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Fishin report for Lake Iwanttobethere..


Bobby Bass

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BREAKFAST OF CHAMPIONS for me this morning and that was a can of coke and a couple of pain pills. Back is still acting up after horsing the tiller around and getting all the gardens done. They are actually all planted both here and at the Resort. I think the part that got me was digging trenches for tatters, that is a young back job and I could not find anyone to do it for me. With the gardens finally in I can move on to other projects. Like the yard is already to be mowed again, I just did it last week. Yesterday I spent the day getting sidetracked, even with a to do list. Cleaned out the Tahoe of winter stuff and exchanged it with summer stuff. Sand and ice melt were exchanged for rubber waders and life vests. Go bag of winter clothes was exchanged with go bag of shorts and tee shirts and towels. Spare tire for the Puddle Humper was put in its spot but not till I filled it with air. Got side tracked there as I then went around checking tires on everything around the cabin and adding air as needed.

Yesterday was also the first day of the planned explosions on the road, twice yesterday we heard the weak warning whistle go off and a minute later there was the KRUMPT of the explosion and then the all clear sign. There is about five minutes of silence and then the jack hammering starts. After the second explosion in the afternoon Duncan was outside on the deck with me and when the KRUMPT came he was looking around to see who was shooting at what and he had the look of "It must be one big bird" I patted him on the side and didn't make to much of a deal about it, don't want him to get to excited when he hears the KRUMPT as it looks like it will be going on at least twice a day for the next few months.

With the Tahoe all cleaned up I started on the Puddle Humper. I had brought out the shop vac to clean what the leaf blower had missed in the Tahoe. I do not remember putting the Puddle Humper away with so much grit in the carpet and there were dry maple leafs it seemed in every crack and crevasse that would hold them. So I vacuumed the carpet and then wiped down seats and the console. Tighten screws and found a couple of missing holes were screws should be. Motor and graphs had already been checked out so I was good there. Fish board needed a cleaning and I took a brush and some wheel cleaner to the metal tape and proceed to clean the numbers right off because I was distracted talking to the wife and was not watching what I was doing. Add a replacement tape measure to the stainless steel screws that I had already written down on my shopping list.

Was just starting to bring the box out that had boat tie downs and lights and odds and ends when the daughter announced she was ready to go shopping. With my back giving me a few tinges from leaning over the side working in the boat it sounded like a good excuse to move on. Besides I had a list of things I needed to get and it was about time for some dinner. This morning I woke up at six when I rolled over wrong and my back stabbed me awake. By eight I was done dozing and ready to get out of bed. I got help there from Duncan as he jumped up in bed and threw himself at my back. Made my way to the Den with my can of coke and sat down to jot a few things down. No sooner did I sit down then the weak warning whistle went off and Duncan cocked his head and looked at me with that look of his. A minute later and we both head the KRUMPT and a minute after that the power went out here at Lake Iwanttobethere {1,986,577}

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THE WAITING GAME has started here at Lake Iwanttobethere. Yesterday I finished working on the Puddle Humper. It is all clean, oiled and greased, storage is filled with sorted tackle boxes and rods have new line and are secure. Gas tank is full and the Tahoe is clean and ready for fishing. Tires have fresh summer air and the trailer lights have been checked. Grass is mowed and the garden is all in. Now comes the wait for the garden and weeds to grow and the grass to get ankle high again. But before that happens I will be out fishing, that is as soon as the weather lets me. This morning we have some high winds going through the area and rain has been falling off and on. Rain barrels are filled so it can stop anytime now.

It was around five last night when I stood on the deck with Duncan at my side and look out over the property here at the cabin. The smell of fresh cut grass was in the air and the note book with the spring to do list was resting on the patio table. The wind tugged at the pages that were covered in check marks on things that had been completed. I have spent the last three weeks working on the list and working on the sub list of things that get added as I would get distracted working on something that was found on the way to doing something else. The list was complete and I was done, at least with the spring to do list.

