The Gila, Apache and Golden, to the Dolly Varden, Arctic Char, the voracious Bull and the Appalachian Brook, over to the Rainbow, Redband and Steelhead, to the Yellowstone and Greenback cutthroats, up nort to the Laker, and lastly, to the ubiquitous Brown ... they're all there, portrayed mostly in spawning colors.
The original painting is for sale. If you're interested, please contact me at dsharley12@yahoo.com. For the first time in three years, I've also had this painting prepared for a run of limited-edition giclee prints. Printed on art paper, and signed and numbered by me, these prints will be part of a limited run of 150. They're available for purchase for $220, including standard shipping, through my website, dansharley.com.
*************
Thanksgiving and Christmas have come and gone,
and we’re already a couple of weeks into 2014. The blur of holiday activity
often leaves one exhausted, and Betsy and I were not immune to that condition.
We hosted her family for Thanksgiving, then, followed it up with a huge
fish-fry in honor of Betsy’s youngest brother’s birthday. The shopping
(spending) spree followed, as we quickly prepared for the arrival of Christmas.
We headed west for the big day, arriving at my
parents’ home in Heber Springs Christmas Eve night. We did the traditional big
meal and offered one another thanks and well-wishes for the
year to come.
Christmas morning, we exchanged presents and
littered the living room floor with brightly-colored wads of seasonal paper. Everyone
was happy to give and to receive, as Bumper snoozed amidst the cacophony of
crinkling paper and surprised laughter.
Geez, making these people happy is exhausting. |
After clean-up and a rough organizational effort
(“my stuff is over here”), me and the guys looked out the back windows of the house
at the immense, slate-gray water of the Little Red River. Dreams of spending
the afternoon in the backyard, wading the trout-filled stream were dashed by
the Grinch-like Corps of Engineers, who dialed up two full generators all day,
resulting in extremely-high flows. Instead, we stayed inside, ate a ton more
food, and Mom and I lost repeated games of Scrabble to my brother.
It's a Polish Christmas! |
The generation continued throughout our visit, as
the swollen river kept us far from its enticing shoals, runs and holes. Dad, Tim
and I decided to head north to see my Uncle in Mountain Home, and to fish the Norfork
River, which offered wadeable conditions. At least, that’s what the online
report said.
Alas, immediately upon arrival, a quick
inspection of the river revealed that the report was incorrect, and the dam was
at full generation. The three words that best describe this are as follows, and
I quote: “Stink, stank, stunk.” The Corps hates Christmas.
Dad's Christmas present to me ... an awesome selection of his hand-tied flies. Bass beware. |
We drove an hour back towards home and tried
fishing Sylamore Creek, a scenic feeder of the much larger White River. The
White was also swollen with upstream generation, but Sylamore is not a
tailrace, thus not directly affected by the Grinch.
Dad plies the icy waters of Sylamore Creek |
It was, however, affected by the recent cold
weather. The stream was crystal clear, yet downright icy, and the trout within
it, sluggish and presumably shivering. We caught a few – my Uncle dominated
with a homemade streamer pattern – but every fish seemed like they had
sacrificed themselves in order to get a temporary reprieve from the glacial
water (“PLEASE don’t throw me back
yet”). Ah well. We were fishing, and that’s what matters.
The rest of the visit was a steady stream of
activity: playing with Bumper, hiking Sugar Loaf Mountain, spending quality
time with Mom and Dad, and eating several tons of sausage-balls, ham, turkey
and gingerbread cookies.
Betsy, resting on the South Col before Hillary's Step and the summit push. |
Balancing work, family and charity pursuits can
be a roller-coaster ride, and December offered a mix of labored climbs,
exhilarating bursts of speed and occasional stomach-churning twists and turns.
In the end, all was accomplished, the spirit of the season was maintained, and
Betsy and I crossed into 2014 like a couple of marathoners at the end of a late
July race. Exhausted, relieved and completely spent.
I hope everyone enjoyed a great holiday season, too, and you’re off to a great start to the new year. I’ll see you somewhere downstream.
Sugar Loaves. |
2 comments:
Amazing painting, I can see why that would take a long time to paint.
Great work,
Phil
Thanks for the good words, Phil ... I appreciate it greatly!
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