Blog 114
Lake Ketchum Art Galleries
Life On the Lake
Dedicated to the Joys
of Waterside Living
July 2007
SALUTING TEN YEARS
AT THE LAKE

Bluegill close-up, picture by my friend Sean
522
At dusk, about
inning seven of a Mariners baseball game, I sneak away for about fifteen
minutes flyfishing off the end of my dock. There are bluegill redds
in the shallow water just off from shore, and these I try to avoid fishing
near because the male fish defending the nest is aggressive in
chasing away all intruders, including my swiftly moving small nymph. But I
still manage to catch one of these beautiful small fish fairly regularly
in deeper water--say water seven or eight feet deep.
They have tiny
mouths and often don't get hooked; all I feel is a tug and then the line
goes slack again. But most nearly every night I get one or two, and then I
have to disengage the small hook from inside their mouths. Micro work if
anything is. I use forceps to go this and am as gentle as possible in my
surgery in the near dark. I am most certain in most instance the
fish is not seriously injured.
Occasionally
there is a surprise on the end of my line. One of the abundant rainbows
still left in the lake after it being hard fished for several months will
take the fly and fight hard. Because of the warm water they have become
lethargic, almost inactive, so it is a big surprise to me, and I am sure
to them, to suddenly be involved in a tussle.
Serious
rainbow trout fishing will have to wait until the cool water of October to
amount of much of anything. And by then the bluegills will have become
inactive again, at least from a fishing standpoint.
(I see very
few entries in this website for the month of July and promise to try to do
better next month. But see how I hedge my bets.)

521
Here they are
again, the Goose Family Ketchum. Nothing shy about them, they go just
about wherever they please. I remember when geese used to be an oddity.
Then, in Seattle anyway, they became a plague, a plague of geese. The
strong family connection and bonding caused rapid proliferation. And we
have our share. But I rather like them--their strong family ties, their
bonding, and their boldness.
Try to back
them down and you'll probably fail. And my two large Labs can only chase
them a few yards into the lake, where they resume their rule.

520
Okay, so there
is another remarkable rose, one blooming right a long side the featured
one. and the color is special to me, for it repeats after many decades the
chrysanthemum I bought my wife when she had given birth to our son, some
forty-five years ago.
To find a rose
with the same salmon colors is, well, a lucky find. Of course there have
been others, over the years, but most of them bloomed their little hearts
out and, alas, died.
Last year this
rose was nearly eaten up by aphids. None of the blooms was worth
photographing, unless it was as an illustration of what not to let happen.
But this year is a blessed one, from the stand point of rose-growing.
And I'd like
to share it with my website readers. The photo is a thumbnail, which means
if you click on it it will download to your image browser and then to your
color printer. Most people have them now and they get cheaper by the year.
So Happy
Fourth to you from Life at the Lake.
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