Winter Foraging and Ice Fishing: Photo Essay

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We caught five trout at McConnell Lake and ate one for breakfast using our rocket stove.

Our neighbor Joe Trotta invited my family to go ice fishing. We met at McConnell Lake, about fifteen minutes drive from our home. The girls got to ride on a skidoo, towing a sled with our gear, out to the ice fishing holes. I have never ice fished in my life, nor caught a fish. Today was my lucky day. I caught two trout. It seems wondrous that closing in on my fifth decade I can still find delightful new experiences.

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The girls got to ride on a skidoo to the ice fishing holes on the far end of the lake. The skidoo towed a sled with our gear.

The equipment needed for ice fishing is extremely basic. A skidoo isn’t necessary. Shaen and I walked across the lake in about ten minutes while the girls got to enjoy the novelty of a skidoo. It’s easier to walk on the skidoo tracks. During the melt, the ice is safe to walk on but the snow on top of the ice melts. You can get a boot full of cold water if you go off the skidoo tracks. I know because I went off the tracks and got a boot full of cold water! I will bring a spare pair of wool socks next time. Walking across the lake got us thinking that it would be nice to cross-country ski or snow-shoe across the lake too. We could easily pull our fishing gear with a small sled.

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Here is the equipment for making a hole in the ice and scooping out the ice pieces from the hole. On the right is the ice fishing gear. Simplicity itself.

It took me about ten minutes to cut a hole in the ice and scoop out the pieces of ice. I was out of breath by the end. Some people use manual or powered ice drills but Joe has made a simple cutting tool with a heavy solid bar with a very sharp blade on the tip. The top of the bar has a rope that loops around your arm to avoid losing the cutting pole by accident when you break through the ice. Once the hole is cut, it is easy to re-open the hole if you come back within a few days.

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Joe has been ice fishing for years. He has a small seat and bag for all his gear. He uses live worms and frozen corn for bait. He sometimes uses shrimp to “chum” the trout.

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Sonja is using a plastic bin for a seat. We use this bin to carry our rocket stove and a supply of fire wood and starter. She has a few pieces of corn which she uses to “chum” the trout.

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Joe showed us how to look through the icy water to see the fish below. You get your head right into the hole and shelter your head so your eyes can adjust to the darkness of the water. Erika got a face full of cold water!

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Shaen is cooking a trout and warming up breakfast on our rocket stove. Erika and I collected deadfall trees from the forest while Sonja helped maintain a fire to keep warm.

I have to say, I really loved being out there, even with a cold, wet foot. The lake was so quiet and still. Erika and I enjoyed dragging out the deadfall trees onto the lake to make a warming fire. When Sonja wasn’t fishing, she whittled sticks and tended the fire. We enjoyed a late breakfast of fresh trout cooked over our rocket stove. If that wasn’t enough, we came home with enough trout for dinner.

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Ice fishing is very easy and needs very little equipment.

I have recently learned how to enjoy eating fish heads. Fish heads are very nourishing. I also keep the trout liver and any trout roe I might find and eat it raw. I know that might sound gross, but after all the reading I have done about nourishing traditional foods, I have taken to eating the so-called “waste parts” of the fish. It was hard at first. I had to get over my cultural training but now I enjoy eating the fish heads and raw roe. If you are wondering why I would want to learn how to enjoy these foods please see:
Ancient Dietary Wisdom for Tomorrow’s Children
Sacred Foods for Exceptionally Healthy Babies …and Parents, Too!

Sustainable System Series

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Nature is the great sustainable system. Humans have always altered nature to supply our own needs. How will the human family learn to live in balance? This question will be answered by the myriad of choices facing today’s generation.

“A community economy is not an economy in which well-placed persons can make a ?killing?. It is an economy whose aim is generosity and a well-distributed and safeguarded abundance.”
Wendell Berry’s 17 Rules For A Sustainable Economy

What is a sustainable system? Over the next few months I will try to answer that question for myself. I have dreaded writing this series because of very obvious pitfalls.

First, I want to make a statement about where I’m coming from. I started to study botany and ecology at university but I did not have the hardiness to become an academic. Nor did I want to transform my love of nature into what I saw as “pea counting”.

Nevertheless, I am a lifelong, autodidactic learner with a deep interest in these topics. I am also a reformed environmentalist. These days I have more in common with hunters, fishermen, wildcrafters, ranchers, farmers and gardeners than conservationists.

I do not see myself as a steward of the environment.?The human family does not possess this world no matter what some of us might think. The world possesses us. I will try to avoid the human condition of hubris.

I will focus on simple systems that the household can implement. I am not interested in grand plans or movements that want to force people, through government regulations and laws, into changing their practices. If an idea is?good, it will take root without force.

Actually, grand plans scare the living daylights out of me. If you wonder why I deeply fear grand plans, please read Ecofascism: Lessons from the German Experience. It is a cautionary tale. Governments have a monopoly on the use of force. If the environmental need is perceived as the highest good and the only value then, backed by the forces of government, even genocide is acceptable.

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Appropriate technology and appropriate materials change with our environment. Here are some hand-split cedar steps. On the west coast, wood and water is never in short supply.

Nature is a beautiful example of a sustainable system. Everything lives, dies and is recycled in its time. It’s a messy, complicated process. Can the human family find a way to make peace with this system and live within its sacred balance? Or are we predestined to rise and fall and be recycled like everything else?

Back in December 2011, I wrote Dreaming in the New Year: “Maybe we need to learn how to tame our technology and harness our brilliance. All the answers are out there, we just have to apply them.” Tame our technology. Harness our brilliance. These words have haunted my nights and filled my dreams. What a simple idea with such complicated, possible outcomes. Here are just some of my experiments as I try to answer the question: “What is a sustainable system?”

Sustainable System: Gravity Water System
Sustainable System: Mason Bee Condo
Sustainable System: Solar Electric Fences
Sustainable System: Rocket Stoves

I would like to end this post with a TED Talk by Allen Savory called How to Green the Desert and Reverse Climate Change. Allen Savory talks about his own personal journey of discovery that has made him question current wisdom about climate change and solutions. Shaen has tried using Allen Savory’s methods here in Kamloops. If you would like more information please see Brittle Grassland Pasture Update: Photo Essay.

“To be truly radical is to make hope possible, rather than despair convincing.?
Raymond Williams