I like warm weather.
Today is July 4th, and it’s warm outside. Actually, it’s almost hot, but that’s
okay. I can always find a cool spot if
I need it, but I can never seem to find a way to get warm when it’s cold
outside.
I’ve lived most of my life in places like Texas, southern
California, and Arizona, and I have rarely allowed myself to experience the
cold. At various times circumstances
dictated a trip to cold country, but a shivering body and chattering teeth are
not my favorite forms of exercise. I
think it is great that some persons like to ski, or ice skate, or
snowboard. I think it is great that
some persons ride snowmobiles and some persons ride bobsleds. I think it is great that Santa lives at the
North Pole. I think it is great that I
live where it is warm.
In Fort Worth the temperature would occasionally drop below
freezing in the winter and a reading of ‘zero’ was not overly unusual, but
warmer days were never far off. In
Arizona cold nights were not uncommon, but warm days were expected. And I’ve never seen snow in Long Beach,
CA.
My first experience with extreme cold was on a business trip
to Great Falls, Montana. I left Dallas
in 70-degree weather and landed in Great Falls in minus 40-degree weather. I had on a heavy coat, but it wasn’t
enough. When I stepped off the plane, I
could instantly feel my various parts freezing. Or maybe the problem was that I couldn’t feel my various parts freezing. My parts were growing numb very fast. I wore a handlebar mustache in those days,
and when I placed my hand over my face to protect it from the weather, I broke
off one side of my mustache. It had
instantly frozen. So I did the only
thing that made sense at the time—I broke off the other side. Oh, well.
I rented a car that had a block heater. At my motel I could park just outside my
door and plug in the car to an electrical outlet to keep the engine block warm
without running the car all night.
Cool. (Maybe that was the wrong
expression.) I parked the car and went
inside to get the extension cord the motel provided. When I tossed it out of the door to uncoil it, the cord shattered
in mid-toss. It froze as fast as my
mustache. I guess that was the reason
the motel had about a dozen extension cords in my room.
The following morning I met with the manager of the store I
was visiting, and all he could do was stare at my face. Finally I asked him if something was wrong.
“It’s your mustache.
Why is it so lopsided? And your
hair is a different length on each side.
Is this a new trend that hasn’t reached Montana yet?”
I knew my mustache had a problem, but my hair? Apparently I had managed to break off a
large portion of my hair on the way to the store that morning. I wanted to go home.
On a business trip to Minnesota, I was talked into some ice
fishing. The temperature was only about
10 below so I wasn’t too worried about my newly re-grown mustache, but it was
still very cold. Leonard, the store
manager, assured me we would be quite comfortable. He had an ice hut. I
didn’t understand exactly what I was getting into, but I was reluctantly
willing to give it a try.
About 5am we were standing at the edge of a frozen lake with
a sled full of our gear. Maybe I should
say that it was all Leonard’s gear. I
owned absolutely nothing suited for this adventure. In the dark distance I could see a number of cabin-like
structures sitting out on the ice and most of them had smoke emanating from a
pipe extending through the roof. We
were going out to the red one. Wait,
they were all red, but Leonard knew exactly which one was his.
I had never walked very far on ice before, but it wasn’t as
difficult as I had supposed it would be.
Visions of slipping and sliding and falling were going through my brain,
but nothing like that happened. I just
walked normally, and together we pulled the sled behind us to Leonard’s ice hut
where a sign on the door identified him as the owner.
Inside we were sheltered from the elements to a degree. The hut was about six feet wide and about
eight feet long and had a wooden floor in it with a trap door that could be
lifted up to expose the ice underneath.
There was a small cast iron stove at one end in which Leonard started a
wood fire. Soon there was a coffee pot
on top of the stove and we were getting ready to fish.
The first thing to do was to open the trap door and cut a
hole in the ice. Leonard used an auger
and a metal spade to accomplish this, and he threw the excess ice into a bucket
and then he then tossed the contents out of the door. He opened a small box and removed from it some heavy fishing line
with a leader and a lure of some kind attached to the end. Into the hole he dropped the lure and
lowered the line about 10 feet. And he
sat there holding that line.
Occasionally Leonard would raise and lower the line a few inches, but
mostly he sat there. Finally I asked
him what came next.
“Oh, well, uh, not much unless a fish bites. Sometimes we need to scoop out the ice from
the hole. It re-freezes quickly.” Leonard was happy, but I was bored—and cold.
It didn’t take me long to realize that only one person
fished at a time, and Leonard was doing the fishing. My job was to sit quietly, sip coffee, and keep the fire in the
stove going. After an hour of so of
this, Leonard handed me the line so I could take a turn “fishing.” No sooner than I had taken the line, a fish
took the lure.
It wasn’t a big fish, although it did require some effort to
retrieve. I’ve never been much for hand
line fishing, but when attempting it with cold hands and heavy gloves, it
becomes rather difficult. I couldn’t
feel the fishing line through the gloves.
In fact, I couldn’t feel the inside of my gloves with my cold hands. But I managed to get the fish up through the
hole and into the cabin. It wiggled for
about ten seconds before freezing, and after I removed the lure, the fish was
tossed into the corner of the cabin. We
didn’t need an ice chest—we were sitting in a freezer.
Then Leonard took over the fishing duties again, and I can
honestly say I was glad he did. I
believe I could find more enjoyment by watching paint dry. I was cold, I was bored, I was cold. I threw more wood into the stove, poured
another cup of coffee, and I waited.
About 10am I began to wonder what was going on outside the hut. I opened the door to see snow falling and
several men pulling their sleds back toward the edge of the lake. Maybe it was time to go.
Leonard laughed at the idea. “Wimps! They’re just fair
weather fishermen. Afraid of a little
snow.” Apparently we weren’t going to
go.
At last Leonard caught a fish and tossed it over with the
other one. I took the line when he
handed it back to me, and I dropped the lure back into the hole. And I sat there with Leonard looking at me
as though he was the happiest man on this earth. Maybe he was. He was
certainly happier than me.
It was well into the afternoon when I caught another fish,
and I thought we would go home at this point, but I was incorrect about
this. Leonard wanted to give it another
try. I opened the door again to look
out at the snow and could see little more than a gray/white fog. Now I was starting to worry. I actually had thoughts of abandoning this
effort and trying to find my own way back to the truck. But, 1) I didn’t have a clue where the truck
was, and 2) Leonard had the keys. I
closed the door, threw some wood into the stove, poured another cup of coffee,
and sat down.
Leonard caught his second fish about 5:30 and said that was
probably about all the fish were going to pull out of there today. At last he was going home. We packed our things (including the four
fish) onto the sled and started off into the now very dark fog. With unerring accuracy we walked to the
truck and within an hour I was back in my hotel room where it was warm. Warm.
I was to visit Leonard’s store several more times over the
next few years, but always in the summer.
He would constantly remind me of the great time we experienced ice
fishing, and he would never forget to invite me back; however, for some strange
reason, my visits to his store were always in the summer.
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