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Category Archives: Challenges

How to fish like a girl

100_0954Day 2: Educate us on something you know a lot about or are good at. Take any approach you’d like (serious and educational or funny and sarcastic)

Disclaimer: Any professional bass anglers should stop reading RIGHT NOW. The three amigos in this article are not professionals, and fish only for the thrill of feeling a tug on the line and potentially landing a whopper—or at least getting said whopper close enough to the boat to inspire a magnificent fish tale with which to bore awe family and friends. We do not compete in tournaments (not sanctioned ones, anyway…there always seems to be some sort of contest within the boat), nor do we fish to fill our plates. We are strictly catch-and-release, recreational fisher persons. Therefore, our choice of tackle and our bass fishing techniques are a bit…ummm…unorthodox and would likely offend any real bass pros.

Step 1: Choose appropriate fishing buddies. A hubby who’s willing to paddle the boat is a good choice, and a friend with the connections to gain access to a nice, quiet, well-stocked pond is a must.

Step 2: Stake out your real estate in the boat. Male anglers may only use one lure the entire day, but they are still going to bring Prius-sized tackle boxes and an unwieldy jumble of rods which they are going to try to stow in your space. Make it seem like you are not being territorial by offering to keep the minnow bucket at your feet (this increases their re-baiting time, giving you greater odds of getting a bite while their lines are out of the water).

004-023-cotton-candy-finesse-wormStep 3: Set up your equipment—quickly! The boys are going to try to get the best spots, so you must act fast. Two rods are encouraged, because inevitably one is going to get hung just when your companions are having a run of good luck, and they are not going to move the boat so you can get unstuck. Preferably, rig one line with a bobber and a feisty, active minnow (professionals, I TOLD you not to read this!!), and the other with an artificial lure like a ZOOM® finesse worm in cotton candy (read pink with glitter), spritzed liberally with garlic spray.

Step 4: Cast out your lines. If it’s been a while since your last outing, it’ll take a couple casts to get the feel of things again, so don’t be surprised when your carefully chosen, feisty, active minnow flies off the hook, lands halfway across the pond, then swims for freedom, and don’t be discouraged when your artificial worm wraps itself securely around the oak limb overhanging the bank. The boys’ll still be busy rooting through their massive tackle boxes to find THE lure with which to out-fish the other, so you’ve got time to paddle over to the offending tree to rescue the tangled worm (once their lines are in the water, though, any entanglements will be met with choruses of “Cut the line! Cut the line!”). Reel your lines back in, untangle, rebait, and try again.

Step 5: Fish. The minnow is fairly low-maintenance…it will swim around, dragging the bobber across the top of the pond as it searches for a sunken log to hide under, and in the process will eventually run into a hungry bass. Until then, you are free to actively fish the artificial worm. Cast it into shady areas near the bank, and reel it back in slowly, giving the pole a little twitch periodically so the lure looks and acts like a real drowning worm. Repeat.

Step 6: Switch on autopilot. Lose yourself in the repetitiveness of casting out and reeling in. Become absorbed in the turtles sunning on a log, the heron fishing on the opposite bank, the osprey circling overhead. Tune out the fish stories being traded by your companions, mentally compose your grocery list, plan your post-fishing snack from WaWa.

Step 7: Check your minnow. Glance over at the last known location of your bobber and notice that it is missing. Good gosh, how long has it been gone? Drop the pole with the artificial worm (it’s a good idea to release the bail on the spinning reel, because inevitably this worm is going to embed its hook into some massive underwater obstruction which will otherwise pull your rod out of the boat) and grab the pole with the minnow. Keeping the rod tip down, begin reeling slowly until you feel pressure on the line, then snap the tip up with a clean over-the-shoulder jerk to set the hook. This motion will cause great commotion amongst the fishing buddies as they abandon their own lines and struggle to discover, “What’s she got?”

