Category Archives: Uncategorized

Infrequency

Apparently, I’m back to not writing again. It is odd how the times that grab me with something to say aren’t when I have time to address the affliction. Possibly it’s lucky for me that I can put it away and not recall it in the times where there’s space to fill. Like now, I should be off to bed, and I could be. But I’m here composing because I thought of this on the way to my room and returned to the computer after it was put to sleep. And it isn’t flowing. And maybe that’s what I worry about most. Writing is hard, at least for me. I find it to be very rewarding, when it goes well. Which isn’t often.

I worry a lot about what I’m writing. I don’t want it to be trite, or (too) melancholy, or just tinged with the reflection of better days gone by. I listen to what others have written for tv and roll my eyes quite often. And I don’t want to be the source for such awful tropes and stilted dialogue. But there’s bad, and bad, I guess. I’m not sure I really have anything to say* that hasn’t been said, and in better ways.

I’ve been watching the commentary on the Firefly tv episodes on DVD. I don’t often pay attention to DVD extras. I think it was “The Lord of the Rings” that did me in. I put the commentary on for a lark when I watched “The Avengers” once after about a dozen times. I really enjoyed it because Joss Whedon gave a lot of what I considered valuable, educational information, not just anecdotes. (Although that was quality also)

After “The Avengers” I was really hungry for more Whedon commentary and found that the “Serenity” commentary did not fail to satisfy. I (virtually) ran out and obtained a copy of “Cabin in the Woods”, which turned out to be a movie I could get behind despite it being of a genre that I usually avoid. Unfortunately I got a copy without commentary there. So I started in on Firefly, and was somewhat disappointed that not all episodes have commentary, but it’s been fairly educational. In all the commentary I’ve found out two basic things. First: some of the dialog they thought was awful turned out surprisingly nice in the way it was delivered by the actors (despite the problems the actors have with wishing they’d delivered it differently). And Second: sometimes expediency dictates the path you have to travel for the overall narrative, even if you don’t like exactly how you get there.

That second one seems like a little of a cop-out, but the example Joss gave was the killing of the alien mothership in “The Avengers” and having all the aliens still in Manhattan falling dead. He didn’t really like it, but needed to get past the ‘mopping up’ phase to resolve the movie in a timely manner. I remember at the time I saw the movie in the theater I knew what was coming and was a little disappointed in that resolution, but I got over it pretty quick.

It is hard to believe, though, that the real groaner dialogue from some of these b-grade tv shows that I’ve been hearing is due solely to the actors portraying their characters woodenly, and the directors letting them get away with it. I have, on occasion, taken some dialogue I really like out of context and just said it plainly in my mind, and it does sound like some of the crap I write, so maybe there is something to that.

Following that train of thought leads me back to “Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance” and the issues of Quality that drove Robert Pirsig around the bend, which is where I sit now, stuck in a Gumption Trap with just about anything I’ve been trying to do lately. One of the things I think I learned from Zen and the Art was that to get out of the trap you just start by doing little things. Cleaning up the shop was one of his examples. By putting the tools away and making order it kind of gives you the kick to overcome the inertia in starting a project. I’ve been trying that the last couple weeks in the studio trying to get some momentum to do the things I need to do to get pottery going. Possibly it’s little things like this that will help me to get writing again, which I feel some inexplicable compulsion to be doing, even though I don’t know that I have anything to say. Apparently, I’m not going to find a muse with attitude and a knife to my throat.

* I think I’ve mentioned Lorites before

Never a Masterpiece

if [[ $i =~ .*%.* ]] && [[ ${i/\%/} -gt “$crit” ]]
then
echo “Critical: $previous is $i used $timestamp”
exit 2

So, I’m banging my head against a coding problem this morning and I slog on through to the end, it’s a fancy piece of fluff that doesn’t amount to more than 20 lines, but it does what is needed, and yet in the back of my mind I can hear across the ages… Doris Jensen is yelling, “Are you with me?!” from back in high school, telling me I shouldn’t be jumping out of the program at that juncture. The code works, and it’s just a bit of a hack anyway. But I can see the way to finish the code. It just takes storing the result and letting the conditionals finish. And I’ll have to set up an upper limit test for the warning, but I can see it, and it will only take a couple minutes.