Garden had been expanded and a few new raised beds had been installed. Fence repaired and the greenhouse that had collapsed during the winter has been removed. Grass seed had been spread and is growing and flower pots are all filled and the small greenhouse is empty of plants. Even the deck has been power washed and now all that was left to do was put that notebook away. I even had time to get my web page back up and running and write a few stories. Summer has finally arrived for me here at Lake Iwanttobethere.

My neighbor Chuck has been out fishing a few times already, I know this because he tells me that he has already been out fishing a few times. Throwing a sucker borrowed from Elmers minnow bucket off the dock does not count as going fishing he tells me. Up here you have to actually hook your boat trailer up to your truck and drive somewhere. Even my son has gotten his Barge out on the water a couple of times this year. I know that as he calls me late in the evening and makes a point of holding the phone over the stove so I can hear the sound of his fish frying. But I am waiting my time, I have been watching Barney the wonder fish dog and he has been down on the dock but has not shown any real interest in fishing. That tells me that I am not missing much and the good fishing is still ahead.

Bud has been spending more and more time on the deck just following the sun and napping. Duncan is become my early warning dog as we have been getting road explosion's two and sometimes three times a day. Duncan seems to know when they are going to sound the warning whistle and comes over and bumps his head against me to tell me. The other day the power went off for a half hour or so, came right after one of the blasts so I am guessing there is a good chance it was related. Today I am going to sit out on the deck, enjoy a cigar, stay out of the rain and watch the grass grow. Monday I have it written in ink on the calendar that I am going fishing here at Lake Iwanttobethere {1,991,170}

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WELL IT FIGURES I am ready to go fishing and the weather has changed once again to stop me. First thing I saw this morning was rain rolling down the glass of the skylight window in the cabin. Next thing I saw was the bass thermometer hanging on the siding of the cabin just nudging the fifty degree mark. Third thing I saw was the tops of the trees swaying as the wind was pushing them around like a bully collecting lunch money. Just got to love summer and the constant changing weather from one day to the next. Sunshine Ray is forecasting yet more rain for the weekend and that is on top of the heavy rain we got this week along with the wind that knocked out power for some of the folks living on the lake. Yesterday when I was in town I spotted a tourist on the walking trail with a tiny fold up umbrella tangling from her arm. She was passing a local heading the other way and she had a look on her face. Might be because the local was carrying one of them small snow shovels, The tourist does not know what kind of weather changes we get here at Lake Iwanttobethere.

With summer here of course school is out and Fridays I have my number two granddaughter who comes to spend the night. I don't fish on Fridays as that is her night and she has her own list of things for us to do. On her list was to wash out all the pots in the greenhouse now that they are empty of plants. We got out the hose and she did the sorting and I did the washing. I was told that she washed 137 pots, I told her no we washed 137 pots which she answered that she did all the hard work I had the fun work of playing in the water. With pots all washed and set up to dry we moved on to starting a fire in the pit and sitting where the smoke bothered the mosquitoes more then us. The grand daughter had brought her back pack with her to the fire pit and told me she had brought marshmallows to roast. Before she took them out she wanted to make a bet with me that I could not put three marshmallows in my mouth and close my lips so they touched. I took her up on the bet for fifty cents then she took the marshmallows out from her back pack.

When I saw the marshmallows I just handed over her the two quarters. They were the big big fire marshmallows and I knew she had been down at Ma and Pa's grocery as he orders them in special for the summer. There was no way I was going to even try and get them in my mouth. We did roast a couple of the marshmallows over the fire and I heard her drop my two quarters into a small baby food jar of her sisters and then she tucked the jar back in her backpack. It would seem that I was not the only one who had lost this bet. As we munched on sticky hot marshmallows and swatted at the occasional mosquito that made it past our smoke screen we talked. She showed me her knee with a big bandage on it that she got when she fell on her bike. Just this week she had removed her training wheels and was still learning a few of the finer skills that after awhile you take for granted. She had learned that you don't take sharp turns on loose gravel that is on cement sidewalks, unless of course you have a foot down to keep you upright.