Step 8: Land your fish. Assuming you have indeed hooked a fish and not a log, carefully take in the line. This is a delicate dance, two steps forward, three steps back, as the fish will weave, bob, dive, and leap in an attempt not to get anywhere near the boat. Your companions will be shouting all kinds of advice, “Give him some slack! Reel faster! Keep the tip up!” but tune it out and let your actions be directed by the fish on your line. As the bass tires and begins to submit to your will, ask a fishing buddy to ready the net to help land the beast, because until visual contact has been established and proves otherwise, every bite must be considered “the big one” and there is no worse feeling than getting “the big one” within arm’s length then having it whack its face on the boat, dislodging the hook so it can swim merrily back to its family.

Step 9: Gloat. Unhook the bass, grin engagingly, bat your eyes, and ask someone to pass the scale. Weigh the fish. Measure its length. Pose for pictures. Carefully release “the big one” back into the pond. As you rinse your hands, casually say, “Not bad for a girl, eh? That’s one for me, how many for you guys?”

 

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A fish tale, brought to you by Jenni’s blog-every-day challenge at Story of My Life.

 
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Posted by on August 2, 2013 in Challenges, On Me, True Life

 

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That’s not my name!

not my namePhoto from joyreactor.com

Day 1: The story of your life in 250 words or less (or one paragraph… no one will be counting your words… probably).

Born Karen Michelle on July 25, 1972, in small town, Ohio, I spent the next 33 years informing anyone who called me Karen that my real name was Michelle. Due to my dad’s job, my family upped stakes and moved every few years, an experience that, as a very shy child, I hated with a passion, but for which I’m deeply grateful now. Wanting to be near rooted family members, I chose a college halfway between my mom and my dad’s childhood homes, which allowed me to indulge in the grandmothers’ love and home-cooking on school breaks. Armed with a biology degree and no idea what I wanted to be when I grew up, I stuck around my college town after graduation and started to put down roots. After working several years each as a veterinary assistant (gaining enough experience to decide that I definitely did not want to go to vet school) and as a picture framer/retail manager (because it was about as different from being a veterinary assistant as I could get), I finally went back to school to become an elementary teacher. Joining the local Lions Club nabbed me a husband, and when he gave me his last name on New Year’s Eve 2005, I promptly moved my maiden name to the middle position and petitioned the court to make Michelle my legal first name. Now it doesn’t matter how much trouble I’m in, I don’t have to sheepishly await for someone to holler, “Karen Michelle!” 🙂

storyadayaug

 

Exactly 250 words, brought to you by Jenni’s blog-every-day challenge at Story of My Life.

 
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Posted by on August 1, 2013 in Challenges, On Me, True Life

 

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Known unto God

11,954 burials, 8,367 of which are unidentifiedCommanders in far-off war-rooms issue orders as if the supply of khaki-clad boys were limitless. Bravely they do as they are told, charging bunkers, strafing airfields, storming beaches. By the tens of thousands they fall, sons, brothers, fathers, uncles. Too many to send home, too many to identify–nameless heroes planted reverently in some farmer’s field. In perpetual anonymity they rest, their final slumber deep, if not peaceful.

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five sentence fictionLillie McFerrin’s Five Sentence Fiction prompt for this week was the word “limitless.” When I visited the WWI battlefields near Ypres, Belgium, earlier this year, the rows of gravestones of unknown soldiers buried in Tyne Cot Cemetery seemed limitless to me. No surprise, I guess, since there are nearly 12,000 headstones, 8,300 of which are nameless. The waste of human life took my breath away as I tried to imagine the families back home who were left with empty arms and were not even given the cold comfort of a gravesite to visit in return.

My five sentences didn’t emerge as fiction…my apologies for that.

 
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Posted by on July 30, 2013 in Challenges

 

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Daily Prompt: A to Z–The job switch

102_1171Annabel rose and peeked out the bedroom window. Barest hints of dawn were just visible on the eastern horizon. Curtains settled back into place as she turned away from the view. Days ago, she’d dreaded each sunrise, as it meant another eight hours shackled by a headset to a desk in a windowless cubicle. Eagerness was not a feeling to which she was accustomed. Finally, this morning she was waking with a sense of purpose and anticipation. Gently, so as not to wake her sleeping husband, Annabel padded down the hallway to get ready.