The whole thing kind of glows in a golden light, the GOOD CODE. I know it’s right there and can knock it out real fast, but what I’ve got works and won’t fail, but it’s just kind of kludged together. It’s not glowing in the golden light. Maybe it’s glowing a bit in some sort of black light. It’s proud that it will fail critically first, and then warn next because of jumping out of the loop you don’t need an upper boundary for the warning, but you can kind of still see the mustard stain.

In my mind Mrs. Jensen yells again.

At least it’s not obfuscated for the sake of preserving my job. I had a mandate, once, a long time ago to follow some coding rules I didn’t agree with which required rewriting functions with aliases which referenced other functions which were aliases… And, it’s true, I did get laid off from another job because my scripts made me superfluous once others learned how they worked.

But I have learned to look critically at bowls and put them back on the wheel to take that last 1/16th of an inch off the bottom to make it feel lighter, and I cut a new board if I take a little too much off the one I just cut. I wondered for awhile if it’s just because computer nerds are supposed to be lazy, and there’s something gratifying about ‘getting away with it’.

Or maybe it’s that there’s not actual physical material involved. Nobody is ever going to see this code, and I’m not kidding here. It’s a bit of monitoring that may be scrapped for a better system in a few years. I’ve written code for a bank that some friends say may still be in existence fifteen years later. I bet nobody ever looked at the code.

But if they did, they’d see some fine haiku documentation.

 

progress is a lie?

I’m sitting here in disbelief, slack jawed and boggling. Nicholas Cage’s rant about The Beatles White Album from the movie “The Rock” is poking around the borders of my consciousness. I’m trying in vain to rationalize this experience away, but this cassette sounds so good! Last week sometime I saw a story about Robert Smith of The Cure playing an acoustic set in Spain during a glitch with the instruments on stage. There were three songs he played, none of which I remember particularly fondly, but they were good and it was very classy how he smoothed over the interruption with something personal. It reminded me that when I switched over from cassettes to CD’s that I only managed to repurchase (don’t get me started on that) a couple of the albums. My favorite tape from the Cure was “Faith”, which was the first to make it to the technologically advanced collection, but the first album that made me a fan was “Standing on a Beach – the Singles”. I don’t think I’ve actually listened to that album in literally 20 years. Thinking about it I hurried online and picked up a used copy for $.01 plus a couple bucks shipping. Unfortunately, the CD is called “Staring at the Sea: the Singles”, and doesn’t include the B-Sides that are on the cassette. It does have a couple bonus songs, but I think it was the missing songs that really got me.

I joked that I needed to dig up a cassette player and try to rip my old cassettes that have been boxed up and sitting in the basement for 10 years. It was really a joke. Really. But I couldn’t shake the thought. I’ve got so much on my plate I don’t have time for a silly diversion. Yet, somehow, here I am at 11:30 headphones plugged in to a partially broken and completely dusty boom box listening to The Cure. And I’m blown away. Maybe it is just that I’m tweaking neurons that are dustier than the stereo and cassettes combined and it’s sparking some additional serotonin, but the technologically ancient, magnetic coated tape sounds so much better than anything I’ve heard in years. But it can’t be, can it? Not that I’m any sort of luddite, or even an audiophile snob, but there’s something to this experience that is more than I’ve been getting from my usual listening habits. For several years I’ve been pondering how I used to buy an album every payday and head home to plug in and just stare at the walls while the music took me away. I’d written it off as something unique to youth or inexperience, and that maturity changed things. But maybe I was wrong, because as I sit here, right now, trying to write as I listen to this tape, with the fire rekindled between my ears, I’m finding it hard to complete a sentence as I keep drifting off. My eyes glaze and I’m carried away with that feeling from my youth.

Sorry, as I wrote that last, the song “New Day” ended and I had to rewind the tape to listen to it again. No kidding. I had to rewind the tape and stop it three or four times to get beyond the start of the song and then listen to the last 45 seconds or so of “Stop Dead” before it started again. No click of the mouse and ‘dit’ I’m back at the start of the song. I remember how much I hated some songs and to skip past it to the next song was murder. Manual song search before AMS (look it up, kids, you won’t believe me) was probably as dangerous as texting in the car. Skipping songs or replaying them was one of the best things about cd’s when they came out. That and not having to listen to blank tape, waiting for the end on the shorter side, which I’m doing now. My first copy of Pink Floyds “Dark Side of the Moon” had the song “Time” swapped to the other side of the album to even the tape run time out. Talk about Sacrilege. Also my Rush “2112” cassette cut the final song in half. It just sort of faded out, the cassette would flip over and it would fade back in and finish.

