RUN-OFF, A ROAD TRIP AND CARP FISHING

RUN-OFF, A ROAD TRIP AND CARP FISHING

Posted by: Andrew / added: 05.12.2009 / Back to Tailgate

Received this dispatch from Cameron Scott, who works for Taylor Creek Fly Shop in Basalt, CO. He also has an MFA from the University of Arizona, and his work has appeared in a bunch of literary magazines you've never heard of. He's fond of saying, "When I'm not fly fishing, I'm typically fly fishing. When I'm not writing poetry, I'm writing poetry."

 

CARP LANDSCAPE:

 

After a long winter of standing in horizontal snow and breaking ice out of guides, this time of year calls for a blue water or muddy water trip. I'm a fan of the muddy water.  Thanks to Thomas Clennon and the first carp of the season on a dry fly, Highway 17, and rubber legs.

 

Everyman’s Desert

Miles upon miles of irrigation ditches,
trailer hippies and wasted truckers,
gator raisers, and ufo chasers,
leased farms and windowless houses.

We wade through the middle of it all
in search of golden scaled carp:
tough wallower, crawdad crusher, croaker,
warm water trash fish of my heart.

Give us a sign, be it in a ditch or pond,
shallow slough or pit: plumes of rising mud,
coffee can vibrations, submarine back,
sudden breaches toward the sun.

Without question, without questioning,
you are a forgotten renegade
drawing a long line of renegades behind you.

 

Cameron Scott




Comments:

Posted by Piper Foster on May 12th, 2009 @ 5:02 pm

Ms

something about poetry - where the specific becomes the universal and the universal is specific.
i'm a lousy fly fisherwoman, but i know the feeling of being a forgotten renegade, of wanting to see a sign, of being a windowless house.
thanks
Posted by Katey Schultz on May 12th, 2009 @ 6:20 pm

...lovely

A great list poem with a wham-bam ending that feels like an ode. I enjoyed this.
Posted by Mary Scott on May 12th, 2009 @ 9:45 pm

refreshing...

crisp descriptions of contrasting landscapes bringing a refreshing understanding of a a fish not commonly acknowledged as interesting. I really enjoyed this poem and the adventure of seeking/seeing a fish in its context plus the ending shift which wraps the poem up well(or sets it free!) Nice flow.
thanks for an intiguing poem
ps great picture ,too!
Posted by Kim Nuzzo on May 13th, 2009 @ 4:01 am

Deep down inside every man and woman...

a long line of renegades, recognizable by their yearnings and thirst, maybe divine dissatisfactions.
Posted by Kirk Webb on May 13th, 2009 @ 8:08 am

Masterful!!!

Let it be known that Poetry DOES have a place along side fly fishing. Andrew, it's about time you got some of this gangsta' shi-ite out to the public! Cam, keep em coming boy!

Renegade = Cam Scott
Posted by Andrew on May 13th, 2009 @ 10:59 am

Fish Getters

Glad everyone's enjoying some non-pre-packaged content willing to take a risk. Otherwise, you'll be getting a lot of: ORIGINAL HOSS'S HAWG BAIT "THE DIP BAIT THAT'S EASY ON THE NOSE AND SECOND TO NONE!" posts.

On the other hand, I do feel like I'm back in a workshop--maybe one of the most horrifying locales on the planet.

Cam does intend to send more, so stay tuned.
Posted by mk cobb on May 13th, 2009 @ 8:46 pm

i think i've been here before...

yep, definitely. somewhere in the middle of wyoming to be exact. horned helmut with electric tape teeth on top of a stuck-in-the-ground pitch fork to chase off ufo chasers, or renegades like me. thanks for taking me back, cam.
Posted by Hanes on May 18th, 2009 @ 11:18 am

next time I want to go

very well written, sounds like it isn't the authors' first carp trip
thanks cam
Posted by Lisa Kornze on Feb 10th, 2010 @ 8:57 pm

Out of the snow...

Cam - Enjoyed your set up before the poem and your characters - all of 'em. Tight poem. Makes me want to get out to our Pyramid Lake on a frosty morning. Thanks for the moment away from my busy day.



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