I listen to her tell me about her week and I told her about mine. We made plans to go fishing and she fed the fire as I watched. As the light of day fled twilight started to creep in and the robins went quiet and the frogs got louder. The fire crackled and we sat on the bench sharing secrets that would not be secrets if I wrote about them. We watched as through the trees we could see the lights of my neighbor's truck coming up his drive. He had been out fishing, again. I stood up and told my granddaughter to grab them marshmallows. "Let's go see Uncle Chuck, here at Lake Iwanttobethere" {1,997,190}

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HAPPY FATHERS DAY it is high noon here at the Resort and it is Fathers Day and it is raining, hard. It looks like Father Time did something to upset Mother Nature as the wind is blowing strong and the rain is falling hard. From my seat here in booth number one I can see the rain that is running down the roof to mix it up in the valley forming some class V rapids before launching itself off the roof and completely passing the already full rain barrel. This weekend has not been a good weekend for someone to be camping in a tent. The Main Room here at the Resort has been a busy place all weekend as it has been raining the entire time and everyone has found the Main Room to take shelter in.

A lot of talking going on and you can hear kids banging on the pin ball machines in the game room and laughter coming from guys in the Bait Room. The pot belly stove has a fire in it and even though it is the middle of June it does not seem out of place on a day like today. We had this idea that we would have a Fathers Day BBQ here at the Resort. There is plenty of room for everyone but with the rain the BBQ is off for now. Instead Marv will cook up everything we need on the grill and we will still celebrate. Since it is Fathers Day we have a lot of guys here and we are a little more open to how we will be celebrating it. The last I heard the Fellows were still going to have the remote control truck races at two, rain or shine. There is some standing water on the track they built so it will be more like a mud bogging race I am thinking. Elmer was trying to get the judges to allow him to enter his remote control power boat, there is enough water on the track to float it.

Marv and Vic are next to me in booth number two taking notes from an outdoor magazine that they are reading. The topic is "How to get in shape for Elk Hunting" neither one of them is planning on going Elk hunting but they are using the article to get them ready for Chipmunk hunting. I have been informed we have a chipmunk invasion going on and the two old guys are not prepared to be feeding the culprits from their gardens here at the Resort. They are going through the article and just making some adjustments to convert it from elk to chipmunks. Like changing the hiking miles per day to blocks per day. What I have overheard is that one of them will be the shooter and the other will be the spotter. Yesterday they were on the laptop looking for someplace to buy a couple of ghillie suits.

I was up kind of early as I got a book from one of my daughters for a early fathers day present and was reading here in the booth. I had a Lake Iwanttobethere Root Beer close at hand and a bag of Cheetoes. Smootchie the cat who spends a lot of the summer here at the Resort as the kind of hired gunslinger / mouse catcher was bothering me as I tried to read. I finally had to dig into the bag and give here a Cheetoe which she proceed to lick the cheese flavoring off before going to sit on the corner of the table and lick her paws. Reading a book and trying to keep the orange coloring of the Chettoes off the corner of the pages can be hard. Chuck pointed that out when he came in the room and saw me and the cat both licking our paws/fingers.

The rain has let up some as it is no longer shooting out of the valley and past the rain barrel but I can now hear it tapping on the lid of the cover. We might just be able to get this race started on time. On another note someone maybe it is you will be reading this story and will be two millionth person who has read a story from here at Lake Iwanttobethere. I just want to thank my second grade teacher who told my mother she was holding me back to do second grade over again because I was having a hard time writing a big thank you. Not because I am writing stories but because I fell into a different crowd and they liked to go fishing here at Lake Iwanttobethere {1,999,608}

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A FISHING STORY, finally from here at Lake Iwanttobethere. This morning I made a tour of the gardens checking to see how things are progressing. I had a glass of orange juice in my hand and Duncan walking at my side. I kind of felt like I was taking a tour of a factory floor and Duncan was my foremen, not saying much but there to answer questions. I walked by the boat house and leaned up against the Puddle Humper, the hum of the charger at work on the trolling motor battery. I set my glass down on the front boat deck and flexed my shoulder and worked my fingers some. Yesterday I got out fishing and the shoulder got a work out along with my fingers from casting and reeling and yes landing fish.

