North 40 Fly Shop eMagazine October 2017 | Page 4

NOTE SMALL The earth and sky are being weird. First there was an earthquake in western Mon- tana, the largest in 50 years, that rattled the walls and raked me out of sleep believing my enemies had rented a bulldozer and driven it straight through my house. Then there were the forest fires in Williams Lake, British Columbia that forced unprecedented evacuations and turned lives upside down. Those were followed by our own round of Montana wild- fires that forced many people to stay inside and defend their homes—for weeks at a time. Then there was the whole eclipse deal, which I didn’t even pay attention to until a friend phoned the night prior to the big event and said, “Do you realize the eclipse is happening on your birthday?” He suggested Rexburg, Idaho for totality; I said, “It’s going to be 90 percent in Missoula. Why do we have to drive four hours?” But the next day, there we were, sitting in a park- ing lot with 500 other gawkers, staring at the sky. It got darker. It got cold. A coyote howled and crickets chirped. All of a sudden the sun resembled a fat ba- nana hanging in the sky. But it wasn’t until that last one or two percent of the sun faded away, when it became night before noon and the stars came out, that I felt like I’d taken part in something completely unique—I leaped to my feet and wondered, if one percent of the sun could make the difference be- tween day and night, how powerful is that thing? I can’t ignore all the earthquakes of late, nor this sucky wave of hurricanes. They remind me of a time in Alaska when a typhoon swept across the Pacific and slammed into Seward. Salmon swam over the highway leading to Anchorage, and part of a moun- tain slid over a road leading from town to Lowell Point, where my sister and I were hunkered in an apartment. The Coast Guard couldn’t evacuate us be- cause Resurrection Bay was in complete turmoil, and 4 it took three days, if I remember correctly, for crews to clear and rebuild that road so we could get out. Another time, in southeastern British Columbia, a wild, mid-summer storm dropped half the Pacific, it seemed, onto a drainage of the Elk River. I hap- pened to be in that drainage and watched a river go from perfectly clear and fishable to a raging tor- rent in an hour. When the steep canyon walls came down, and a friend got hit in the head with a rock, we scaled those muddy walls on all fours. When we reached the canyon rim my friend said, “We could have died right there.” He was right, but I’ve always gotten off easy—the weather hasn’t wrecked my home or destroyed my business or directly cost the lives of family and friends . . . like it has for so many people this past summer. More often these days it seems like leaving the house could be a life-threatening event. And for us— people who spend time on the water and willingly deal with the elements—the odds of something cra- zy happening increase dramatically. We could play it safe, I guess, and stay off the water and out of the woods, but I think things would look pretty pale. I know this: I never feel quite as alive as when the weather arrives, in one form or another, and drives me away, with my heart racing and my eyes wide. That comes from the endorphins and the adren- aline rush, I know. But some of it has to do with feel- ing small. I don’t get that sensation when I’m mired in work and withdrawn to the back of my brain. But being out there in the elements, feeling small next to nature, let’s me grasp a refreshing perspec- tive. Out there, in the lightning, the wind, the snow, the sleet and the rain, I may not be in charge but the answers are clear—we’re all in this together; nobody’s getting out alive; time is short; might as well fish. - Greg Thomas, Editor in Chief