Yep, we moved again. Not too far, just to Groton, Connecticut, a mere hop from Rhode Island.
When I think about our time in Groton I remember so many things that I consider pretty damned phenomenal and important to how we grew up into the nutcases that we are... I'm not going to do this chronologically this time. Connecticut gets to be random like that. It's how they roll. Deal.
Let's start with the fishing.
Dad would take us fishing on the weekends to the local lakes and stuff. We caught tasty fishies like bluegills and I caught a catfish once only I didn't know it cause it felt like I was just dredging up some tree branch from the depths. No fight at all. I was a huge fan of fishing (and still am even though I haven't been in a long time) and I will always thank my dad for introducing the sport to me. Holy crap... I just realized that I *do* participate in a sport... wow!
Dad bought us real fishing poles, not those cheezie ones they sell for little kids now. I learned to fish using a real spinning reel and by the time I was in 2nd grade I could tie most of the standard fishing knots. I loved fishing. My brother didn't like fish. He also didn't like fishing that much, probably because it usually resulted in us having to eat fish. I don't recall him ever really putting in effort to catch fish... except that one time.
We used to go on 'Sunday drives' and one day we crossed over a bridge where a lot of people were running around with buckets. Naturally we stopped to see what was going on. The alewives were running. Ok... what? Alewives!!! We started to get excited... I mean it sounded like we should be getting excited. People are running around with buckets!!! How could you not get excited!??
Alewives are smallish fish, related to herring and apparently, they swim up rivers. When they do this they are running...even though technically, they are swimming because, well... no legs. Can't run. Anyhow, we all got out of the car and went down to the riverbank and sure enough, it was full of fish and people were just scooping them up and putting them into their buckets. My brother leaned over the water and grabbed one and we realized something. We. Have. No. Bucket.
Luckily, my mom is always prepared for just such an emergency. She had plastic garbage bags, and a good thing too because by the time she whipped one out of the car, Don had already caught three more. By hand. He was having a great time catching fish without benefit of a fishing pole. I caught a few and then just stopped and watched. This was not fun to me, but watching Don was. He was excited and catching lots of them. I'm not sure what we did with all those fish, I'm sure mom cooked them but I don't remember ever eating them. That was one of the best Sunday drives ever.
Once it was decided that the family interest in fishing wasn't just a fad, my dad bought a little boat so we could fish from the middle of the lakes instead of the edges. Now, we need to remember that when my parents buy things they don't scrimp. They get something worthy and this boat was no exception. It was a little 13 foot Boston Whaler. If you've never heard of Boston Whalers, no. They are not for catching whales, they are a manufacturer originating in New England that make these spiffy little boats that are unsinkable. If the Titanic had been made by Boston Whaler we would not have had to suffer that horrendously long movie and the annoying Celine Dion song that plagued the world for so long...
Now that we had this boat, we could go fishing in the ocean... a whole different arena of fishing that had tastier, bigger fish. We would get up early, mom would pack up a bunch of food for us and we'd head out into the sound. We'd spend the entire day out there catching flounder mostly. Around lunch time, dad would run the boat up on some sandbar island and we would get out, play in the sand and eat lunch until it was time to head back out for more fishing. When we got home we'd lay all the flounder out on the lawn, usually white side up because it was usually getting dark outside and you couldn't see them right-side up, and take a picture. Then the parents got busy cleaning them and wrapping them up for the freezer. Us kids would pretty much pass out from exhaustion... Is it possible that this 'fishing' was actually a plot to get us to bed early on weekends?
Sometimes mom and dad would go out fishing without us for mackerel. Mom helped make a jig, which was basically one fishing line with five or six hooks that branched off of it. She put little tassels made of colorful yarn on the hooks for bait (which worked alarmingly well by the way) and they would bring home dozens of mackerel. Other times dad would go out with his buddies and fish for stripers. Any time fishing happened, the mandatory yard photo happened. We had so many pictures of dead fish laying in the front yard....
Next time - Don and his magic fishing worm...