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A good
friend recently told me that river rambling is a worthy pursuit.
It was a validation of my last 20 years. Not that I needed validation,
but somehow it helped qualify my desire, twenty years into the love
affair. Perfect. Clear. Concise. Passionate endeavors can be misconstrued.
I love my work. Is that bad or good? Most would say that is awesome.
I can speak from experience when I say that it can be a negative
factor on a marriage when the other half is not as passionate about
mother earth's waterways. It is what it is.
Watersheds
are so dynamic, powerful and fragile in the same sentence. The entire
earth depends on water; Flora, fauna, drinking water, spawning beds,
rainforests, shrub steppe, transportation, photosynthesis. It might
be a bit overwhelming to list all factors that watersheds affect
especially when sometimes all I want to do is double spey a fly
out into a broad riffle/run. How selfish is that?
Tailwaters
are wonderful fisheries, but deep in my heart the freestone river
is incredibly special. An unencumbered watershed is more romantic.
Simply navigating the river is inspirational. Now let's cast a fly
into likely waters, surmise the insects of the day and release a
wild and possibly indigenous fish back into the flow. How cool is
that?
Cool
stuff at times doesn't come easy and is not without a price. It
is easy to point fingers and accuse everyone else be it the big
companies, special user groups, small companies, and the like for
the decline in habitat our waterways face. With all that said, the
problem we face requires a joint effort from all user groups and
we cannot continue to point fingers. We all have to cast our fly
where it counts! - jack
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