But I digress.

And I drift away again.

Maybe I need to find me a Walkman.

Sea shells by the sea shore

shellsAll things being equal, I’d rather be outside–unless there’s snow, I’ve not yet been able to overcome my aversion to cold. But if it’s not cold, and I could be anywhere outside, I’d pick the ocean every single time. My parents used to take us to California every few summers to go to Disneyland and/or Sea World and during those weeks we always had a day at the beach. Those were the golden moments of my youth, although you wouldn’t know it from the early 8mm movies. The last time I remember visiting the beach with my parents I was almost 16. I remember that day very well. I spent an hour or so standing chest-deep in the troughs of the waves and bobbing up over the top out beyond the breakers. The wave would lift me up off the sand and set me back down, over and over. Near where I was a girl almost my age in a white bikini was doing the same thing. It seems strange to me now that I didn’t try to strike up a conversation, or even really make eye contact, knowing more with hindsight what 16-year-old kids are supposed to be like.

I don’t think I saw the ocean again until I was 23 or so. That year I kind of got fed up with everything and just took off by myself and eventually ended up in Eureka, California. I sat on the beach and watched the sun set. Corny as it sounds, it’s almost as if I could feel the waves unwinding all the knots that were in me. I just sat for a couple hours and watched the waves crash. That was the start of my beachside therapy. Whenever things got bad I’d pick up and run to the beach by myself for a couple days. I went up the coast to Oregon a couple times, just to see new beaches. Frequently I’d be gone four or five days without having a conversation that didn’t include somone counting back change or asking if I would like fries with my order. Mostly, as it was when I was 16, I didn’t mind.

Now that I’m married I’ve found out not everyone likes the beach. I think I’m winning Debbie over, but I don’t think she will ever see what I do in the ocean. She seemed to get a bit of a kick today watching me scramble in the knee-deep surf, grabbing shells and rocks and trying to stay reasonably dry. I didn’t fully succeed. There is something else I realized today that changed. When I was a kid I spent a lot of time and energy trying to find perfect shells. I’d toss out most of the ones that were broken, or had worn down in the surf. My goal was to find matching halves and keep them together, although I rarely succeeded. I hadn’t realized until today that when I find a whole shell, unless it’s really interesting I usually toss it up on the drier sand for someone else. (Uninteresting finds go back into the surf.) There’s something about the shell fragments that I now find really intreguing. I can wax all sorts of philosophical at times and come up with reasons why I’m interested in the little broken things in life, but boiled-down right now in the hotel, after a day at the beach, I think that things just don’t have to be whole and perfect to be beautiful. And finding the beauty in things that are fragmented gives a whole lot more to think about in the long run.

end of the semester

Tonight was glaze night for the class with which I’ve been helping for the winter term. Not many showed up, which seemed like par for the course-it was a strange class. I glazed 10 smallish bowls I had thrown, intending some for theĀ  Empty Bowls charity fundraiser coming up. I tossed out 6 with nasty s-cracks in the bottom. That’s a lot, but maybe I rushed them to dry. John was getting a kiln ready to fire and without many people asking questions we went outside where I watched him finish the kiln load. I’ve been hanging around that kiln shed for the better part of 16 years or so. While John finagled the shelf space, wondering out loud how tightly he should pack it to make sure he had enough of what was still coming down the line for the last few classes, I sat and thought about the friends I had made and how many had come and gone since I came on the scene. John talked about some that had come and gone before me, but who I knew from studio lore. We talked about gardening and cameras, the quality of students and the little things about the studio. It was just one of those slow, pleasant evenings. John thanked me again for coming out and helping for so long. I realized that even when the students are more difficult helping out there is kind of a break for me. I don’t have to worry whether or not I’m getting the things done around the house that need doing, or really worrying about any of my own problems, but I’m there answering questions and hanging out with my friends. My family, really, as John and Diane have become more than just friends. They’ve given me so much in support and advice that I can’t possibly ever repay. I made a little joke about not being able to make stuff again until fall and John asked me to come back over the summer. The short semester starts mid-June and only runs 8 weeks or so, but I think I’ll try to get back.

