Fishermen

Jake Forrest Lunsford


My oldest son is thirteen and already has a beautiful roll-cast, a thing he did not learn from me. It is early morning, and we are fishing the swift waters and slick stones of the Au Sable River in upstate New York. Really, I am watching him fish; my line has been dry for an hour. A hundred or so yards upstream, he appears to me as a strong pair of rolling shoulders backlit under the rising sun. My view of him is framed between the water’s surface, the greenery of banks, and the covered bridge spanning the gap. Sunlight reflects from the curved spine of fiberglass in his hand and manifests as a rolling loop of leader and tippet extending itself upon the water. The fly-line in between is invisible against the backdrop of foliage, but I know it is there when the trout rises and the air glistens with spray, tension ripping it from the surface. His first fish on a fly.

All of my sons are fishermen, no matter what else I fail to accomplish in life. My sons are fishermen. It feels good to say it. So many things they could have been, and may yet still be, but this they have together. I did this, among other things less worthy of praise, but this I’ll hang my hat on. Fathers and sons follow intrace, and maybe one day they’ll manifest all of the things their mother would change about me, but they love the water and what lies beneath, and that’s something. 

My second son is obsessed with bait-cast reels and largemouth bass. He likes anything that has gears and range and the possibility of becoming irrecoverably mangled. He threw a baseball through my sliding glass door last month, too. As he works off the cost of replacing it, the deepest cut is to remind him the price of that door is almost exactly the same as a new outboard and trailer for the old Jon boat leaning against the backyard fence, the same his mother and I floated in on the river of our courtship. The catfish that never were swim in tears of lessons learned the hard way. 

Little brother’s little brother is eight. He’s still in a love affair with night-crawlers, bobbers, and split-shot, the things that actually catch fish. We exchange glances at his older brothers’ struggle against the romanticism of John Gierach and innovation of George Snyder as we tie monofilament on long sticks and catch sunfish under the ball of fire that gives them their name. He looks cool in a pair of shades, and he loves that, too. His crooked little smile when he snags a stick that he thinks is a fish is the stuff of magic.

Then there’s the baby. He’s two years old and rocks a Zebco 33 with no line on it. He doesn’t even know, bless his heart. I spend enough time retrieving his rod from ankle-deep water and feel grateful to not have to worry about wildly swinging treble hooks just yet. That day will come. For now, he runs the bank worrying his mother to death and chanting, “Catch fish!,” over and over again. One day, buddy. 

I haven’t fished seriously in years. Most days, I sit on the bank, or with my hand on the rudder, a pair of pliers and a sharp knife at the ready, maybe a sandwich for the meltdowns. I am the backdrop, and it strikes me now how fine a job that is. 

After all, my sons are fishermen. It feels good to say it. 

 

About the Author
Jake Forrest Lunsford writes his nonsense from the window overlooking his chickens, of which there were thirteen before the o‘possum. While hostage negotiations have thus far been unproductive, the remaining twelve are committed to the peaceful resolution of this conflict. The springer spaniel who sleep on the couch isn’t talking. To read more of his nonsense, visit https://jakeforrestlunsford.com/, or follow him on Instagram @jakeforrestlunsford.

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At first, it was enough to just know where it was. Seeing it once or twice a day on my dresser reminded me both of the trip, and the penny’s potential. Finally, on the way out the door to another fishing trip, I put the penny into my pocket as a way to curry favor with the fishing gods. When I thought about where the penny had come from, I figured it might have a little bit of a fishing mojo after spending so much time in the lake. The trip was a success and the penny earned a permanent place in my pocket.

Over the next year, I dutifully moved the penny from pocket to pocket as I went about my life, making sure to keep it safe and close by for those moments when I needed a blast of luck. At times, I’d pull it out and flip it. Heads meant I was on the right track. Tails meant I needed to slow down. Other times, I’d fidget with it as I thought through a problem. Eventually, I could tell how my life was going based on how clean the penny was. A bright, shiny penny meant I’d been thinking a lot. A dull, grimy penny meant I wasn’t as worried about things. 

It was, as it turned out, a pretty great year. The twelve months that I held on to the penny weren’t always easy, but things were moving in a fantastic direction for my family and me. I know the penny wasn’t the cause of that luck. But I still attributed a good amount to it, just in case.

When I returned to Onaman Lake a year later, the penny came with me. For the most part, it was there because it was always in my pocket. But a part of me felt like I should return the penny to the lake, to give back what it had offered me over the preceding year. The closer I got to the return trip, the stronger the feeling became. The superstitious part of me knew that keeping the penny wasn’t an option. Real or not, you don’t tempt the gods. If nature offers you something, you respect the gift and give thanks. If you say you’re going to return it, you follow through. 

That thought followed me all week as I thought about what to do with the penny. I found the answer to my problem on the windowsill of the cabin. In the middle of a handful of change left by another guest was another American penny, this one from 1960. I would have preferred another 2023, but this was better. It was older and had acquired more experience than the one I had. It would do nicely as an offering. 

As I watched the older penny sail through the air, I thanked the lake for the year that had been and the one that was coming up. I’m almost 100% sure I would have been fine either way, but as an angler and a naturally superstitious person, I think it always pays to err on the side of caution. It costs so very little to give back, to honor the resource. Just about a cent in fact. 

You don’t tempt the old gods.