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Lake of the Woods sandbar with driftwood
We were fishing way off in the back reaches of the mammoth Canada “Lake of the Woods.” My partner and I stopped on a little sand and fine gravel beach to eat dinner. We had fished a solid five hours, with light gear, rods bent constantly with the resistance of walleye, crappie, yellow perch and a few smallmouth bass. That little gravel bar had deer tracks that I didn’t see much of thirty years ago. There were also some big, deep timber wolf tracks in the sand. Driftwood was everywhere, and I started picking up a few beautifully shaped and weathered pieces to bring back home. I am and always have been a scavenger of sorts, way back to the days I spent on Bull Shoals and Ozark rivers where I collected driftwood and rocks that I just couldn’t walk away from. My place is filled with unusual rocks, driftwood, arrowheads and old stuff that cause Gloria Jean to call me a hoarder. I can’t help it. There’s something out of whack in my brain that makes me treasure things of little value to anyone who is normal. But I ain’t the only one, there are several others I have met much like me. We are the people you see in McDonalds parking lot looking for pennies.
And as Rich built a fire, there it was, a scavengers delight… an old fishing lure. I have something in the neighborhood of five or six hundred fishing lures I have found over the years and yet finding another one brings me great happiness.
At Nestor Falls, Ontario, at a small sporting goods store,
big foot-long muskie lures sell for 20 to 24 dollars. So between our long hours of fishing, we stopped to get
exercise by scouring each little sand bar for fishing lures. We came home with 29 of them, many of
them antiques. Ten of them were big muskie lures which each sell for more than
I pay for fishing lures in a year.
Larry with a large yellow perch
Yellow
perch are not valued much in Canada, but they are one of the best fish you have
ever tasted, in the same family as the walleye. Trouble is, they are often very small, like our
bluegill. Rich and I got into a bunch
of bigger ones, from 11 to 13 inches in length and we are allowed to bring back
25 of them, so we did. The crappie
which once were thick in those waters seem to have dwindled drastically. In spots where we once caught dozens,
we found none. Where we did find
them, they are big and hard fighting fish you catch right on a sand bottom in
almost forty feet of water and we caught our limit quickly.
Rich with a nice crappie
We caught lots and lots of fish, but most walleye were small. In fact we caught none exceeding 15 inches. Walleye fishing in Lake of the Woods seems to be declining greatly. I hooked into a few good-sized smallmouth though, and once we got tired of fishing jigs straight down below the boat, so we tied on spinners and buzz-baits and caught northern pike by casting the shoreline. There isn’t enough room here to say all I’d like to say about this past week in Canada.
Rich with a nice crappie
We caught lots and lots of fish, but most walleye were small. In fact we caught none exceeding 15 inches. Walleye fishing in Lake of the Woods seems to be declining greatly. I hooked into a few good-sized smallmouth though, and once we got tired of fishing jigs straight down below the boat, so we tied on spinners and buzz-baits and caught northern pike by casting the shoreline. There isn’t enough room here to say all I’d like to say about this past week in Canada.
I have been told that my great grandfather stowed away on a ship and went to Canada from France. He met and married a young woman who was the daughter of a French trapper who lived for a time with Cree Indians in Northwest Ontario north of Lake of the Woods. Her mother was a full-blood Cree Indian. So there isn’t much of the Canadian Cree blood in me, but there is a little, and I can feel it when I visit the Lake of the Woods area a couple of times a year. It is a spectacular multicolored wilderness in October with clean, clear blue water and woods where you could get lost forever. There isn’t a way for me to use words or photos to describe it. It almost seems to be a sacred land, a place where God stoops closest to the earth.
I loved the Ozarks dearly when I was young, but it is nearly gone, the Ozarks I knew. The rivers are filled and dirty and the woodlands recede. The type of people I knew are gone, and the values and convictions they had are fading away fast.
Canada’s
cities, Winnipeg and Toronto being the two I have seen, are at the least, no
better than cities found here.
They are stuffed with far too many people and they seem to crave a life
of more money, and new technology.
But in the rural areas of Manitoba, Northwest Ontario, Saskatchewan and
Alberta, you will find the greatest country people you have ever met, and their
morals and values are much like I saw as a boy here in the Ozarks.
I
think if I were a young man today, I’d look at the part of Alberta just below
and just east of the Rocky Mountains where the land and life is too difficult
for the lazy and those looking for government handouts. The only illegal immigrants they would
ever have to worry about are those people from the U.S. like me who are craving
peace and neighbors who have the old-fashioned beliefs that I have. Small churches there are the only
crowded places, made up of those who will work hard without the worship of
money nor the screwed-up “diversity” we are seeing destroy our nation.
The
rural people of Canada can escape their government socialist leanings and
incompetent leaders, which are as bad or worse than our government, by just
going deeper into the wilderness, where the laziness of “diversity” and the
heathen element of immigration which envelopes our nation doesn’t exist. You
can forget who they are in that bush country of northern Manitoba or
Saskatchewan.
People
in our country who are over fifty can sense what is coming here… it is
something you just feel in your soul, seeing more of the west burn each summer
and the consuming drought which is unmatched in history, only a part of natural
catastrophes which are coming. In Korea and Iran, nuclear weapons are now being
held for our cities, and if you pay attention to that little fat moron that
heads Korea you know that in a matter of a decade or two or perhaps sooner, you
will see great destructive, horrible bombs fall on our country, or perhaps
brought across our border and detonated on the ground by those ‘diverse’ people
who hate us.
I
know that a very small percentage of Americans have the love of solitude and
peace that I have, but those who are younger and do share such feelings, should
forsake all places where numbers of humans are increasing rapidly, and look at
remote wild areas like those found in rural Canada. I was only a small boy when my grandfather told me that a lifeboat
will only hold so many, and that someday I would see the country we loved so
much destroyed by numbers of people beyond my comprehension. He added that when nature endures
tremendous numbers of any species, some kind of destructiveness comes to save
the lifeboat from sinking. Something
is coming, and you can feel it. We have abandoned the things that made our
country great. There are no more
Abe Lincolns or Roosevelts in our future.
I
feel so fortunate to be able to live as close to the earth as I have been. If
my kids and grandkids would go with me tomorrow I would be headed for Canada
somewhere, never to return. That
beautiful, natural wild country is a rough land to survive in, but it is a
place where life has more of a purpose than the accumulation of wealth. Without computers or television, it
would not be hard to get back to a real purpose for living, close to God again.
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