Tuesday, October 15, 2013

The Life of a Pond

I watch the seasons flow over my favorite "home pond."  Locked in ice and snow in January, budding with new life in May, basking in the heat of August, and today in the middle of October decked out in golds and reds, my pond lives through the seasons.

But ponds also die, and my pond is showing signs of age.


Ponds die when they fill in with silt. Many beaver ponds meet this end eventually. Each spring high water washes silt into the pond. In the still water of the pond, the silt settles to the bottom, and  over the years the pond fills in and becomes a meadow with but a small stream winding  through it. A favorite pond on Loop Loop Creek has disappeared like this in the last forty years.

Ponds die when the outlet stream cuts down through the earth that dams the pond and drains it. The pond I visit each year to fish in the spring and fall will one day suffer this fate.

Other ponds, like the pond in the picture, that have no strong stream bringing in silt or outlet stream cutting down through the dam, will still die. This pond is gradually being choked with vegetation. The growth of each new year dies in the winter and falls to the bottom. One day this pond will be a marsh and then a meadow.

So I catch my pond on a beautiful day in October in the autumn of life. Like me, it is enjoying these warm days and brilliant colors of the season. And like me, it waits for what is ahead, unafraid, just waiting.

Monday, February 18, 2013

What a Difference

What a difference a year makes. This pictures was taken very near to the same date as the picture on an earlier blog two years earlier. Does this presage an early spring? I am ready for it.

     I am hoping to get to a new pond this spring, Haven Lake, just above the Skokomish River. Pictures on the web are few, but what I've seen is intriguing.

Monday, February 11, 2013

Ponding

I can't believe it's been two years since I last posted on "Ponds." Looking back I note I did not get to all the ponds on my wish list, but I did visit a few. Caught some fish as well.

     My favorite pond is Stump Lake. Yes, I know it is a "lake." But it is smaller than the somewhat more famous Walden Pond, so I don't apologize.

     I try to get to Stump Lake a couple of times a year. Whether spring or fall, it is a symphony of nature. Bald eagles glide over the lake searching for an unwary fish. Ducks of many varieties, well, duck for a meal along the water edge. Beaver glide silently, often close by my canoe, and then out of some nervous habit slap the water and are gone.

      And, of course, there are fish. Some of them are surprisingly large, for such a small lake, and beautiful. They dimple the mirror like surface on a quiet spring evening and are alone worth the trip, but I leave them where I have found them.


     Fall brings crazy color. Few places in western Washington are as beautiful.

     And the name? The stumps. I don't know if they are the remnants of a drowned forest or the castoffs of a old logging operation. Whichever, they populate the lake and provide habitat for the trout.

     The interesting thing is that there is another pond, "Spider Lake," no more than two dozen miles away as the eagle flies that is another drowned forest.

     But Spider will have to wait. Next to Stump Lake my favorite pond is Prices Lake. The scenery is better than the fishing, but if you can latch onto one of the wild cutthroat that own this lake it is worth the hike.

     It takes a raft or float tube to enjoy the pond, but it is an easy one or two block hike. Go in the summer when the water lilies are in bloom.

     Happy ponding until next time.

Thursday, February 24, 2011

Back to Hibernation

Seriously.  This is February 24. What's this all about?

The ground hog must have seen his shadow.  Anyway, it will all change soon to spring. :)

Saturday, February 5, 2011

Anytime Ponds

Ponds soothe my soul. I like to fish ponds, of course, but it isn't fishing that attracts me to ponds. I think it is the quietness of ponds. And the life.


I pass this pond every morning on my way to work, and every morning is different. Some mornings it is dimpled with rain.  On others it is frozen white. This afternoon it reflects a leaden winter sky broken  only by the rings of foraging ducks.

The same is true of the seasons. In another month my pond will begin to come alive. Birds will call from the pond edge where new reeds will soon provide cover for nesting. New leaves, emerald green in the morning sun, will tip the bare branches of willows. And the lily pads will begin to once again tile the pond edges.

By summer the pond lilies will be in bloom, brightening the pond edges with their yellow bosoms. Cattails will wave in the breeze. And the ducks will be busy with their new broods.


