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The Catskill region is a lonely place. Maybe it wasn't in
its borscht belt heyday when young Jewish New Yorkers spent
their summers in the big hotels with the hope of meeting a
future husband or wife. And many did. The stories are legion.
But when I first came to know the area intimately, in 1985,
it was a lonely place and it still is. Beyond the hotels people
live rural and solitary lives. Our Blue Hill was "settled"
by our closest neighbors and they lived a mile away. George
Ratner and his wife Millicent moved up to "the hill"
from New York City during the depression, cleared forty acres
and built their own house. In winter they skied to the store
for groceries.
Francine and I came to the Catskills from rural New Hampshire,
the domain of gritty, independent Yankees who have a strong
identity and connection to the land. In the Catskills the
people are from everywhere and nowhere. In many cases they
got there by backing up into a place of refuge. Somehow the
area afforded them anonymity, privacy, and, if they were fly
fishermen, some of the greatest trout water in the world.
That fact had a lot to do with my being there.
Francine and I arrived on Blue Hill in early April, a that
time in the north country when spring is coming but not any
time soon. We spent the first night in the house with no electricity,
sleeping on the floor of the kitchen. We cleaned out the spring
box up in back and got the water running. Once our house was
operating to some extent I began to think about fishing. I
knew we had some serious fishing neighbors-great fishermen
like Len Wright, John Borden, George Ratner, Emory Pierson,
and Catskill Bill Kelly. I heard tell about "Kelly"-
that he knew everything about the Catskill Rivers and how
to fish them. He had a reputation as an authority on these
topics and, as a retired fish biologist for the State of New
York, he had credibility. But there were other words I heard
in association with his name- "eccentric," "difficult,"
"private," "unusual," and remarks which
referred to "his drinking". I headed down to the
foot of our hill, to the small ranch house on the Neversink
River where Catskill Bill lived.
Even fishermen who aren't otherwise eccentric
are eccentric about fishing. They protect their fishing territories-
the secret knowledge, the fly patterns, the techniques, the
lore. It can be hard to learn these things. And Kelly, for
whom fishing was almost everything, was pretty damned eccentric
anyway, even without the fishing. That first time I went to
his house and met him I think he was hiding. This guy had
lived alone for a long time. His front door was through the
garage, past his blue ford pickup with the fenders falling
off. There was a nasty aluminum storm door with no glass in
front of a grimy wood door that seemed to be lacquered in
bacon grease with some hamburger thrown in. I knocked. No
answer. Remember, this is a small house and in the country
you know-if you have any hearing at all- when somebody drives
up. So I was already a little nervous. People get shot in
the country occasionally. Forging ahead and knowing that he
was in there somewhere, I poked my head in and called-"
Mr. Kelly"? "Yes," I heard from somewhere inside.
Then he appeared, a very big man with three days growth on
his face and furrow like a crater between his bloodshot eyes.
I told him who I was in my most charming and friendly way,
that I was interested in fly-fishing, and that I had done
a lot of fly-fishing for bass in New Hampshire. "Yea,
I heard", he said. He talked a little bit-very circumspectly
about nothing mostly but with a little fishing coming into
the picture. I think he showed me his fly-tying vise and a
few wet flies he had tied but when I asked about the rivers
and the fishing in any specific way his bushy black eyebrows
dove into that crater between his eyes and those bloodshot
eyes rolled back into his head. It was a short visit. Somehow
I was invited to come back another time, which I took to mean
'when he was feeling better'.
So, a few days later, with the sun high enough in the sky
to melt the snow, and the water running into the creeks, and
the creeks into the river, I headed down to his house again.
This time he was almost radiant, with a broad smile, which
seemed out of context and a bit scary coming out of that tortured
face. But there was that side of him-"Oh yes Rick, Great!
Yes Art! Wesleyan College, Brown University etc. ect and so
forth. And "You look like a guy who would enjoy a snowshoe
hike along the river, maybe cook a hot dog etc.etc."
Of course I said I was that type of guy and promptly got in
the truck and drove the mile up the hill to get the snowshoes.
Sure enough when I got back Kelly was ready with his snowshoes
and a small pack and off we trudged into the woods behind
his house along the Neversink, some of the cleanest, prettiest
water you can see.
In New Hampshire I was used to going into
the woods deer hunting before it got light and coming back
after dark with nothing to sustain me but a candy bar and
some Red Man chewing tobacco. And I gave up the Red Man. And
snowshoes, well, Francine and I have been out on them for
hours at 20 below zero until I, being weaker, got hypothermia.
