SLIGHTLY OFF THE
MARK
I hear it’s been a bad year for ice
fishing. I thought every year was a bad year for ice fishing.
I mean, it involves standing out on
a frozen lake in the middle of winter, for crying out loud. That’s not a hobby
– it’s something the Taliban would use to torture people into confessions.
A bad year means it’s been too warm
to get good ice – “good” ice, by the way, is what you put in your drink – and
so you either can’t go out, or it’s dangerous to go out. In other words, a bad
year for fishermen would be a good year for me. Too warm to freeze? Yay!
I’m a supporter of global warming,
and so I breathe out carbon dioxide as fast as I can. I’ve heard the Sports
Illustrated Swimsuit Edition is good for increased breathing.
Still, some people are fans of ice
fishing, just as others are fans of basketball, the world’s most annoying
sport. He runs back! He runs forth! He runs back again! He sweats! Gah. There’s
a connection there, in that basketball playoffs in Indiana are traditionally accompanied
by ice storms. Perhaps Mother Nature feels, as I do, that the only good thing
about basketball is the cheerleaders. If they had cheerleaders in baseball and
took away the spitting, it would be the perfect sport. Except they need to make
it full contact.
Ice fishing is pretty much like
regular fishing, only instead of hoping for good weather you hope for bad. Once
the lake freezes solidly enough you go out on it, drill a hole in the ice, drop
your line in, and wait for a fish that’s sick and tired of being cold to just
give up and grab the hook.
“I’m freezing down here! To heck
with it, at least the frying pan will be warm.”
By the way, can you ice fish on a
frozen ocean? I think I just figured out how Santa Claus feeds his elves. So
much for my retired reindeer theory.
Some ice fishermen do exactly what
I’d do if I had that special brand of lunacy: They bring a house with them. A
little shed is slid onto the ice, and a really smart fisherman supplies it with
a portable heater (or stay home by the fireplace). I suppose you could expand
it a little and have a portable toilet and cooler, and maybe bring out a
battery to hook up lights, a TV, maybe some fishing show DVD’s …
Of course, if you could do all that,
why not just stay home? Put a couple of fish in a bucket, throw on your parka,
and you’re in business in the comfort of your own living room. If you really
want to make it realistic, fill your bathtub with cold water, jump in, and
start screaming that you fell through the ice.
Be warned, your spouse is likely to
let you drown.
It’s March now, but don’t despair,
ice fisher people – this is Northern Indiana. We could easily have another
couple of months of blizzards and freezing temperature, which explains why I’m
cheering on that global warming thing.
Hm … are there female ice fisher
people? Surely there are. Over the decades, with women’s rights and all, more
and more women are gaining the right and willingness to do really stupid
things, just like men do.
Not that walking out on a few inches
of ice on a frozen lake in temperatures that could kill a person in minutes is
necessarily stupid. Sometimes it’s just crazy. Lots of smart people are crazy,
and some of them like to drop a hook through a hole in the ice when there’s
perfectly good fish in your grocer’s freezer. I mean, it’s freezing there too,
right?
Many sports had their start with
matters of survival. I’m sure Eskimos who had to chop through the ice and catch
fish to survive the winter would be endlessly amused at the idea of someone doing
it for fun. “You can just order it at a restaurant … and you don’t?”
I’m not sure what basketball had to
do with survival. Maybe our ancestors had to heave big rocks into bird’s nests
to get dinner.
In any case, it’s hypocritical to
make fun of another person’s hobbies. I’m sure many fishermen would be
horrified at the idea that I love reading for hours at a time, even though I
can read on the couch and have never, while reading, been hit on the head with
a basketball. Well, there was the one time, but that’s another story.
So I’ll let it go at that, but I’ll
tell you one thing: It’ll be a cold day before you ever catch me ice fishing.
I guess it would have to be.
I'm not into it either. I don't like the taste of fish, so why bother going to catch it, summer or winter? And it's the sort of activity my idiot ex-brother-in-law loved to do, one more strike against it.
ReplyDeleteYesterday, Lake Simcoe, a moderately sized lake in central Ontario, had two dozen plus ice fishermen out on the ice despite the fact that they had been warned not to. The winds started breaking the ice sheet apart, and they all had to be rescued by emergency services.
I like fish -- but I hate fishing. I mean, I love steak, but I don't go off hunting cows! They should have made those fishermen swim for it.
DeleteI don't think you should ice fish since you always hurt yourself doing house repairs, Mark. I can only imagine what could possibly happen to you like drowning.
ReplyDeleteOne thing you'll never have to worry about is me ice fishing!
DeleteMark,
ReplyDeleteI can't say I"m into ice fishing either. And I agree with Shelly, stay far away from it in light of your 'luck' with house repairs. Stay safe! Keep warm! Enjoy your sport of reading!
Reading is easier, more comfortable, and more rewarding!
DeleteGreat tale, Mark!
ReplyDeleteOr, since we're talking about fish, great tail?
DeleteI'm totally with you on basketball, and there is no fish in the world tasty enough that I would risk frostbite. I'm kind of fond of my fingers and toes.
ReplyDeleteToo late for me -- I got my fingers, toes, and face frostbitten when I was a dumb teenager, which is why you'll find me gloved and covered up even when the temperature's just a little chilly.
DeleteIt's almost the equivalent of looking for a good fish restaurant out here in the desert. :)
ReplyDeleteI can see how that might be a problem!
Delete