Dustin showed up and we talked music and John smoked his pipe while the kiln pre-heated. One of the advanced students I don’t know came out and asked a question. A bit later she came back and asked another. I gave her some advice and it occurred to me that I actually do know quite a bit about general ceramic knowledge that I can use to help people. I often forget that I know, and still think of myself as sort of a newb. I’ve heard the quote several times from Malcom Gladwell that it takes 10,000 hours or 10 years of repetition to become an expert at anything, although I haven’t yet read his book. Maybe I’m getting close to that, although I wouldn’t claim to be an expert just yet. I do surprise myself sometimes. Sam Wilson, my drawing professor at the U for the foundation class said something that stuck with me. Maybe I’ve written this before, but it bears repeating. He said you start off in art ripping other people off, because it’s all you can do. He said the secret was to keep ripping people off long enough until you have a body of work and can start ripping yourself off. It was sort of the tongue-in-cheek humor that he seemed to like best, but it did have a point. Lately I’ve been thinking about my early stuff when I was trying hard to be an artist. Maybe there’s something there I should revisit.

I suppose I’ll go out Saturday morning and see how my bowls turned out, have a last Saturday afternoon lunch with Jack and maybe Chuck for a few weeks until the summer semester starts. Maybe by then I’ll think of something I can rip off from my early work.

Throw it out

I think most of us realize we live in a society where you use it up and throw it away. I have a perfectly functional iPhone 3 sitting on my desk beside me that never quite gets its batteries charged. My new (1 year old) iPhone 4 probably doesn’t get the fullest of uses as it is. I probably should have sold the 3, or given it to someone who could use it, but I’m comfortably behind the curve. As my wife could get her a 3gs that would outperform my 3 for $50, and have an OS that could be kept up to date, I opted to leave it behind as a toy for jogging music or gaming. In reality it just sits looking forlorn from the corner of my desk. I might still be using it, but the calendaring functionality for work was going to leave me behind unless I upgraded.

I didn’t grow up during the depression, but my parents were raised in the aftermath and learned frugality. I guess they passed it on to me, although I don’t remember it being emphasized as a core value. I remember tuna fish being too expensive to have every day, it being a favorite meal of mine. I also remember playing a game I made up where I collected the trickle of water from a hose that ran to the floor drain in the basement from the humidifier when the furnace kicked on. I’d save it in old jars (that were too good to throw away) that smelled faintly of pickles and jam, despite the thorough washing. I never got too far, as my mom would eventually find the stash and dump it all out, but it didn’t keep me from running to the basement whenever I noticed the heat coming on.

Which brings me to Saturday night and my weekly laundry chore. Sometime in the final load the motor gave out so the spin cycle wouldn’t go. The washer isn’t too old, slightly pre-dating my marriage of 5 years. With thoughts of the heaping of troubles and technical breakdowns, I sadly proceeded to bed with the sodden load heaped in the machine. I returned to the problem this morning. I’ve fixed washers and dryers before, and it’s usually not something too difficult to troubleshoot. I took off the control panel exposing the electronics and scored the hidden technical sheet. It was only the spin cycle that was failing, so in my mind it had to be a belt or a motor. Pulling off the front of the machine I realized that with the belt intact, the technical advances in washing technology had rendered me impotent in the machine-fixing adventure for today. The spec sheet talked about the transmission and the motor. I broke down and called a couple appliance repair shops and finally found an acceptable deal of a free in-home estimate available in the same day.

The technician was a nice guy and managed to come a couple hours early. I had put everything back in order, so as to not alert him to my monkeying (although it did get that corner of the basement a much-needed cleaning). He quickly opened it up and diagnosed it as the motor. He called for a quote and said there was one available, but that it would be about $370 with the labor. I was somewhat sticker shocked and knew that it was somewhat over half of what I paid for it new. Now I know I’m partially to blame, as in my efforts to finish the laundry and get to bed I often push the load a little heavy, which must have contributed to it’s early demise. I don’t know what I would have been able to save if I had been able to comfortably diagnose the problem and get a motor, but I don’t suppose the labor was too unreasonable. The price was right at the point where I was almost ready to just get a new one, but the frugality kicked in enough that I just had the work done.