And so, on this early spring day I was a little perplexed
when, after about a hundred yards and with my fearless leader
visibly out of breath, we sort of pitched camp. In this case
we sat on a log while Kelly caught his breath and began the
culinary preparations. From his pack he took out some newspaper,
some lighter fluid and a bunch of sticks. He proceeded to
get a little fire going. Out of his pocket he took a couple
of hot dogs, put them on a stick, and cooked them, I think
for about 30 seconds. Yum! And when I say he took them out
of his pocket I mean he took them out of his pocket. Kelly
was the type of kid, as I was, who often had frogs and pollywog
tails and things of that nature in his pocket. And I would
bet that if you dug deep enough in that pocket from whence
appeared the hot dogs you would still find some of those things
or their remains.
You know they say that a kid never forgets anything you do
for him with caring, with sincerity. And even though I was
40 and Bill was 55, I was still in a lot of ways like a kid
wishing his father would do something with him and that it
would be fun or pleasant. And so I remember all this and lots
more.
Kelly and I became great friends and fishing buddies. He got
himself in better shape. He told me his secrets and we could
joke together. I could disarm him and what a pleasure that
was because his armaments were formidable and many people
who hoped to know him never could which was a loss all around.
I called him "Catskill" which made him shake his
head and laugh. Nobody else called him that. Believe me he
could be scary but never for long with me. "What do you
think about that, Catskill "? I would say. How I enjoyed
that. Kelly had other friends like Len Wright- ("Harvard,
of course") who was a famous fishing author and lived
back in the woods "next door". They got together
often for a few "soda pops". Friends, we're talking
serious booze. If Len Wright is still alive it's because alcohol
preserves. And there was Emory Pierson whom Catskill called
Emory Fearsome. Fearsome was even wackier than Kelly and,
for me, even harder to know.
Kelly loved fishing and tying flies, and
particularly fishing the wet fly, which he knew how to do
better than anyone. He loved music and art, especially the
Hudson River School painters. He had a work of that period
on his wall. Later he raised angelfish and made money at it
and he made money with his bottles, antique bottles. He knew
all about them. But he was a loner and uncomfortable with
most people. Booze helped him relate and get over whatever
shyness or insecurity plagued him. But the black moods would
follow and so there was a constant roller coaster of emotions
going on and one never knew what to expect. That probably
explains his kids being half estranged. His wife of many years,
the mother of their children, died after a long battle with
cancer, a long painful dying. Bill suffered and drank and
got thrown out of most of the bars in the area and, I think,
got retired out his job early and wound up in this little
lonely house by the river. When his wife died everything fell
apart. Then life happened again and he met or reconnected
with a woman who had been a friend of his wife. They were
very much in love and about to buy a house together when she
was diagnosed with cancer. They had to decide not to go ahead
with the house buying and instead minister to her dying. It
took me a long time to find out about these things.
Catskill and I fished the rivers. We fished for the salmon
he introduced into the Neversink River at the mouth of the
river where it flows into the reservoir. Only a few people
had access there. And for several years, until it became clear
that the salmon were waning and that his project was a flop-
for several beautiful years- we had wonderful fishing in a
place 100 miles from New York City that was as pristine and
wild and beautiful as anywhere in the world. And it still
is. And I caught my first shad on a fly with Catskill Bill.
He pioneered the techniques of fishing for shad with flies.
He could look at the Delaware River and tell if there were
shad there. I would see nothing. Now I can but it took a long
time and I learned it from him. He love to fish for shad.
And he was a great trout fisherman. When, reluctantly, he
would tie on a dry fly, he knew how to use it. At a bend in
the river he hooked a big brown trout on an 18 Adams that
looked like it was going to run all the way to Delaware Bay.
He landed it. I ran to the truck for the measuring board-22inches!
And then he released it.
We got involved in fishing the inlet of one of the reservoirs,
a place reputed to have very big brown trout. We tried lots
of different things. Kelly would learn and go home and tie
things up. We caught fish and he kept at it and finally landed
the biggest fish ever caught in the Catskills on a fly- over
fifteen pounds. There was a picture in all the papers. He
also caught a 5-pound brook trout in back of his house which
probably is the biggest brook trout caught in Catskills in
a long, long time.
