
beautiful valley, shut in on each side by the hills. Along the
trail leading to the stream blue and white lupines grow in
profusion, giving a delicate amethyst tinge to the landscape. Wild
honeysuckle, with its pinkish-red blossoms, is on every side and
the California azalea fringes both banks of the stream, its rich
foliage almost hidden by magnificent clusters of white and yellow
flowers, which send out a delightful, spicy fragrance, that can be
detected far back from the stream.</p>
<div class="figcenter"><SPAN href= "images/069.jpg" target="blank" name="image069" id="image069"> <ANTIMG width-obs="100%" src="images/069.jpg" alt="THE TROUT'S PARADISE" /></SPAN>THE TROUT'S PARADISE</div>
<p>The meadow larks called from the hillside their quaint "Spring
o' the year," the song sparrows sang their tinkling melody from the
live oaks, catbirds mewed from the thicket, and occasionally a
linnet sang its rollicking solo as it performed queer acrobatic
feats while on the wing.</p>
<p>Ahead of us a blue jay kept close watch over our movements, but
at last decided that we are harmless, and with a last shriek of
defiance flew away to pour out his vituperations on other hapless
wanderers.</p>
<p>Adjusting our rods, and baiting our hooks with salmon roe, we
crept down to where a little fall sent the water swirling around a
rock, making a deep pool, and an ideal place for trout. Dropping
our lines into the rapids, we let the bait float down close to the
rock in the deep shadows. As soon as it struck the riffle there was
a flash of silver, and the game was hooked. Away he went, the reel
humming a merry tune as he raced back and forth across the pool,
the rod bent like a coach whip, the strain on the line sending a
delightful tingle to our finger tips. But he soon tired of the
unequal contest, and was brought safely to the landing net. He was
by no means a large fish, as game fish are reckoned, but to my mind
it is not always the largest fish that gives the keenest sport.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> href= "images/071.jpg" target="blank"<SPAN name="image071" id="image071"> <ANTIMG width-obs="100%" src="images/071.jpg" alt="FISHING FOR BROOK TROUT" /></SPAN>FISHING FOR BROOK TROUT</div>
<p>From one pool to another we passed, wetting a line in each with
fair success, scrambling over logs and lichen-covered rocks, wading
from one side of the stream to the other, until the lengthening
shadows warned us to wind in our lines and start for home. Well
satisfied we were with the thirty-two trout reposing at the bottom
of our basket.</p>
<p>Our long tramp and the salt sea air had made us ravenously
hungry, and the sandwiches that provident wives had prepared for us
were dug out of capacious pockets and eaten with a relish that an
epicure might covet. I shall never forget the trip back. Night
overtook us before we were out of the first valley, the ascent was
very steep, and we had to stop every few rods to get our wind.</p>
<p>At last we reached the summit of Grizzly Peak, seventeen hundred
and fifty-nine feet above sea level, while to our right Bald Peak,
nineteen hundred and thirty feet high, loomed up against the sky.
The path on Grizzly was so narrow we had to walk single file, and a
false step would have sent us rolling down hundreds of feet.</p>
<p>The view—although seen in vague outline—was
magnificent. Berkeley and Oakland lay seventeen hundred feet below
us, their twinkling lights glowing through the darkness like
fireflies. Out on San Francisco Bay the lights flashed from the
mastheads of ships at anchor or from brightly lighted ferryboats
plying from mole to mole, while far to the left, Lake Merritt lay
like a gray sheet amid the shadows. In the middle distance off
Yerba Buena Island two United States gunboats were at anchor, one
of them sending the rays of its powerful searchlight here and there
across the water, and making a veritable path of silver far out
across the bay.</p>
<p>Jack rabbits and cotton-tails scurried across our path and
dodged into thickets. An owl flapped lazily over our heads and
sailed away down the valley, evidently on his nocturnal hunting.
But we had little time or inclination to give to these mountain
creatures, as we had to pay strict attention to our footing.</p>
<p>The last descent proved to be the hardest, for the grade was as
steep as the roof of a house, but we finally succeeded in
scrambling down, and at last reached the grove surrounding the
Greek Amphitheater; then home, footsore and weary, but happy with
our afternoon's outing on the trout streams in the Berkeley
Hills.</p>
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<div class="figcenter"><SPAN href= "images/topic09.png" target="blank"><ANTIMG width-obs="100%" src= "images/topic09.png" alt="On the Beach" /></SPAN></div>
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