Her resumé had seemed woefully inadequate when, on a whim, she’d responded to the help wanted ad. Instead of waiting weeks for a call that never came, she’d been summoned almost immediately to the magazine’s head office for an interview. Just as surprisingly, she’d been hired on the spot and given her first assignment.

Ken, bless him, had been totally supportive since she’d first mentioned wanting to change careers. Loosening the plane ticket from her clenched fist the evening after the interview, her husband had cynically eyed her inaugural destination. “My, my, they’re certainly flinging you to the far corners of the world!”

Now, emerging from the shower, Annabel swiped the steam off the mirror with her towel. Outfits had fallen by the dozen last night as she’d agonized over what to pack and, more importantly, what to wear today. Piling her hair in a chic knot at her nape, she stood back and critically eyed her reflection. Quite respectable for a newly minted travel writer, she thought.

Retracing her steps to the bedroom, she carefully placed a kiss on Ken’s forehead as he slept. Silently she crept to the front door, slung her bags over her shoulder, and slipped off the porch into the waiting taxi.

“To the airport, please.”

“United Airlines flight 897 to Beijing is now boarding at Gate 37.”

Very nearly 24 hours’ travel lay ahead of her. Wheeling her carry-on down the gangway, Annabel contemplated the subject of her debut article. Xiamen Piano Museum had gotten enough positive reviews on tripadvisor that her employer had decided it worth a feature article in the upcoming issue. Years of banging the ivory at her parents’ insistence would hopefully ensure she had the background knowledge to do the piece justice. Zipping her Chinese phrase book back into her bag, Annabel settled into her assigned seat and envisioned a day in the very near future when she’d open the inflight magazine to see her own byline staring back at her.

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The Daily Post from July 27 instructed: Create a short story, piece of memoir, or epic poem that is 26 sentences long, in which the first sentence begins with “A” and each sentence thereafter begins with the next letter of the alphabet.

 

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In the eye of the beholder

cloudsPhoto copyright Douglas M. MacIlroy

After only the briefest glance, Deena slammed the book shut and stuffed it with shaking hands back into the Amazon.com box the UPS driver had just delivered to her door.

Jake had spent the last ten years schlepping his assortment of Nikons from country to country, capturing unique views of the world’s most stunning vistas. Now that his efforts had finally drawn the attention of a publisher, her brother had every right to be proud.

She was touched that he’d sent her a copy from the first printing.

But the book was the stuff of nightmares for a severe agoraphobic.

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friday-fictioneersThe muse has been on strike for the past couple of weeks so I’ve opted out of participating with Rochelle Wisoff-Fields’ crew of writers at Friday Fictioneers. The muse and I have reached a tentative labor agreement, so here’s my 100-word attempt for this week’s photo prompt.

 
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Posted by on July 26, 2013 in Challenges, Fiction

 

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Wiser for the experience

101_3154“I don’t know, why don’t you try and find out?” I said when my granddaughter brought a proposed solution to her dilemma to the arm of the porch swing where I sat carving in the warm afternoon sun.

A little while later, she reappeared and plopped dejectedly beside me, propelling the swing into a gentle rhythm before sighing, “It didn’t work, Grandpa.”

“I’m not surprised, Pumpkin.”

“If you knew it wouldn’t work, why didn’t you tell me before I started?”

“If I had, I would have robbed you of the wisdom you gained by trying it yourself.”

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This short piece was written for Lillie McFerrin’s Five Sentence Fiction prompt “wisdom.”

 
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Posted by on July 23, 2013 in Challenges, Fiction, Tuesday Tales

 

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Weekly Photo Challenge: Fresh

The Daily Post Photo Challenge this week is “Fresh” and I thought I’d snatch the opportunity to provide proof that I actually finished one of the projects on my “Do Before the Move” list. I purchased this hideously painted small chest of drawers at the local auction in the winter. This week, I finally got it sanded and painted, and traded the dinky little wooden pulls for some pretty bakelite knobs I found at an antique fair. Now it’ll have a fresh life as a collector’s chest, holding my shark teeth, ammonites, and sea shells, plus all the other little treasures that regularly find their way into my pockets whenever I go for a walk.