My neighbor Chuck and I went fishing and even though Sunshine Ray was calling for just a small chance of rain we were going to have fifteen plus mile winds from out of the SW to contend with. We drove over to Bacon Bay because my notebooks tells me that I have had good luck there this time of the year. The landing was a little flooded as we have had a surplus of rain the past two weeks and right on cue it started to sprinkle on us. We got back in the Tahoe and drank a pop and ate a sandwich and when we were done the rain stopped and the wind that was blowing just went away. We launched the Puddle Humper on dead calm waters and at sixty-six degrees I was a little surprised as I thought the water would be warmer.

First off I took out the bug spray and soaked myself down as it did not take long for the black flies to find us. We worked down the shoreline working out the kinks of a very long winter. Chuck had the advantage here as he has already been out a few times and is in mid season casting form. First hit I get is from a little snake of a northern and he is off before I can get him on. The second fish is a bass and when I boat him I hold him up for Chuck to see. His biggest fish so far this season is an eighteen incher and as I rest this one on the measuring board it is nineteen and a quarter. Some polite smack talk follows and ten minutes later I land another bass and this one is a tad smaller at eighteen and a quarter, still a nice fish.

We work our way around the shoreline skipping places where fishing had been poor in the past and just hitting what I hope are the good spots. I catch another eighteen and a quarter inch fish and Chuck lands his brother. Four fish over eighteen inches and we are on a roll. Chuck is also catching a few fifteen inch bass while I am busy clearing the way of northerns. Shortly after seven we are fishing off a reed point that has given up some nice bass in the pass and is known for holding some big northerns come fall. I was hoping to tease a big old northen to run a buzz bait down but other then a couple more small pike we got nothing.

The skeeters were not bad and the flies had deserted us in their place there were Mayflies. I thought they wee a little early but the weather has been so screwed up that you can't really count on anything to be normal. I am tossing a buzz bait when I hear Chuck grunt behind me. I know something is up as he goes quiet when he has a fish on. I reach down and turn on the video camera and get it up just in time to catch a jumping bass and see Chuck's rod bowed over. Less then a minute later and we are admiring a fat bass and Chuck is back in the lead with a twenty inch bass. Good thing I didn't smack talk him to bad on my fish as he is not rubbing his catch in on me here at Lake Iwanttobethere{2,002,679}

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A GOOD DAY for sailing here at Lake Iwanttobethere or maybe not. Strong winds have tree tops swaying from side to side and as I watch the big maple it almost seems to be twisting in the strong gusts. Some decent size waves are building on the lake here and they come one after the other to roll under the dock before hitting the small beach I have and then pulling anything that floats back out into deeper water. It is not quiet by any means as the wind does not make noise but the leaves that are being blown like reeds in a duck call do. Wind chimes are doing just that, banging away and sounding like a middle school first hour band class. I should mow today but I may wait for the seed pods to stop falling from the Maple tree. The strong winds means no flies or skeeters to worry about but you do have to duck the seed pods that are coming down like crashing helicopters.

Puddle Humper sits quiet in the boat house, waiting. Batteries are all charged and a few fixes that were needed are completed. New line on the buzz bait rod as that is the only rod I did not get around to putting new stuff on and that is the one that my line broke on twice. Was thinking about fishing today but when I came out to the deck and was hit with the wind I decided today was not a fishing day. Matter of fact I am having a hard time thinking up what are good things to do when it is blowing so hard out. No leaves to rake and toss up in the air for the wind to take away, definitely not a brush burning kind of day. Could go sit on the swing and read, the wind would take care of the swinging part but then I would have to hold tight to the book so the wind didn't turn pages before I was ready. Got some wood to cut and maybe some splitting but that falls under actually working and I am trying to put that off for awhile, it is after all summer.

