North 40 Fly Shop eMagazine October 2017 | Page 73

in line, I presume. But the only thing I could con- sistently do well with these bulky gloves on was soil my pants. The instructions said to wet your hands be- fore putting the gloves on. Right. I’m supposed to stick my hands—hands already frozen from rigging up a fly rod and pulling on waders—into ice-cold water, trusting that wet Chinese rubber gloves will miraculously generate heat? I never came up with the intestinal forti- tude to do that. You’d stand a better chance getting your picture taken with the Pope than you would getting me to stick my hands into icy water after I’ve been fumbling with tippet and trying to tie #20 Griffith’s Gnats to the end of my line. But I did wet my hands once when the Velcro—which snags on anything within a 10- foot radius—got hung up in my shorts while I was digging through three-inches of clothes and cursing cold-weather shrinkage during an emergency. While wearing these gloves my exposed fin- gers got so cold I had to constantly look down to see if I was holding my fly line or if my fingers had snapped off. My hands got what my father would have described as “cold as a well digger’s ass,” or “cold as a witch’s teat.” I have no ex- perience with either so I can’t comment on the accuracy of my father’s account. I just call this kind of misery “shivering Jesus” cold—because all I could do was stand there shivering and hol- lering, “Jesus, it’s cold!” My hands got so cold, in fact, that I stopped fishing, started a fire, and put on a pot of co fee. I held the hot tin cup in my hands until the rubber softened and homogeneously bonded to the palms of my hands. Hair and lint stuck to my hands for weeks. And I began thirsting to whip somebody’s ass. The more I stared at the cold-weather fishing gloves, the less I wanted to get on the water and test my Arctic survival skills. Staying holed up at the house for a couple of more weeks, holding a nice hot cup of Irish coffee in my hands, and waiting for better weather seemed like a good idea. Actually, it seemed like a damn good idea. So when a buddy called and asked if I want- ed to brave the weather and head up into the mountains, I told him I’d love to join him but something had come up. However, in a good- will effort to ensure his success, and add to his fishing enjoyment, I sold him the cold-weather fishing gloves—at a modest profit, of course. “Don’t forget to wet your hands before you put the gloves on,” I told him as he pulled out of my driveway. “Huh,” he said. All I could muster was, “Haw, haw, hawwwwwww!” w 73