By Larry Bozka
Page 2
Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever
damn near killed me in August '95 after I got attacked by several
dozen very hungry deer ticks while belly-stalking a huge Hill
Country axis buck on a hunt with my old amigo Rick Stovall of
Gary Grant Sales. Prior to that I survived three separate 105-degree
encounters with a violent and unpredictably recurrent viral infection
that the best infectious disease specialists in the state dubbed
"viral meningoencephalitis"-"fever of unknown origin."
It was, they suspect, more than likely passed on to me by a malevolent
marsh mosquito.
And, in a careless and downright
idiotic maneuver at the Galveston Yacht Basin on Mother's Day
of '96 (I remember the day vividly, because after losing two other
whoppers on structure-severed monofilament, Mary caught the now-famous
"Mother's Day Red" on a SpiderWire-laden SpiderCast
spinning rig near Seawolf Park-a 38-1/2-inch bull that Conroe
taxidermist Al Hillmeyer graciously mounted for her), I hopped
off the bow of my boat, landed on the algae-covered boat ramp,
slipped backward and hit the concrete with the bone-crushing impact
of a runaway 18-wheeler.
But nothing, and I do mean
nothing, ever hurt the way that hip break did.
Recovery time, Monmouth told
me, would be three to six months. The accident occurred on May
12. I looked at my calendar, noted that I was scheduled to host
Houstonian Sonny Santos and his friend Joe Stuart on a Trophy
Quest trip to Redfish Lodge on Copano Bay on Aug. 17, and confidently
announced to the skeptical surgeon that I would indeed make the
trip.
And what do you know, Doc?
Here I am, standing high on the casting platform of Chuck Scates'
Shallow Sport, fly rod in hand, line looped over my bare feet
while the veteran lodge manager and fishing guide poles the wide-beamed
flats boat through a super-shallow cove just east of Rattlesnake
Point.
It's been three months, four
days and seven hours since the operation. The leg still hurts
like the devil, but for a change, the pain is not foremost on
my mind. Mary is at the console, tossing a Rapala Skitter Pop
topwater with a new Daiwa Emblem-X ultralight spinning rig and
Maxima 6-pound-line. I'm up on the platform, holding fast to Scates'
every word as he points out what I'm doing wrong and, bit by bit,
helps me send the mud minnow streamer 35, then 40 feet away. A
fumble here, a decent cast there. When the line shoots cleanly
through the guides like it's supposed to, I feel like Brett Favre
firing a 50-yard touchdown pass.
Chuck Scates is a world-class
flycaster. The 45-year-old pro epitomizes the term "sportsman."
Back on July 8, 1989, he captured an 8-pound, 11-ounce speckled
trout from the super-skinny waters of the Lower Laguna Madre that
to this day still stands as the IGFA 2-pound-tippet world record.
Lean, tanned and looking every bit the image of the penultimate
flats fisher, Scates wields a fly rod like Mark McGwire swings
a Louisville Slugger.
Last night, he took the time
to rig my new Harris Solitude IV fly reel with bright orange Dacron
backing and Scientific Anglers Mastery weight-forward fly line.
Holding it in my hands this morning, relishing the salt-saturated
seabreeze and listening to the chaotic squalls of laughing gulls
and piercing whistles of early-bird bluewing teal, the 8-weight
Loomis GLX feels like a magic wand. Like a slow-rising flare,
the fiery August sun cooks through the looming, cotton-candy column
of a colossal, ebony-laced thunderhead.
I knew I'd been missing the
experience, the peaceful and gratifying thrill of being on the
water. I just didn't know how much.
As my father lay on his deathbed
almost seven years ago, he looked me straight in the eye and told
me with a faltering but determined voice that anyone who can't
sense the presence of a Higher Power as morning breathes life
into the woods and waters is a person without a soul. Or, at the
very least, a person who has yet to find it. Being away from the
bay for so long has drained my own. But being here today is filling
the void. I'm healing up, and I'm not talking about my hip.
We don't take the time to go
fishing. We make the time. The bays and their unbelievably beautiful
bounty are a priceless gift from God, and if it's one we've been
shown, then we should consider ourselves truly blessed.
How many kids, women, and even
grown men, would be out here today if they only knew it existed?
How many youngsters would be changed forever, and for the better,
if only someone who's been there would take the time to share
this marvelous gift that we take for granted and way too often
hoard for ourselves and solely reserve for our own precious time?
I sincerely believe the old
adage that God does not deduct from a person's lifetime the days
that he or she spends fishing. I also believe that if this glorious
outdoor cathedral is destined to last, it is up to those of us
who have seen it to share the experience with those who have up
until now been denied the privilege.
I know a few doctors who have
seen me through all of this mess, and a few close friends who
have been there time and again when I've needed them.
And I already know what they're
getting for Christmas.
(Publisher's Note: Speaking
of Christmas gifts, "Homecoming"-the Mark Mantell original
painting which illustrates this feature-is now available as part
of a new limited-edition print series being produced by the Friendswood,
Texas-based artist in conjunction with Texas Fish & Game Publishing.
For details, check out the ad on page 54 of the Nov.-Dec. 1998 issue -Roy Neves)
# # # #
page 1 / page 2
|