The calendar for the day is not totally clear, I do have to drive over to day camp and pick up grand daughter number two. She is at day camp all this week and needs a ride home today as her ma has to go to the dentist. She was here late yesterday afternoon looking to see if I have any more of those big marshmallows. Seems she is making more money with the marshmallow bet then working with her cousin in the lemonade stand. Always wondered why adults could not make a profit running a lemonade stand then I started to add up the costs of a stand. Of course you have to have a stand then you need lemonade, cups and spoons and a sign. A few napkins just to show that you have them and of course it is all about location location location. For an adult the biggest hangup might be the advantage a kid has over you, the cuteness factor and the fact that they have an adult who provided all of the above needs leaving the kid with just profit.

Reminds me of the kids who wanted to sell sweet corn in a stand just outside of town. Of course there the kid's dad had to just grow an acre of sweet corn and before summer was done he was giving it away at the Lodge. The kids found the job of selling corn to old people boring and the fact that the ladies were picking over all the ears before not buying any and saying they could get better corn down the road at another stand. I decided to take a ride into town and go to the General Store. I always seem to need something from Big Earl and I parked the Tahoe outside his store I spotted Big Earl on the sidewalk in front of a display of kites. Of course, on a windy day like today I should go fly a kite! My wife is always telling me to do that anyway here at Lake Iwanttobethere {2,005,706}

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NOTHING BRINGS A town together like a good garage fire. Last night I was busy cleaning out seed pods from the big maple that had fallen into the planters on the deck when I saw a thick black column of smoke rising from town. I was already in the Dodge and heading down the driveway when the beeper went off and I got an address to head to. I am not active in fighting fires anymore but I still am pretty good at crowd control and nothing brings out a crowd like a fire. Five minutes later and I was close enough to see kids on bikes and joggers heading toward a thick cloud of smoke that the high winds were driving down the street. I had to turn my wipers on as some ash was being blown against the windshield.

I pulled up along Sheriff Tim's squad and blocked traffic and with my lights flashing I climbed out. A few other guys in traffic control pulled up and we had the street blocked off and got people to stop. Of course the thick black smoke that the wind was blowing down at the ground did a lot in driving people back and I retreated to the other side of the Dodge to get out of the way it. Fire trucks came from the other side and I could hear on my radio that it was a garage fire and it was going to be a total loss even though it was just a few minutes old. I listen in as they were deciding on whether to put out a call to the next town over for more help. The thought being the strong winds might spread the fire.

It took about ten minutes but the fire was knocked down and was contained. The black smoke quickly cleared from the air and with it the crowd. We pulled the traffic control back towards the burnt out garage and it was a loss. Reed the Realtor was already taking pictures as he is also the insurance guy in town. Mr. and Mrs. Varson garage was a total loss but there is some good and some bad news to report. The bad is the garage is a total loss, it did not help that Mrs. Varson had several years worth of magazines stored in the garage that had recipes in them that she had been meaning to cut out. The good was that Mrs. Varson being a stout woman did not have to much of a problem hooking up the garden tractor to the Lund and getting them both out of the garage before the fire could get to them.

Mr. Varson is a Lodge member and already this morning fellow Lodge members were over at the garage helping to clean up. The Fellows were there looking for anything that could be salvaged and as of right now it is unknown how the fire started. Big thing there is no one was hurt and just the garage burnt, the Lund seems to be just fine. The volunteer fire dept. met at the Lodge after all the equipment was cleaned up and parked back at the Fire Hall. Only then did the guys take a few deep breaths and calmed down some. What usually happens is the guys start talking about old calls they have been on and we all knock on the cherry bar top of the Lodge and say thanks out loud that our calls are few and far between.

