Mack loved to fish. He didn't mind fishing for the big ones, but he really loved fishing for the scrappy little ones. The bream at Club Lake were favorites. Those very small fish could really tug and pull on the line. They are fighters.
As a young kid, going to Club Lake was a huge treat for me. It meant being with my father one on one, sharing his zeal for all things fish, and being out on the water. I can still feel the thrill of walking across the rickety wooden bridge to the boat house; watching Daddy navigate getting from the car and eventually into the boat; the musty smell of the boathouse; the sound of water lapping on the wooden beams; the putt-putt-putt of the little engine coming to life; pulling out from the musty darkness into the fresh light of the lake; wondering about the strangeness of the secretive duck blinds. I was full of anticipation of hours with my dad at his happiest- on the water; watching birds; using his inner knowing, years of experience and curiosity to ferret out the best fishing spots; preparing the fishing rods by tying knots in the thin fishing line to attach weights or lures with his beautiful hands and finely coordinated motions; teaching me how to tie his special multiple twisted knot to securely attach a lure. Losing a fish because of a poorly tied knot didn't happen with a Mack knot. I loved to watch him prepare the lines. He was so attentive to detail, light in his manner, and happy at heart. A man in his element. A daughter with her dad. All was right in the world while on Club Lake.
One of us, I don't remember who, did snag the basket and the fish were recovered! We were so excited and I know he was satisfied that his scheme worked!
Club Lake Part 2: Bream Fishing on the Dam
According to Mack, its time to fish for bream when the buds on the a pecan trees are the length of your thumb nail.
Often, we would fish for bream from the bank at Club Lake. We would drive past the boat houses and park below the steep embankment of the dam. The rods, tackle box, and worms would be carried up the hill by the kids, then Daddy would will his way up that embankment, throwing his left leg out with each step, lurching one step closer to the top. We would set up on the grass or on a wooden pier close by. He set us up with bamboo poles; no reel; just a line tied on the end of the pole, a bobber attached to the line and adjusted the right depth, a hook tied on with the super-duper Mack knot, a worm squeamishly threaded on usually with his help, and we were ready to go.
The water was a few feet deep at the pier, quite a bit deeper closer to the dam. Knowing/hoping that there were multiple bream nests, on the bottom, Daddy would use his bream-sense to know where to throw his line. We would follow his lead. On good days, we would catch bream hand-over-fist. Red ears. Blue gills. The deeper in color and heftier in depth and girth, the better. Size DID matter with bream!
He measured by holding a fish on his palm and eyeing how far down his wrist it extended. With the nose at his fingertips, a good bream's tail would lay a few inches onto the inner arm beyond the wrist.
He would clean the bream at Club Lake; just gutting them and removing their head. He and mother would cook a bream feast those evenings. Bream, breaded in cornmeal, fried outside. Served with hush puppies. We would eat the meat along the upper back. Those little fish were too small to fillet, so we just munched along the "bream tenderloin". Very tasty. Great gustatory memories.
In the later years of my father's life, my brother, Drew, caught a good sized bream. Knowing how much Daddy admired the feisty little fish, and that he could no longer manage getting into the boat or onto the dam at Club Lake, Drew had that bream mounted. Daddy put it right beside the chair in which he spent most of his days. Turns out that it was a blue gill, but the taxidermist painted it as a red ear. He didn't care. He got to spend his days accompanied by what I believe was his favorite fish: the spunky little bream.
I swim most days in the clear, natural, unchlorinated waters of Barton Springs pool. There are vast numbers of bream in those waters. I watch those pint sized fish protect their nests, chase away bass, and aggressively pursue me if I get too close. As I swim with the bream of Barton Springs, I feel my father's presence. I don't know what happens after death, but I do hope that he is swimming along with me as I point out all the activity below the surface: Carp, catfish, eel, craw daddies, cormorants fishing, ducks bobbing, water flowing from the aquifer creating a current which makes the tall weeds undulate, and the ever present feisty little bream.
Wonderful memories Jan, always nice to hear fishing stories of Mack. I have no doubt that he is not swimming with you enjoying every bit of the underwater activity!
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