That’s right, Andrew and I got a legal buck on the opening day of deer season. That has NEVER happened to me before, especially given the fact that we didn’t leave until 2:00 in the afternoon because we went to Gonzo and Gabriela’s baptism in the morning. We came back home cold, wet, tired, and hungry, but we were successful! It was a great day!
What made the getting the buck especially memorable was the fact that it was near the place where Dad and I each got a forked-horn buck when I was about 13 years-old. It’s a place called Rattlesnake Lake up the south fork of the Smith River. Dick and I have been there and shot his pistol.
When I was about 13 years old Dad and I were hunting there and walked up a cutover area looking for deer. We were about 20 yards apart working our way up the hill and I heard a shot coming from where Dad was at. I froze looking for what he may have been shooting at. Above the brush in from of me I saw a deer with forked horns looking in the direction of where the shot had come from. I took aim at the deer and fired a shot. The deer dropped, and I at first thought that I had missed and he had turned and run off. I yelled to Dad something to the effect that I saw one but had missed and it had run off. I ran up to where I had last seen the deer and looked saw the deer laying there. I looked to the side, and much to my surprise I saw another forked-horn deer laying there. Two deer. Dad had seen the one he had shot and had not seen my deer, and I had seen the one I was shooting at and had not seen Dad’s deer.
All these memories came flooding back as Andrew and I went up to Rattlesnake Lake. I’ve been there three times since Dad and I were there, but I must say I haven’t been able to recognize the place, only recollect the memory.
It was raining lightly as we were experiencing the first precursor of winter. It was a warm rain, but yet the harbinger of what the season was to bring. For better or worse we didn’t see any deer there, only the affirmation that it was in the fall season. The only thing we saw were the Band-Tailed Pigeons flying out of the roadside berry bushes fueling up for their migration south.
We drove up the road until we saw a likely looking place. As I was getting out of the pickup I noticed the buck. It was a successful trip.
Oh, you thought I shot a deer? No no no. I just found a dollar.
Jim
Monday, September 20, 2010
Tuesday, September 14, 2010
Past Summer Fun
North Coast Kayak Fishing
Del Norte County is on the cusp of a new and enjoyable phenomena! Select fishermen in the area are venturing into a new local fishing area that is very old. More and more people are fishing from a kayak in the North Coast region.
Fishing from a kayak allows a person to successfully fish formerly local non-fishable waters. Just beyond where a person can cast from the onshore rocks, but just inside of where motorized boats dare not go, is where it’s at. So near but yet so far. Virtually unfished waters await a person fishing from a kayak.
The local Crescent City area is fortunate to have many places to launch a kayak from and be fishing within five minutes. The third turnout south of Washington Boulevard on Pebble Beach consistently has the smallest surf coming ashore and allows one to access and fish the sea stacks just south of Castle Rock. Garth’s Cove Beach, by the airport, is protected from north winds and swell which allow a fisherman to fish the waters south of where much of the rock was quarried at Pt. St. George for the harbor jetty. You can also access the rocks in front of the steps south of Pacific Avenue, but the hard part is dragging your kayak back up the stairs. Access to the south side of Preston Island is a short drag across the rocks but the water is generally very well protected from the north swell. The beach access at 6th Street is a place where it is generally an easy launch across a sandy beach. Wherever there is a kelp bed it tends to dampen the swell, but it makes it harder to fish around. These inside waters are rarely fished but are rich in rock fish. The wind and / or swell direction ultimately dictates where to fish from.
The sport is becoming more and more popular as people discover the benefits of fishing from a kayak. In Southern California it is very popular. In fact, kayak fishing has it’s own magazine devoted to the sport as well as online kayaking forums.
Besides being able to access water that is rarely if ever fished, you don’t need a trailer for your boat or need to launch from a boat ramp, and there are minimal maintenance issues. It’s good to see that more local people starting to fish the area from a kayak. After having fished locally from a kayak for fifteen years I can highly recommend it.
As with any endeavor that takes place in or around water kayak fishing should not be taken lightly. There are many factors that can make a trip enjoyable or uncomfortable, and worse yet, dangerous. A person should be totally comfortable with their kayak. Always wear a lifejacket and be familiar with the local tides and weather forecast. You do not really need to go far offshore but need to be aware of any wind coming up. One should never venture out if it looks the least bit questionable. It’s always worse when you’re actually on the water.
Use the ‘buddy system’ or at the very least tell someone where you’ll be fishing and what time you’re coming in. Having some type of signal device or waterproof phone is good insurance. I’ve heard of a kayaker losing their balance flipping their kayak and ending up in the water while fighting a fish. Some gear was lost and a little pride was damaged, but no real harm was done, and luckily, the fish was landed. Whether you use a sit-a-board kayak or a sit-in kayak, it’s not worth catching a few fish to endanger your life or put someone else’s life in danger.
One needs to be very careful so that you’re fishing on the side of a rock or on the shore side instead of being on the ocean side and take the chance of being swept into a rock by a large swell. Also, it’s better to fish with too light of a line than too heavy of line. Breaking off stuck gear is harder than what it seems it should be when you’re in a light kayak, especially when you’re close to a wash rock.
I have found the most successful method for fishing this inside water is not the usual method of bouncing jigs on rocky bottom areas but rather to cast next to wash rocks and rocks exposed at low tides with lures that you might use to catch other game fish. Using jigs work, but I have been most successful casting and retrieving at varying depths until you find the level that the fish are at.
As ocean fishermen know, rock fish do not always hang around rocks and they’re not always at the same rocks all the time. At times they’re found in open water areas away from rocks. Sometimes it takes some ‘prospecting’ to find the fish. A small depth finder / fish finder allows a fisherman to fish smarter and not fish blind.
