A MOTHER'S
PROMISE
by Joyce Abrahamson
I looked into your newborn face
And made to you this vow,
To never hurt the
innocence
That I see in there now.
To always nourish mind and soul,
To keep safe and
secure,
This precious life placed in my
care
Whose love I will ensure.
**
When you've outgrown your toddler
days
And leave your nest for school,
I promise I'll have taught you well
About the
Golden Rule.
The values that you learn at
home
I hope will carry through,
For as you do to human-kind
Will thus come back to
you.
**
I promise you when teen-time comes
I'll be there by your side,
Not to thwart your
hopes and dreams
But hope only to guide,
To make correct decisions,
To help you as you
grow
And gain your independence.
You'll do it well, I know.
**
When it is time to choose a spouse,
The one love of your life,
I promise not to
interfere,
Or create between you strife.
For you'll have made a sacred vow,
Each one to the
other.
I promise you I'll never be
A criticizing Mother.
**
When you have children of your own
I know they'll be well taught;
The lessons I
instilled in you
Will not have been for
naught.
But when I hold my first
grandchild,
Old rules will be forgotten,
About this I now promise you,
That I will spoil
him rotten.
***

(Jerry and his halibut: he looks exhausted, as he should be
after reeling in a 33-pound, 36-inch fish that was lurking 550 to 600 feet below
the surface of the ocean! RWM)
FISHING: A GLASS HALF FULL
by G.C. Sparks
(Following is an Email from my brother, which I'm sharing with you. We,
landlocked in New Mexico and with attention focused on our dire needs for water,
should find this experience from a novice deep-sea fisherman intriguing. The
initial fishing expedition herein described occurred off the Oregon coast not
too far from where the writer and his wife, Betty, both professional people now
retired, live in a two-story house near the ocean. It seems to me a good title
would be Fishing For the Halibut. RWM)
Last Friday, I got up at 3:15 to go halibut fishing, a type of angling that
normally attracts only serious fishermen and a new experience for me, a serious
landlubber. There, I joined a line of good ole boys waiting outdoors in the dark
to check in, some sipping vodka and wearing much-stained heavy-duty wet weather
gear, the kind with bibs and suspenders to which they'd added tiny scissors and
pliers on retractable lines for easy tackle repair. My new colleagues don't
spend a lot of money in barbershops or on razors.
Tradewinds, the charter company, deployed eight boats that morning, the first
of a four-day sport halibut season. "My" boat, the Sunrise, was the first
Tradewinds boat out of Depoe Bay, and then we and other boats raced 2 1/2 hours
to an area called Chicken Ranch, where halibut like to hang out some 500 to 600
feet down. When we arrived, Chicken Ranch -- halibut is the real chicken of the
sea -- was already full of small boats, some as small as 20 feet. There also was
a Coast Guard cutter and, periodically, a chopper overhead. The
News-Times reported that 250 privates, together with an unknown number of
charter boats, deployed out of Newport for Chicken Ranch Friday; I never saw a
number for Depoe Bay to the north, but the massing of small boats at Chicken
Ranch must have looked something like the rescue operation off Dunquerque in
WWII. (Depoe Bay owes its strange spelling to a local Indian who thought a
French-sounding name would make him elegant.)
Reportedly, the Coast Guard is furious at the number of too-small private
boats operating that far out, and punishes with heavy fines anyone unlucky
enough to need help. Every year, including this one, a "private" goes down, but
there are so many other boats around that usually no one drowns.
The day was sunny and began calm, but turned windy, creating white caps and
causing our beamy, 34-foot boat to wallow constantly from port to stern so that
one moment you're looking up at the sky and the next down into the ocean -- kind
of like working in Navy Branch. While waiting and drawing the harbor scene,
Betty said that she saw one small boat towed back (at a cost of $1,000) and
talked to another private boat owner who returned exhausted from fighting a
headwind and strong current in his small, underpowered, boat. Irresponsible
fishermen reputedly kept the Coast Guard even busier on Saturday.
Everyone on our boat (14 guys) "caught" a halibut, including the father and
son who never left their cabin. The father, an obese old guy (and, with me, one
of three seniors on board), couldn't stand upright on the rolling boat; his son
was seasick the entire trip. The limit is one each.
I caught the seventh fish at 10 a.m., after which I had little to do until we
returned hours later to port. Fortunately, mine (36 inches long, 33 pounds) was
one of the smaller ones. We used three-pound weights to get down to where the
halibut lie on the bottom. The weight, together with the depth, and a strong
current meant that reeling in -- even without a big fish on the line -- is a lot
of work. The heavy tackle and weight also also initially made it hard to get the
feel of the fish. Despite the heavy gear, lots of fish broke free. At our second
spot, I got a strike of enormous power that instantly snapped my line. I was
lucky compared to another chap who lost three after fighting them almost all of
the way up -- his arms must have felt like rubber bands. The largest fish were
caught at the end -- three of them ran over 60 pounds -- and they must have felt
like hauling in a barn door from the deep. One had almost straightened out the
heavy steel triple-barbed hooks when it was finally brought aboard.
On Sunday, we went to Gold Beach and Brookings on the South Coast. In
Brookings, we went to the Azalea Garden and admired huge wild azaleas, some
bushes 20 feet tall by 20 feet across. The next day, we took a Mailboat Hydro
Jet to the town of Agness 32 miles up the scenic Rogue River. On Tuesday, we
fished without success for salmon on the Rogue. (Although chinook can run over
40 pounds, salmon tackle looked comparatively dainty.) Even when salmon are
plentiful, I've found them tough to catch after they enter the rivers because
they cease feeding. I've caught one (on the Umpqua in the '60s) but otherwise
consistently failed in fishing for salmon in rivers, whereas Betty and I both
easily used to catch them at sea. Now, she gets seasick, probably results of
meds she takes, and our area, once a magnet for silvers (or coho), isn't as good
as the South Coast where chinook are still plentiful. If caught, wild silvers,
classified as endangered, have to be released. Betty likes to fish, though, so
we'll probably give the Rogue another shot. It is the best river in Oregon for
chinook, and if you hook one -- and keep it -- you really have something. We
also might explore renting a boat locally when the fall run begins. (It's
cheaper and a lot less trouble than buying a boat.)
Bottom line, based on my "vast" experience: catching bottom fish is easiest;
halibut are a lot of work; and salmon, if you can catch them, are the most fun.
Halibut and salmon, freshly caught, are delicious. I might go halibut fishing
again, but if I do, I've gotta get in shape first.