It does really kind of chap my hide, built-in planned obsolescence. It’s hard to fathom the number of things this year that, through mechanical breakdown or technological eclipsing, we have needed to buy anew. The printer we had for just a couple years had its power supply die, and since it cost less than a day’s wages to get a better one, we did. Three of the four ballasts in the lights in the garage with less than two hundred hours usage over the last couple years died in December. My current truck has needed far more in repairs in half the time of my last one, prompting me to wonder if I shouldn’t trade it in frequently. The new tv didn’t have enough older connections, so we bought a blu-ray player, because it was cheap and did a better job. I know this smacks a lot of First World Problems, and it’s true, but it about kills me every time I take something functional (or nearly so) and toss it aside. It’s especially painful because I see people who do it more than me without seeming to have a second thought. I’m in a border-line hoarder position, as I’m a tinkerer, and think things like: “The motor and gear system in the scanner on the printer could be really good for some art or automation project!” This has caused me to have a basement full of things that,”just might be good for something”.

Debbie has a couple tables that belonged to previous generations in her family. My own grandmother gave me a chair that used to belong to Mrs. Bliss, one of her friends, and I’m hoping to have it reupholstered sometime soon. But I can’t really see that I own anything (besides a few pieces of art) that would really be something to be left to a future generation that would be less than ephemeral. My desk is recovered cubicle equipment, my tools cheap Chinese steel and plastic, and now even the books are now largely going to ones and zeroes. Maybe I’m just nostalgic for a time that was never mine, or maybe my frugality has gotten the better of me and I don’t acquire heirloom things. I just find the whole concept a bit sad and empty.

easter resolutions?

I’ve really been putting off writing this (and any) post for quite awhile. Not that I don’t want to face the dismal result of last years resolutions as much as I just haven’t been able to find the gumption to write at all. Also, this was an entry that needed to be done, but has no fire.But here we are.

Last year I put down 5 resolutions, and evaluated the resolutions for the previous year, so that looks like how this is going to go from now on. So for last year:

  1. Climb Lone Peak. This again. It was on my 2010 list and was the only carry-over as it has been since I was about 16. I really meant to do it, but because I failed on #3 below I wasn’t physically up to it, but was scheduled to make the attempt anyway with Steve from work. The day before we were to leave Chuck called and said he had a day to come help me drywall the garage. Getting the garage done trumped the hike, so I bailed, although to Steve’s credit, he got Walter from work and they made it to the peak, putting me to shame. Grade F.
  2. Take the Kayak out 5 times. I had all sorts of good intentions with this. On my first attempt I drove up to Birch Creek Res. by myself and got the kayak out and realized I’d forgotten the paddle somehow. I was beside myself with frustration, but managed to catch one of the biggest tiger trouts I’ve ever landed from the shore. It was exciting, but not what I had hoped for. At the end of the summer I did manage to get out with Brian, his son Alex, and his brother-in-law, Jason Rino for an epic day of fishing. And this time I remembered my paddle. Grade should be a D, but due to the epic day and a botched attempt– C-
  3. Running. I had a goal of 300 miles, which seemed reasonable due to the success I had the previous summer, but I managed to get out twice for a total of about 4.5 miles. Grade F
  4. Replace the floors in the ol’ house. Financially, we never got in a position where this was going to happen as we spent more time and resources on the garage and having fun. Maybe this year, but another F.
  5. Writing… well, lets just jump to the F

So, not so good. Best laid plans of mice, etc. But overall it wasn’t a bad year. Debbie invested us in some Disney season passes and we went a couple times and again for our anniversary just after the start of the year. I also worked on finishing the garage, a 5 year project that I had on my 2010 resolutions to finish. I’m happy to say that project is almost behind me. I spent quite a bit of money and effort, but last Tuesday it passed its final inspection. I thought I’d be more relieved at that, but there’s still the taping, mudding and painting to do, as well as stain and finish the concrete and arrange the space. But the expensive and stressful part is behind.

I also put a lot of time into my art. I spent the first half of the Fall semester feverishly working to get enough ware together for the CAU Holiday Sale and did that again. Again, I didn’t sell much, but I got a lot of really good feedback from people. I also got a call from the Patrick Moore Gallery asking for me to bring in some stuff to show over the holidays, so I have a few pieces there now, too. But at the CAU sale I was next to Johnny Hughes, one of my friends from when I started at Stoker. He really encouraged me to apply to the St. George Arts Festival and told me I’d do much better there. Despite my disinclination to face the public I did manage to apply, and was accepted. I’ve been spending a crazy amount of time getting ready for that and have less than a month until it happens. So between those two and beefing up a pretty decent garden last year I brought 2010’s resolutions up by 50%. Maybe I’m just lagging a year.

