Where to start.
As was mentioned in a earlier post my life has been wrapped around my obsession with fishing as long as I can remember.
I believe it started at my grandma's property on Race lagoon on the east shore of Whidbey Island south of Coupeville. My grandparents built a cabin there in the 1930s or 40s.
My Grandma was born in 1908 and was raised on her Grandpa Henry Race's farm above Race lagoon.
As a kid we lived in in Ferndale and spent a lot of time at the cabin during the summer. I was allowed to bring a friend along whenever we went there.
We'd build rafts Tom Sawyer style and pole around the lagoon fishing for starry flounder and sculpins (bull heads back then) using bacon or weiners for bait.
The lagoon runs out into Saratoga Passage and we'd ride the raft out of the lagoon on the ebb tide and fish out in the bay. The water was clear, we'd peer through the gaps in the log raft and watch the fish take our baits. My first experience with sight fishing now that I think about it.
Salmon swam in the passage a lot of the year. Grandma always had a boat and small outboard available.
She would take my brother who was 4.5 years older out mooching for blackmouth and silvers. I was so jealous but I was too young to go.
I'm convinced this was the basis of my obsession with fishing. I vowed at age 6 or 7 to catch more and bigger than my brother.
My brother and I were on our own mostly as we were raised by a single mom who worked a lot. Free range kids so to speak.
At home in Ferndale fishing revolved around local ponds, creeks and the Nooksack river. A fishing rod, a can of worms across the bike handle bars and I was good to go. Searun cutthroat were the primary quarry.
I sent away for a Roddy spinning rod and reel from a cereal box and felt like a king when it arrived.
Bro and me were fishing for SRC in Ferndale and he said I'm going to use your rod and he took it and hiked down to Hovander park bar ( pre park days). I stayed put and fished with his pole. Later I went home and here he comes dragging an 18 lb. King Salmon he had caught on my rod with a June bug spinner.
As a teen I watched the tv fishing shows of the day. Jim Conway and Gaddabout Gaddis being the primary ones on the 4 channel black and white tv we had. They fly fished and I remember a particular episode on fly fishing for half pounder steelhead on the Rogue River. Bam..... I want to fly fish!
Off to H&H sporting goods in Bellingham. I met Jerry Wells there and he set me up with a 7wt glass Fenwick, probably a Pflueger reel and fly line, tippet and some Carey Specials for the local stillwaters.
I caught my first trout on a fly at Fazon lake on a red Carey special. It was a long steep learning curve from there I'll tell you. No you tube, no internet, just magazines basically. I knew no other Flyfishers or about flyfishing clubs and rarely saw other Flyfishers.
I'm rambling now, fishing has had a profound effect on my life and really has shaped the person I am today.
Chapter two at a later date.
Thanks
@Scott Salzer for this thread.
Thanks@ Stonedfish and
@Buzzy for
the help, and guidance as I continue to learn this incredible sport we all love so much.