Tuesday, May 31, 2016

A Beautiful Morning on Tinker’s Creek


Something from the tackle box:

       Later, the Lord said to Elijah, “Leave and go across the Jordan River so you can hide near Cherith Creek.  You can drink water from the creek, and eat the food I’ve told the ravens to bring you.”
       Elijah obeyed the Lord and went to live near Cherith Creek.  Ravens brought him bread and meat twice a day, and he drank the water from the creek.  But after a while, it dried up because there was no rain.  (1Kings 17:2-7 CEV)
 
working down towards the bridge
       Yesterday was the Memorial Day holiday and, for the most part, I had a very enjoyable time.  Kathy and I spent the entire afternoon at a backyard barbeque hosted by my son Nate and his wife Tracy.  My daughter Andrea and her fiancée Chad were there, along with my Grandkids, Nolan, Gwen and Lydia.  The food and company were great, and Nolan got to show me the new fishing rod he received for signing up for Cub Scouts.  I helped him rig it up and we practiced casting in the back yard.  It’s a sweet set-up for a six-year-old and he will be catching fish with it in company with his grandpa as soon as school is out for the summer.  But, as enjoyable as the afternoon was, what I really want to tell you about was my morning.
       After a Friday and Saturday up at the cottage Kathy and I came home so that I could do the church service on Sunday morning.  Which is fine, except that there is no point in making the five-hour drive back up just to spend one more night and then come home on Memorial Day afternoon to be at work bright and early on Tuesday.  This meant that the holiday proper would, of necessity, be spent around our home rather than on the lake.  This is also fine, especially with the BBQ option at my son’s place on the table, except that I had really wanted to get some more fishing in up north before my lake got too jet-ski/power-boaty for my taste, which it often is on weekends after Memorial Day and all the docks are in.  Oh well, - what would be a good plan B? 
       I know!  Since we don’t have to be at Nate’s house until around noon, I’ll get up early and spend a couple of hours fly-fishing on Tinker’s Creek before we get ready to go.  I should have the fishing all to myself.  This is the opening weekend of Bass season, and almost all of the live-bait trout fisherman, who clog things up on the trout streams in May, will have tossed all of their red-worms out in favor of crawlers and crank-baits to use at the local Bass hot-spots for the rest of the summer.  Good thinking. 
it really was glorious
       What a beautiful morning.  I awoke at six o’clock and was parked near the banks of Tinker’s Creek putting my hip-waders on by six-thirty.  The sun had just cleared the eastern horizon and the sky was nothing but bright morning blue in every direction you could look.  I was right about having the water all to myself, as there wasn’t another soul around to compete with the morning songbirds for my ear. 
       The only fly in the ointment was that, after watching the surface of the water in my favorite spot for several minutes, something I always do before getting in to fish, it was obvious that nothing was feeding off the top right now.  Oh well.  I decided to get into the water upstream, near the overhanging apple tree, and take about an hour to slowly work my way down to the honey-hole near the covered bridge.  Maybe they’d be rising by then.
a gray adam's fly
       What a joy it was to get in and play out line from my sixty year-old Conlon Rod.  The breeze was so gentle that I didn’t even have to take it into account when making my casts.  Upstream, downstream or cross-stream, the little gray Adam’s fly I had tied on turned over perfectly within a foot or two of where I’d aimed it.  Problem was, I was aiming it at nothing!  Not a sign of a rising fish anywhere.  Cast as I would to likely spots, it seemed I was destined to just enjoy the beauty of the morning without a trout to say “hello” to. 
       About half-way from the old apple tree to the covered bridge, right at the spot I’d caught my first trout of the season two weeks earlier, I made a cast to a good spot between two clumps of brush on the west bank.  I didn’t expect anything because I hadn’t been seeing anything yet.  But, by golly, the first rising fish I saw in the half-hour of slow work I’d put in so far, was the nice little brown trout that rose to my Gray Adam’s fly!
       She jumped and flipped and generally worked against me pretty hard, but she was small and I soon had her in my landing net.  She went about nine inches or so, and it looked just like the fish I’d caught in the same spot two weeks earlier.  I like to think that it was, as I’ve become a catch-and-release man in my old age, at least as far as trout steams are concerned. 
what a beautiful creature
       After a quick photo-op, and taking the fly out of her lip, back in the water she went. She was just barely hooked through a sliver of membrane at the front edge of her mouth that was about as thick as the 4x tippet I was using.  I don’t know how I ever got her close enough to net.
       Another fifteen minutes of fishing got me down to the bridge, where I like fishing the best, and here things changed.  I saw a couple of fish that were coming right out of the water after flying insects, jumping at a pretty regular clip, right under the bridge.  There was just enough clearance between bridge and water to turn a fly over right in the shade and I figured I was a cinch to come into more action, - but then I heard Mickey Mouse start to whistle. 
my ring-tone
       The ring-tone on my cell-phone is the tune from “Steamboat Willie,” the very first Mickey Mouse cartoon shown in theaters back in 1928.  It’s a snappy little tune that usually makes me happy when I hear it.  Not so much, right at the moment though. 
       “Hello.”
       “Hey there, pastor Mark.  I know it’s kind of early, and it’s a holiday and all, but I was wondering if you were going to be in the office at all today?  If you are, and you could spare me a little bit of time later on, I sure would appreciate it.  I’ve got something I need to talk with you about and today seems like my best chance to do it.”
       “Oh, hey there Tony.  Yeah, I know we need to go over a few things before next Sunday comes around.  Look, I’m tied up with family stuff all this afternoon, but if you could meet me at the church in about two hours time, that would work for me.”
       “Well, I really need to be on the road by then myself.  That’s why I called so early.  Figured we could get this done over breakfast.  My treat.  Otherwise it will have to wait until next Saturday.  And that’s really pushing it, don’t you think?”
       “Yeah.  You’re probably right about that.  Give me half an hour and I’ll meet you at the C&R diner.  Have my coffee waiting.”
       “Will do!  See you in half an hour.”
       “Bye, Tony.”
       “Bye, Pastor.  And, thanks!”
       Well, - OK, - duty calls. – “I’ll see you later my beautiful little red spotted fish friends.  I sure do look forward to getting to know you a lot better the next time I come here. – And I’m hoping that it won’t be too long!”   

