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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Aug 2009
    Location
    White Bear Lake MN
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    1,054

    Default Forgotten Al Campbell Article

    Going through the LadyFisher articles down in the archives (I like referring to the place as the catacombs), when I found a article by Al Campbell that was first run, on February 2nd 1998. I had forgotten all about this article of Al's. I am not sure, but I think that this was the first of many articles to come from Al Campbell. ~Parnelli

    Maybe it's Memories That Make You a Bum
    By Al Campbell


    "If you don't quit fishing and hunting so much, and get busy with your school work, you're going to grow up to be a bum. That's right, a bum, and all because you're too busy fishing and hunting to concentrate on your school work. Mark my words young man, this love affair you have with the outdoors will bring you to ruin." That's a prediction a teacher of mine made when I was in high school. I don't think she was very fond of my constant desire to spend time outdoors instead of doing my homework. You know, she might have been right.

    As I pick up an old rifle for some periodic cleaning, my fingers run over a deep gouge in the wood stock. An elk antler caused that one. I was helping Bob retrieve his first elk when I slipped and damaged my rifle stock. I looked like a bum that day. Unshaven and dirty from physical exertion, I wasn't a fit sight for civilized company. It's a fond memory I'll treasure until the day I die.

    That scratch on the barrel and the little dent in the scope happened while I was hunting with Kevin. One misplaced footstep, and I slid over a little cliff. I was bruised and my rifle was scarred, but none of the damage was severe enough to worry about. I wasn't working that day, but I don't regret it.

    My rifle doesn't need cleaning. I need to clean it. I need to spend some time with the many memories of the past that live in its scarred barrel and stock. I need to clean all my rifles and re-live the moments that the scratches, scrapes and gouges represent. I could never get rid of any of them. That would be like burying an old friend.

    I pick up an old fly rod. It's not the best casting fly rod I own, but one I handle more than the rest. The top half is newer than the bottom, a casualty of a bass fishing trip with Tom. I should have used a heavier fly rod designed for bass fishing. I have one, but this one is an old friend, full of memories.

    That nick in the handle happened when I slipped on a rock during a three day camping and fishing trip with Gary. We caught a lot of fish, had a lot of fun, and didn't shave for three days. I'd say we looked like bums, but I don't talk that way about friends who have passed on to better fishing streams.

    My backpack has a dent in it's frame, the result of a snow laden tree that couldn't handle the weight. Tom and I laughed 'til we had tears in our eyes, over that and several other misfortunes we shared during that trip to Bear Lake. Yup, I took time off from work for that one too.

    There's a piece of wood under the rear tire of my pickup. I use it to keep my pickup from rolling down the driveway. To anyone else, it looks like a piece of weather worn fire wood. As I run my fingers over its sun bleached skin, I can feel the tooth marks of a gray muzzled black lab that used to play fetch with me. Midnight discovered that stick on the shores of Sheridan Lake, and we played fetch until I was afraid she would have a heart attack. Many hours of my life were spent playing games with that old dog ? not working, not caring about anything else but the pleasures at hand.

    It's funny how an old stick can revive the spirit of times past and memories of an old canine friend. She's resting on a hill north of town now. She earned her rest. After providing many years of companionship and play while she lived, her spirit still exists in my memory ... and in an old stick.

    I guess my teacher was right. I'm a bum; sometimes for a day, sometimes for only an hour or two. Oh, I spend plenty of hours working, but the times I treasure most are the times I spend doing the things that prompted her prediction.

    As I put the stick back under the tire, I have to pause a moment to wipe the mist of old memories from my eyes. Buford, my basset friend, nudges me for a bit of attention. It's a familiar nudge, much like the ones Midnight used to give me when she wanted to play. When I look up, I can see a window sill that needs repair. It'll have to wait, I have more important things to do today.

    "Hey, Buford, where's your ball?" ~ Al Campbell
    "Everyone you meet in life, give you happiness! Some by their arrival, others by their departure!" ~Parnelli

  2. #2

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    How many of us have done the same thing, going over the scares of gently used equipment.

    The honest, happy smile I get when a vivid memory flashes of a loved one lost to time floods back when you look at a piece of equipment that they used and feel were they have touched and worn it down by their use.

    Good times.
    Thanks Old Man GO IRISH!

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Location
    Liberty Lake, Washington
    Posts
    3,566

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    Thanks Parnelli,
    I sometimes pause to look at the SHWAPF that Al gave me. He showed me how to tie it at the Idaho Fish-In. It always brings back pleasant memories of our time together.
    Where you go is less important than how you take the steps.
    Fish with a Friend,
    Lotech Joe


  4. #4
    Join Date
    Jun 2001
    Location
    Pocatello,id,usa
    Posts
    108

    Default

    Parnelli,
    Thanks for the thread, I remember reading this when I first found this site. I guess I am a bum too.
    Jon

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Feb 2009
    Location
    Northfield, Vermont
    Posts
    741

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    Steven

    Thanks that's one I had not read before, I've been trying to catch up on everything lately

  6. #6

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    Thanks a bunch, Steven. Those things do mount up over the years.

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