The year was 1968 and I had just turned
24. I was flipping through the paper one day when I stopped on a picture of an
old man with what looked to me like, at the time, an unbelievable large string
of catfish. The caption under the picture was, "Dick Dyer Does It
Again!" Seems Dick Dyer was about the best cat fisherman around
Fayetteville, Arkansas. I wished I could do that, but it seemed out of my reach.
When I was a kid, growing up in Wing,
Arkansas I caught lots of catfish, and we needed them. They sure tasted good,
after a diet of salt pork. But they weren't real big. In the early days of
Fayetteville, I had access to larger rivers, and I thought more and more about
cat fishing.
Well, as it happened, shortly after seeing
that newspaper article, my wife Barbara and I
moved over to Anderson Place.
Would you care to guess who my neighbor, right across the street was? You
guessed it. Dick Dyer. I befriended him, I cultivated him, I quizzed him. After
a while, Dick's MO began to emerge. I studied his techniques. He even let me go
fishing with him, once. Well, he began to see that I could be a competitor
somewhere down the line, and Dick dearly relished being the best river catfish
catcher around. Maintaining that status consumed his whole life. He pretty well
cut me off from any more information.
But I knew enough. I began to catch more
and more fish, emulating his methods. Dick was OK with that, he was catching
more, and bigger fish. We went along there, him doing a bit better, for several
years. Then I slowly began to catch as many fish as he did, and probably about
the same in total weight. He still had
the largest fish, 16 pounds. Every time he saw me, he told me about that 16
pound catfish.. He never let me forget about that 16 pound catfish..
Barb and I were coming into our last
months at Fayetteville. One really deep hole I fished a time or two that
spring, with my limb lines probably tied to limbs I know now were too solid,
with very little give, just kept breaking. The lines were 120 pound test or so,
and I couldn't understand it at the time.
Barbara and I were walking along the river
bank, one day in June, on a picnic. I saw two old watermelon rinds lying on the
bank, and they were just covered with hundreds of june bugs. I had never heard
of anyone using june bugs to catch catfish, but I knew that in the late summer,
they often fed by just skimming along the surface, picking up floating bugs and
whatever they could find. I had seen
them doing that at night.
After Barbara had walked on toward the
car, I went back, pitched the rinds in the river, and the June bugs all floated
up. I just scooped them all up, put them in a paper bag, and stuck them in the
car.
When we got home, I wrapped them up real
tight in a freezer bag, and stuck them way back in the back of the freezer, out
of sight. Barbara put no stock in mixing fish bait and food in the freezer.
Late in the summer, I was watching TV one
day, and I heard Barbara scream. I ran to the kitchen. There she was, the bag
in one hand, a handful of June bugs in the other. Seems she had been going
through freezer bags to find something to cook, stuck her hand in, and pulled
out the June bugs. I caught it pretty good over that.
As Barbara settled down some, a little
later, I said, “ I've just got time for one more fishin' trip before we move,
and no telling when I'll get to fish again. I'll get every one of those June
bugs outta' here then.” She agreed.
Catch Barbara when she's not screaming with a handful of June bugs, and she's a
great gal.
Next week rolled around. I asked John
Philpott if he wanted to go with me. Said he guess so, nothing better to do. We
went back to that hole, where the White River and the West fork of the White
River join, where my lines had been broken last spring.
This time, I had a new idea. We were
fishing with cane poles, very limber, and we stuck them way, way back in that
mud bank. I floated each hook right on top of the water, with a June bug on it.
We ran the lines at midnight, and had a
couple of ten pounders and a whole passel of smaller catfish. But, right where
the two rivers join, that pole was going absolutely crazy! Ever tried to get a
lively 25 pound catfish into a small landing net? We finally did. The next
morning, we had a couple more ten pounders and another bunch of smaller
catfish.
Then, we approached that last pole, right
where the two rivers join. The pole was completely pulled out of the bank, but it was still laying there, mostly out of
the water. Lying in the water, either just too worn out for one more flip of
the tail, or having learned from his struggles that was as far as he could go,
was the brother to the last big one. He was also 25 pounds.
Well, when I got home, the first thing I
did was take them over to Dick Dyer. Dick came out, I held them up as well as I
could. Didn't say a thing, I didn't have to. He never said a word to me. Just
turned sorta sick looking, turned around, dropped his head, and walked
back into the house.
We moved to Hannibal, Missouri a couple of
days later.
I never saw Dick again.
About two weeks after we got to Hannibal,
a letter chock-full of pictures arrived. A 40 pound catfish, and a whole bunch
in the 20 pound range. The letter just verified the weights, And in the picture an old man was smiling. Smiling right straight out at me. That's
all. Not another word.
The return name on the envelope was Dick
Dyer.
I knew Dick didn't have my address. But he
managed to find it. And I knew he had found my Glory Hole. All I could figure
out was, he must have ragged John Philpott into telling him.
I was pretty put out by this whole thing
for awhile, then after I settled down some, I began to think about it a little
differently. I had used Dick's methods, developed through his many years of
experience. He used me to locate the Glory hole. Fair's fair.
I've never been back to that Glory Hole,
but someday I will.
Over the years, I think I've figured it
out. There's a dam on the White River, a quarter mile upstream. Catfish
naturally swim upstream. Until they're stopped by a dam. The small fish stay
there, in that shallow hole at the dam. The big fish must have deep water, and
they go back downriver, only as far as they need to, the first very deep hole.
Right where the two rivers join. In the Glory Hole. And there they still lie.
Year after year, just getting bigger and
bigger.
Just waiting for me to come back and
challenge them again.
But Dick Dyer passed away many years ago,
and when he died, he was still the King of the Catfish Catchers in
Fayetteville - and it just wouldn't be the same. Who else in the world could care
as much about the size of the catfish I might catch there as Dick Dyer did?
Nobody, that's who.
For all you fishermen out there, I know you
can find my Glory hole from what I've told you here. But where will you be able
to find a whole bag full of June Bugs?
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