Something to take home in your creel:

       Some folks joke about their pastor only working one day a week, and then only for the morning.  But most of those who do joke about it also know it’s not true.  The ones who think that it is true – don’t joke about it – they gripe about it. 
       In fact, quite the opposite is the truth, especially for small-church pastors, and most of our parishioners know that.  We almost all have scheduled days off, and even when we’re at work we may have stretches of time, maybe even days on end, when we don’t have much that we have to do, but we are always “on call,” pretty much around the clock, all week long, even on our days off, - and you’d be amazed how often that phone does ring. 
       It’s not so bad though.  Most of us who do small-church ministry really don’t mind it that much.  It’s part of our calling.  In fact, we like it.  If you need me, just call me, and I’ll be there for you.  Why?  Well, - because I really do care.  Almost all of us do!  We are there for you in Jesus’ name.  Just remember that even Jesus had to get away from it all now and then, - in fact, - pretty regularly. 
       Lots of folks who read about Elijah living by the creek, getting fed meat and bread by the birds twice a day and drinking crystal clear water from the stream any time he got thirsty, think that it sounds like a pretty good deal!  They think; ‘Why, even though it wasn’t much, all he did was sit there and collect sustenance for doing pretty much next to nothing. I sure never had it that good!’  And they may even think that it’s pretty much akin to the deal that their pastor gets for what he or she does for them. – Well, just keep in mind that it is possible, – even quite possible, – to dry a good small-church pastor’s stream right out – by taking unfair advantage of that 24-7 availability that they give you. 

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