Oliver Round's pickerel.
In a text, I told Oliver the fish are out there. Yes, I was thinking of salmon, especially, but after Monday, which was a great time alone but without fish, I'm happy to see we broke the silence with a number of live flags sounding off on those springy metal strips. Not that we could hear them above the wind and the conversation. A second fish on for me took a shiner but dropped it. Probably a perch. Oliver lost a couple. Each of us caught a pickerel.
Hearing the Gallup pole results at present, after kind of meeting George Gallup when I was a boy. He was a parishioner at Trinity Church, Princeton, which I attended with my family, and he might have sung in the Adult Choir, which my father led as the churches' music director. As much as choral and organ music as an American cultural influence has declined, it's not dead. I think it will always echo Britain's lead, and I don't believe that a relative lack in American church attendance will end the institution here, partly because of that lead the British world takes. What Britain lacks is public fisheries.
Out there on the ice I was more aware of I-80 traffic than usual. It's not visible during the summer.
Less of the sense of being out there. But still...
I had had us walk all the way to the drop-off beyond the shallow flat. That reflected my sense of possibility. I had to pick Oliver up at his house, and on the way to the lake, I did agree with him that right beyond the kayak launch is good. I was actually thinking of closer to shore than where we caught up to him, but in any case, what grabbed hold of me is that we might catch some fish further on.
One of Oliver's Jaw Jackers did get hit with the fathead suspended about 10 feet over bottom in 35 feet of water, so rather than having been a yellow perch, that fish might have been one of the coveted salmon. I had five tip-ups rigged for salmon set out over such depth, but I didn't do any jigging today, even though I had 1/32-ounce jigs to tip with fatheads.
Instead, I looked at salmon over my shoulder, figuring that some other time I might focus harder on catching one. Or some. One of Oliver's five Jaw Jackers rigged with a large shiner got hit, and he caught the pickerel of about 17 inches. That got me thinking, after something had hit only some 15 minutes before in the same hole, and I got my power auger and began cutting more holes, after suffering that (gas) auger's temperamentality. I knew I set the bait suspended over weeds about 12 feet down, which, I had the hunch, was going to produce. While I cut those holes I watched a flag go up near the roaring powerhead. Obviously, working on the ice hadn't spooked that fish. That flag resulted in a pickerel of about 15 inches for me. The final product of my operation was a short row of tip-ups baited with large shiners on a weedy drop-off but nearer the shallow flat than to the 35-foot deep flat bottom. After we saw the tip-up in the middle of that row displaying a high flag, Brian soon had the pickerel I measured at about 22 inches on the ice.
A friend of Brian's, Mike, had showed up before we started catching the pickerel. He hung out awhile, and his cocker spaniel never seemed averse to the granular wetness and patches of shallow ice water up on top of the ice. Temps might have hit 53 degrees. I say that because my car thermometer had registered 50, and it felt warmer out there after a couple of hours, not because of my heavy clothing. Wind probably gusted to 40 miles per hour, and we had to reset some wind flags but not too many. Ice was about 8 inches thick in most places, probably 10 inches where I set that short row of tip-ups.
All equipment in Brian's Jet Sled for the haul home, the ice had already firmed up significantly, meaning the temperature was 32 or colder at our feet, though it was 41 driving east on I-
80.
Brian Cronk's slightly less than 22-incher.