Fall brings a new pallet of colors as the willows that surround the pond turn briefly and brilliantly golden.

Ponds are alive. But they are life in slow motion, slow enough to allow me to pause and contemplate. Rivers are in a hurry; they are wild, pushy, proud. Ponds go nowhere. They invite me to sit and enjoy.They presage eternity where there will be time to enjoy all God's beauty.

Sunday, January 16, 2011

Ponds Past

On a quiet mid-winter afternoon there is nothing more pleasant than to let my mind retrace my steps to some of the ponds of my past. I remember in particular a small pond between Green Lake and Little Green Lake in the Okanogan.

As a young teen it was a place I and my fishing friends went often. The small stream, if you could even call it that, which connected the two lakes could be easily waded, and once across, on the mountain side of the pond rather than the road side, among the reeds and cattails were several small ponds.

I doubt that they were ever fished, except by adventurous boys like me and my friends. And they were never planted with fish. Such fish as there were had found there way in from Green Lake. But because they were unmolested, they grew to respectable size and were relatively easy to catch.

On one summer afternoon Bob S. and I talked my mother into taking us to Green Lake and dropping us off. We waded the tiny stream and began to cast lures into the ponds. Almost from the first cast we were catching fish, nice, colorful 12 inch rainbows. (That's big for boys and ponds.)  Then I cast to the edge of the farside reeds and got a hit from a fish that was obviously larger. After an exciting tussle I landed a bright 16 inch bow.  It was a trophy.

I don't recall now if I returned it to the water or kept it for dinner, probably the latter, as I was not yet into my catch-and-release phase of fishing.

That was the 50s. Thirty years later another friend, Dave D., and I were fishing Meadow Lake in the Cascades in the Santiam Pass area. We had been catching nice, green cutthroat from fallen trees along the shore, and I remembered my pond experience.

There happened to be a similar pond at one end of the lake.  While Dave was busy pulling in the 12 inch cutts, I moseyed up the lake to take a better look at the pond.  It looked good, so I waded out through the shallow reed-filled water to the edge and began casting a fly of some kind toward the deeper water.

Almost instantly I was into a large fish which I landed and released.  It was easily 16 inches. The next cast I had another - a fat brook trout. Not wanting to keep all the fun to myself, I called Dave. He waded out to where I had been casting, and began casting his spoon.

Now, one thing you need to know about Dave is that he is frugal. He loves to fish, but he is not keen on spending money for the finest tackle. On this day he was fishing with a child's Zebco spinning outfit that had served him well. The only downside was that he had gradually cutback the line to the place where it was so  short that when he cast the heavy spoon would fly out to the end of the line with a zing and stop, falling unceremoniously on the water.

This prevented him from reaching distant water but was no problem in this small pool. He cast. On the first or second cast he hooked a brookie equal or larger than the two I had caught. But here is where his frugality proved a fatal flaw.  As the biggest fish of the day raced toward the channel and the lake beyond, Dave reached the end of his line. The rest is history. The fish was gone - along with Dave's only lure.

We both remember that day some twenty years ago.  Dave still fishes with cheap rods and reels, but he went home from that fated trip to buy several of those lucky lures, and I never fish with him now but that he has at least one in reserve.

Saturday, January 15, 2011

In Praise of Ponds

I have been attracted to ponds for a very long time. There was the pond behind my uncle's house in Spokane where my cousins and I built rafts each spring to embark on short excursions on these shallow ephemeral pools. And there was the beaver pond on my grandmother's property north of Spokane where I could occasionally ambush a wild brook trout. Sweet memories.

I have, off and on, pressed my love affair with ponds. But to be honest, I have flirted more aggressively with the rivers and lakes of the Pacific Northwest than ponds, and I have had many pleasant days upon the water and wading the streams. I've caught my share of fish. But I have determined this year to return to my first love - ponds.

My purpose in this blog is to record this year of romancing ponds. Perhaps I shall call it a series of love letter.

To begin I offer a portrait of an unnamed pond not too far from home.