As for this years resolutions, I’ve not put much thought into that, but I’ve had some ideas of what I’d like to accomplish, so lets see if we can’t lay something out.

  1. Exercise or physical fitness. This is a gimme, but I need to get out of my sedentary ways. I’m not going to lay it down with a total of 300 miles running, or climbing Lone Peak or anything, but I need to make a concerted effort to get out every week somehow and create a routine of activity that I can look back on and say I made a positive lifestyle change. This will be the hard one.
  2. Art. Ok, so I’ve gotten out there (or will have next month) more than before. I think I’ve honed my skills and eye to where I have some competency with process and some materials, but I think the artist side needs developing. Hopefully having the studio will give me a chance to explore better than I have with the limited time at Stoker. I still plan on spending time out there, but I want to be able to poke around in my studio and focus on developing my style.
  3. I need to decrease my cynicism. This seems a little odd, but I’ve noticed I’ve become more of a grumpy old dude than I want to be. I’m not sure how I’m going to quantify this one, but I need to lay off reading so much bad news and find a way to increase my positive outlook.
  4. Fix up the house. I’m going to carry this one over, and I think it’s really doable this year. The money is tight, but we really need to get the floors redone, and I think I’m going to feel a lot better with a more maintainable house. This is going to include de-junking, which I’ve already started. I’m getting rid of things I really don’t need or use and that takes up space. I’d also like to get on the way of redoing the kitchen and looking into expanding the basement (although I think the basement is going to be a year or more down the road).
  5. Read more books. I’ve spent too much time just killing time online when I could have been cutting down my reading list. I have several half-read books that I was really enjoying and never quite finished, as well as a lot sitting around I haven’t started yet. I think I used to be more mentally active when I was reading more and I think I had more creativity when I was feeding my brain more than just the top 10 things that something something.

So there’s what I’ve been thinking of the last couple months put down in black and white, or at least light and dark. Maybe doing this in the spring will make me think I’ve already spent a good part of the year and give me some drive to come from behind.

 

day in, day out

I bet someday the sun won’t get up until noon, and it will be all, “Sorry-Sorry, it won’t happen again!” and “I was just a little under the weather.” But we’ll know it was out all night in some dive just feeling sorry for itself and telling the bartender, “I could have been a star.”

There’s a lesson in that for all of us– Change jobs more often.

surfing reblog

I saw this video on the Le Container blog, a nice minimalist picture blog that, despite it’s penchant for bicycles, has a lot of inspirational creative muse for me. This big-wave surfing video posted today really struck me and I don’t want to lose it, so I’m reblogging it, which I don’t do often.

http://vimeo.com/31356055

shipsterns from Dave otto on Vimeo.
I also realized tonight that I’m suppressing the writing urge again. When I get those ideas I’ve just been pushing them down real far until someone else finds them, or something. I had a goal for not doing that so much this year, as I’ll eventually write about when the year ends.

Kayak Fishin

IMG_1215
So I finally managed to get the ol’ kayak dusted off and actually in the water after the last trip’s paddle-less fiasco. Brian invited me out to fish Utah Lake with his son and his Brother-in-law Jason that used to work with us at the U.I ran out to get some equipment I had been lacking, primarily a hand net, but Brian had also suggested that I get a basket to hold the catch. I found both at a reasonable price and picked up a couple lures as well.

I tried to prep as well as I could last night tying the home-made kayak rack into the truck but somehow neglecting to buy gas, or get cash for the trip. As I ran around this morning in the dark trying to get these errands done I stopped at McDonald’s for a quick breakfast. While my paranoia required a third checking of the rigging securing the kayak to the truck I watched a guy browse DVD’s at the Redbox out front. I briefly wondered what kind day you have lying ahead of you when you’re renting movies before sunup. Perhaps he just likes to plan his evenings well in advance.

I managed to roll into the Provo Harbor marina right about sunup after a missed exit due to construction and a quick trip back up to a near gas station to break a $20 to pay the State Park fee at the unmanned entrance. Brian and Jason were just getting Brian’s little aluminum boat and Jason’s float tube into the water. I quickly joined them excited to get out on the water. In my haste I dropped a can of Pepsi that exploded on the pavement, showering me and my truck with a sticky mist before I managed to kick it safely towards the laughing Jason.

I showed Brian my net and basket and he recommended I borrow his basket because his opinion of the one I got was that it was too small and I should return it and get the bigger one. Since I hadn’t got as far as rigging mine up I figured I’d give it a shot.

