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Better than Bob Izumi PHOTO: RICK MATTHEWS


IT’S A FAMILIAR SCENE: a tranquil summer eve- ning, setting sun, calm water, several anglers idly casting from shore. The rhythmic lapping of water against the rocks is punctuated by a loud smack as someone slaps a mosquito. Whether success comes through skill, patience


or just plain luck, the thrill of a memorable catch is what fishing is all about. Sadly, neither skill nor luck were present that evening on Kettle’s Lake. At dusk, the lids on the tackle boxes slammed shut, canoes pointed back to the landing and the familiar explanation “They’re just not bitin’ tonight” was muttered around the lake. My husband and son were among the de- feated. After thoroughly fishing a weedy area that should have yielded results, they could only pon- der their strategic shortcomings. So you can imagine the sheer horror when my four-year-old daughter landed an 18-inch large- mouth bass on her Snoopy rod, reeling it in from shore, right under the nose of her father and brother. She landed it, petted it, named it Freddy, and then released it amid the astounded stares of jealous anglers.


It’s not supposed to be this way. With their record of success, kids should be writ-


ing for the glossy fishing magazines. I can imagine engaging articles filling the following sections:


BAIT AND EQUIPMENT • Pantry Bait— Reel them in with Marshmallows and Wieners


• 101 Things You Can Do with a Fishing Net (Oth- er Than Catch Fish)


TIPS AND TECHNIQUES • Back in the Box: How To Snorkel for Snagged Lures


• Tree Climbing 101: Ten Tree-Top Tips for Retriev- ing Lures


• Whose Line is it Anyway? Untangling Messes of Not-so-Monofilaments


• Getting Mom to Hook your Worm


EXCLUSIVE FEATURES • Landing Monster Sunfish! • The Season’s Most Popular Names for Live-Re- lease Catches


I suppose such magazine articles wouldn’t be seri- ous enough for the average angler. After all, fishing


You can imagine the horror when my four-year-old daughter landed an 18-inch bass on her Snoopy rod


Camping and fishing are synonymous to my kids. Our camping trips are orchestrated to provide the best fishing opportunities possible. We arm ourselves with stacks of fishing maga-


zines, towers of videos, spires of reference books and an intimidating arsenal of lures. But the kids break all the rules. They ignore the professional advice from the fishing gurus on television and make do without the latest gadgets from the fish- ing shows; and they still catch fish. Last summer, my friend’s daughter caught a bass using a dan- delion as bait.


is serious business. Too serious, if you ask me. I’ve never seen a kid come back in a bad mood after fishing with a marshmallow as bait, getting a soak- er, or climbing a tree to retrieve a snagged lure. Kids are great anglers because they’ll take fun


over conventional wisdom any day. And when you have a tackle box, a bag of marshmallows and a few friends, who needs skill or luck?


LYNN ILES loves fishing, she just doesn’t like to fish. She is a fishing facilitator who books the camping trips, docu- ments the catches and listens to the stories when “They’re just not bitin’.”


Toss your line in these parks: KEJIMKUJIK


NATIONAL PARK NOVA SCOTIA www.pc.gc.ca/pn-np/ ns/kejimkujik In the spring the brook trout are active in lakes and streams. When the water is warm the white perch lurk in the shallows.


KILLBEAR PROVINCIAL


PARK ONTARIO


www.ontarioparks. com/english/killb.html The clear Georgian Bay waters are home to walleye, whitefish, perch, pike and bass. A nearby lake trout sanctuary is shelter to a resurgent population.


VOYAGEURS NATIONAL


PARK MINNESOTA


www.nps.gov/voya/ Walleye, pike and smallmouth bass cruise the waters of this park adjoining the Boundary Waters Canoe Area on the Canadian/U.S. border.


YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL


PARK WYOMING


www.nps.gov/yell/ Trout rule in the 1,200 kilometres of rivers and 175 lakes in the oldest park in the U.S.


WATERTON PROVINCIAL


PARK ALBERTA


www.watertoninfo. ab.ca


Numerous rainbow, cutthroat, bull and lake trout rub scales with whitefish, pike and sculpin. One lake trout weighed in at 24 kilograms.


FAMILY CAMPING 11


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