One of the great times we experienced together was fishing
the Restigouche River, which forms the border of Quebec and
New Brunswick. It's one of the great Atlantic salmon rivers
and mostly private. At that time I was a fly-fishing instructor
with the Joan and Lee Wulff Fly Fishing School on the Beaverkill
River. Lee offered a three-day school on Atlantic salmon once
a year. This is something Lee knew more about than anyone
in the world. A wealthy man with an interest in salmon rented
the whole school for his family and friends. This man had
recently bought one of the prime fishing lodges on the Restigouche
on one of the best pools. And I was invited to spend a few
days there at the end of the season and bring a couple of
friends. The only one who would go- and I was sure he would-
was Catskill Bill.
Catskill Bill approached this trip in the
way a devout Muslim might consider his hajj-the once-in-a-lifetime
trip to Mecca. It was the end of the season- late August-
and a chill was in the air. As we drove north the trees were
showing signs of the season to come. Bill was edgy on account
of the unknown, of being stuck with me- a teetotaler, and
of the pressure this opportunity put on his skill, knowledge,
and reputation. It was very important for him to do well in
a situation like this because people would hear about it.
And if we had access to one of the best salmon pools in the
world for three days and didn't catch any fish, well, the
consequences of this possibility to his psyche were profound.
So he was sober, serious, prickly, and uncommunicative-the
kinds of qualities one hopes not to find in one's traveling
companion. But as the long drive north wove itself through
the ever-simpler towns of greater beauty and peace he started
to unwind and talk about the flies he had tied for this trip
and his hopes for them.
Salmon don't feed much on their spawning run if at all; they
have to be coaxed into striking. It can be a very difficult
enterprise with great fishermen fishing great water week after
week without result. Kelly had experienced this himself up
on the Merimishee. For me this was the first time salmon fishing
and I was just glad for the opportunity. And knowing how fishing
is anyway, I had no clear expectations. But all this weighed
on his mind but the rhythm of the road helped and we began
to just enjoy the hills and fields and forests of the rural
north and the palpable sense of less pressure as we moved
farther and farther from New York where competition is king.
After a night on the road we arrived at the lodge later the
next day and were greeted by a staff of seven who were there
to attend to us for our time and then close the place up for
the winter. We entered a classic old lodge set above the famous
river, a magnificent place dedicated to fishing for salmon
in the great pool below. We got settled in our rooms, had
a great dinner in the large den with moose heads all around,
talked with excitement about the water and the setting, and
got to bed early. We were out in separate boats the next day
with our guides. The water was very low and the guides, who
were greatly experienced, fished the way they always fish
but in this low water it wasn't working. We could see the
fish but being in a boat we were above them and they could
see us too. I think we got a couple of reluctant strikes but
no fish on and yet we knew they were there. We only had a
few precious days. That night at dinner we focused on the
situation with a lot of intensity and decided that because
of the low water this was more like trout water and we were
going to fish it that way.
Next day we had a plan and told the guides
to drop us off at different sand bars and let us fish from
there, wading the edges of the pools. They were skeptical,
insulted, and a little shocked since no one had ever thought
to do this. It worked. We started catching fish on wet flies.
And I started using big attractor dry flies with success.
We waded the edges of the fast water and made our presentations
from up close in the way we fished for trout in the Catskill
Rivers and we caught fish after fish to the point of fatigue.
It was thrilling and the guides were impressed. Late that
night Kelly's light was on as he tied fly after fly in anticipation
of the next day. Those next two days after we figured out
how to fish the water were golden. It felt like solving the
clues and puzzles of a map leading to treasure. We entered
all our statistics into the large journal kept in the lodge.
We were almost too successful. We weren't invited back. Later,
I asked Lee Wulff if he thought we would be able to go back
and he said, "That was a once in a lifetime thing."
About six years later I moved away to the Pacific Northwest,
and now I am teaching in Bangladesh and on my way back to
the great American northeast in a year or so. When I was living
out west I came back for a visit to see my dying sister and
I visited the place on Blue Hill and stopped at Kelly's. The
broken storm door was still there and the wooden door had
a few more layers of bacon grease on it. And again, no sign
of life. I stuck my head in and yelled, "Worms for sale
here?" A resounding "Yes"! And there he was,
trimmed down but otherwise looking the same. And I gave him
a big hug and we laughed and enjoyed a too-short time together
again. Not long afterwards I heard he had lung cancer and
I wrote to him and not long after that he was dead. There
was a picture of him in the paper- a picture of him when he
was about 12 years old with his bicycle, looking rugged and
handsome and shining the million-dollar smile of a kid who
loves life, who loves the woods, and loves to fish.
RW Dhaka, Bangladesh
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