Brian got going and towed Jason out beyond the jetty to the open lake where we were fishing. I had declined the tow because I wanted to get a little more experience paddling around. I soon began to question the sanity of this as I was sure to get more paddling in than I probably bargained for in getting around the fishing spot. I made a couple adjustments to the (also home-made) outrigger to keep it more square to the kayak. It either needs a better, permanent mount on the kayak itself, or another brace to keep it from rotating towards the rear as it drags. I tied a bight of the anchor (also also home made) rope from the outrigger to a bracket on the side near the cockpit and that did the trick for now.

Once we were just out past the marina jetty near where the Provo River empties into the lake we started to fish. There were seagulls a-plenty around diving and catching small fish. I had bungled my line setup back on shore and while I was correcting the pole setup I heard Brian’s son over the radio announce he had caught his first fish. Jason quickly responded with another success, and once I got my line in I had one on within a few casts. Then we were all in the thick of it catching White Bass almost as fast as we could. I was limited by the fact that my net, which I had bought for scale-friendiness, was not in the least hook friendly. The first bass had buried his mouth and all three treble hooks into the net and got so tangled I had a tough time getting him free. When I did finally loose the fish from the hook he got a little more liberty than I had intended and disappeared back into the green water, leaving me to struggle with the remaining two barbs imbedded in the net. After that I took precautions in netting all but the head of the fish as best as I could to prevent further cursing.

IMG_1216In a short time I think I had more fish than I had ever caught in one trip. The lure I had been using was getting a bit chewed up and was missing most of the fluffy dressing it had, so I started throwing on lures I’d never used, or had no previous success to just give them a shot. It turns out that these fish would take about anything. I was having a bit of trouble getting them in the basket. Brian had told me that with the floating lid I could pick it up with the fish in the same hand and drop it in one handed. I had very little success at this, but it became sort of a game of roulette for one last chance at escape for the fish. One poor guy managed to leap out of my hand before falling in the basket, hit the kayak flipped off and into the water, but was scooped up by the basket right before the getaway. I started tossing back almost every one I caught unless they were particularly fat. There’s not a lot of eating on White Bass anyway, and I didn’t know how many I could reasonably eat. Secretly I was hoping I could sneak them into Brian’s load.

I actually got a little tired around the 40th catch or so and decided to head over to the weed beds to see if I could get something different. I tried a couple different lures hoping to find a crappie or bluegill, but with no luck. I dug into my tackle box and found a larger lure I hadn’t tried before. I flipped it out near the weeds to the left and brought it in and then flipped it over the other side. It had hardly hit the water when something took it suddenly pretty hard. I thought I had another bass, but as it got near to the boat it almost scared me. I’d never landed such an ugly fish before, and I’ve caught Arctic Grayling.

I ended up paddling over to where Brian and his son were landing crappie and hauled the basket out because my description over the radio wasn’t giving enough detail to identify it for me. It turns out it was a Walleye. I had hooked one before and got it close to shore several years ago with my brother, but it got off before I could land it. I don’t remember it being this scary, though.

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Not long after we decided it was about time to get off the lake. I humbled myself and asked if Brian would tow me in because I was dog tired. He took me over and we picked up Jason who was still back where we were with the Bass earlier. It must have been quite a sight to see this tiny aluminum boat with a diminutive outboard towing a tube towing a 16′ kayak. I had given my basket of fish to Brian because dragging it was causing some trouble. Brian had three strings of fish in the bottom of the boat, and when we picked up Jason he wasn’t able to lift Jason’s basket out of the water it was so full. I think he’d kept about 60 lbs or more of the Bass.We got everything packed up and ready to go and Brian and Jason decided the best option would be to filet the fish before heading out, as the total amount of cooler space was greatly exceeded by the whole fish. Brian had two electric filet knives, and even working in shifts it took more than two hours to filet the whole catch. Arms began to cramp and we began to develop that 1000 yard stare that comes with an overload of carnage. It became all we could do to not break out laughing when thinking of the situation we got ourselves into. I was very glad I had restrained myself earlier and not been tempted with the no-limit on the White Bass.

I did decide to keep that smaller basket.

P.S.

Brian wrote the trip up on his blog http://hnaf.blogspot.com/2011/09/september-21st-white-bass-action-provo.html where I yoinked a picture of us being towed back in.

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