Besides fishing, being in a small boat allows a kayaker to get up closer to the local marine life, but while one can get close there needs to be a respect for the marine life as we are invading their habitat. Every time birds fly away or the marine mammals are scared off the rocks they expend valuable energy that they must replace and thus shouldn’t be approached too closely. When fishing around Castle Rock a kayaker should maintain the proper distance away from the Castle Rock National Wildlife Refuge.
At times a fisherman can get so caught up in the anticipation of getting on the water that they easily overlook important items. I’ve heard of a kayaker having a ‘paddle malfunction’ and realized after putting their kayak in the water that they had left their paddle at home. But, that’s not as bad as the guy that was putting his kayak in the water to go fishing and discovered that he’d left his fishing pole on his front porch at his house.
We live in a beautiful area that merits being explored by any means available. A kayak allows us explore, fish, get exercise, and enjoy our local piece of heaven. Try it, your ‘Fun Meter’ will be off the scale. You will feel powerful, but yet at peace paddling our local waters.
Del Norte County is on the cusp of a new and enjoyable phenomena! Select fishermen in the area are venturing into a new local fishing area that is very old. More and more people are fishing from a kayak in the North Coast region.
Fishing from a kayak allows a person to successfully fish formerly local non-fishable waters. Just beyond where a person can cast from the onshore rocks, but just inside of where motorized boats dare not go, is where it’s at. So near but yet so far. Virtually unfished waters await a person fishing from a kayak.
The local Crescent City area is fortunate to have many places to launch a kayak from and be fishing within five minutes. The third turnout south of Washington Boulevard on Pebble Beach consistently has the smallest surf coming ashore and allows one to access and fish the sea stacks just south of Castle Rock. Garth’s Cove Beach, by the airport, is protected from north winds and swell which allow a fisherman to fish the waters south of where much of the rock was quarried at Pt. St. George for the harbor jetty. You can also access the rocks in front of the steps south of Pacific Avenue, but the hard part is dragging your kayak back up the stairs. Access to the south side of Preston Island is a short drag across the rocks but the water is generally very well protected from the north swell. The beach access at 6th Street is a place where it is generally an easy launch across a sandy beach. Wherever there is a kelp bed it tends to dampen the swell, but it makes it harder to fish around. These inside waters are rarely fished but are rich in rock fish. The wind and / or swell direction ultimately dictates where to fish from.
The sport is becoming more and more popular as people discover the benefits of fishing from a kayak. In Southern California it is very popular. In fact, kayak fishing has it’s own magazine devoted to the sport as well as online kayaking forums.
Besides being able to access water that is rarely if ever fished, you don’t need a trailer for your boat or need to launch from a boat ramp, and there are minimal maintenance issues. It’s good to see that more local people starting to fish the area from a kayak. After having fished locally from a kayak for fifteen years I can highly recommend it.
As with any endeavor that takes place in or around water kayak fishing should not be taken lightly. There are many factors that can make a trip enjoyable or uncomfortable, and worse yet, dangerous. A person should be totally comfortable with their kayak. Always wear a lifejacket and be familiar with the local tides and weather forecast. You do not really need to go far offshore but need to be aware of any wind coming up. One should never venture out if it looks the least bit questionable. It’s always worse when you’re actually on the water.
Use the ‘buddy system’ or at the very least tell someone where you’ll be fishing and what time you’re coming in. Having some type of signal device or waterproof phone is good insurance. I’ve heard of a kayaker losing their balance flipping their kayak and ending up in the water while fighting a fish. Some gear was lost and a little pride was damaged, but no real harm was done, and luckily, the fish was landed. Whether you use a sit-a-board kayak or a sit-in kayak, it’s not worth catching a few fish to endanger your life or put someone else’s life in danger.
One needs to be very careful so that you’re fishing on the side of a rock or on the shore side instead of being on the ocean side and take the chance of being swept into a rock by a large swell. Also, it’s better to fish with too light of a line than too heavy of line. Breaking off stuck gear is harder than what it seems it should be when you’re in a light kayak, especially when you’re close to a wash rock.
I have found the most successful method for fishing this inside water is not the usual method of bouncing jigs on rocky bottom areas but rather to cast next to wash rocks and rocks exposed at low tides with lures that you might use to catch other game fish. Using jigs work, but I have been most successful casting and retrieving at varying depths until you find the level that the fish are at.
As ocean fishermen know, rock fish do not always hang around rocks and they’re not always at the same rocks all the time. At times they’re found in open water areas away from rocks. Sometimes it takes some ‘prospecting’ to find the fish. A small depth finder / fish finder allows a fisherman to fish smarter and not fish blind.
Besides fishing, being in a small boat allows a kayaker to get up closer to the local marine life, but while one can get close there needs to be a respect for the marine life as we are invading their habitat. Every time birds fly away or the marine mammals are scared off the rocks they expend valuable energy that they must replace and thus shouldn’t be approached too closely. When fishing around Castle Rock a kayaker should maintain the proper distance away from the Castle Rock National Wildlife Refuge.
At times a fisherman can get so caught up in the anticipation of getting on the water that they easily overlook important items. I’ve heard of a kayaker having a ‘paddle malfunction’ and realized after putting their kayak in the water that they had left their paddle at home. But, that’s not as bad as the guy that was putting his kayak in the water to go fishing and discovered that he’d left his fishing pole on his front porch at his house.
We live in a beautiful area that merits being explored by any means available. A kayak allows us explore, fish, get exercise, and enjoy our local piece of heaven. Try it, your ‘Fun Meter’ will be off the scale. You will feel powerful, but yet at peace paddling our local waters.
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