Today finds me back at the cabin sill picking out seed pods from the Maples that have seem to all fallen in my yard. The deck is covered as is the big garden, will have to bring in the grand kids to clean them all up and that will cost me a trip to Jeanies and Stan's Ice Cream truck. I will have to drive around town with the windows down on the Tahoe listening for the ice cream trucks jingle here at Lake Iwanttobethere {2,008,506}

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THIS SUMMER IS not looking good, as a matter of fact it is shaping up to be a lot like last summer or lack of summer was. Today finds us here at Lake Iwanttobethere with no rain falling that was forecasted but instead we have had dense fog all day. With no sun the grass has stayed wet all day and only thing good is that the wind has finally eased up some. Yesterday I spent the evening out in the wood shop moving cabinets around and making room along the wall where I have been planning on installing my radial arm saw. I have been using the saw but the idea of the new wood shop was to have a dedicated place for the radial arm and one big table for it. I am going to build a playhouse for the grand kids this summer and this may be the last project building wise that I do so I thought having the saw for cutting plywood would be nice. I might point out it was the wife that pointed out I better use the thing since I have it. So anyway I am clearing one wall of all cabinets so I can start fresh and I am thinking to myself that it is the middle of June and I have a pair of wool gloves on because it is cold. Something is wrong with that. As I write this it is sixty degrees at Fairbanks Alaska, it is fifty-four here at Lake Iwanttobethere.

As I was working in the shop last night I had the doors open and I could hear yelling echoing across the lake coming from Hammering Hank and Tess's place. I was thinking maybe the honeymoon is over and I mentioned it to the wife. The wife rolled her eyes at me before reminding me that this weekend is Hollering Days here at the lake and they were practicing, guess I had forgotten all about it. Today I went down to the Masterbaiters Shop to pick up a few things I had ordered, actually Vicki was good enough to tack on a couple of cases of bug spray to her order. We can't keep the stuff on the shelf up at the Resort. First I made an appearance at the Lodge, checked my mail and then went down to the shop. I had to park on the access road as all the parking was full in front of her store. Several trailers loaded with canoes and several more canoes on top of pickup trucks and grocery getters. I waited in the Tahoe for a few minutes hoping a closer parking space would open and I noticed a few things.

I saw a lot of newer SUV's hauling old trailers with old canoes and I saw some old trucks hauling new canoes. I am guessing that the old canoes were once new and now that they have been around for awhile their owners have bought new vehicles. The new canoes I explain as being once they, the owner bought the new canoes they could not afford a new vehicle too. As I sat and waiting for a parking space to open I saw teenage boys running around in shorts with white legs showing. Some fit looking guys were standing by the front door making motions with their hands and pointing at watches while another guy stood off to the side trying to get some bars on his cell phone. Trailers sat loaded down with canoes and pack sacks blocked the back windows of the pick up trucks.

A couple of guys wearing khaki pants and wool shirts came out with a couple of bags of oxygen packed minnows. Another group of young guys came out wearing sandals and sweatshirts saying Iowa on them. I was guessing the entire group was together and they were heading to the Beyond the Waters Canoe Area. With no parking opening up I gave up and walked towards the entrance. I gave a few HIYA's to some of the guys who looked at me and they nodded their heads and had the look that I was a local and should be avoided. I made my way inside and Vicki just pointed her thumb back at the back room. I picked up my two cases of bug spray and headed back out the door. As I passed the guys wearing the khaki pants I just said "Going canoeing eh" One of the guys looked at his partner and said "Yup, you picking up the years supply of bug spray" and he grinned at his partner. I just patted the top box on my shoulder and just said "Nope just getting enough for the weekend" and walked away with my own grin on my face here at Lake Iwanttobethere. {2,009,609}

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TOOK A DRIVE this morning didn't have any thing really planned for the day other then maybe a thought of going fishing in the afternoon. But I got wind of a surprise birthday BBQ that was going to be at the daughters this afternoon. Birthday is actually tomorrow and it is not only a monthly birthday but it is a yearly one to. I grabbed truck keys from the wood fish on the wall of the den that has hooks for holding key rings and before I could get to the door Duncan was already there, waiting and wagging his tail. The wife looked at me over the top of the paper and glanced at the window and mentioned it says rain in the forecast. I just told her I was going for a short drive and would be back in just a little while.

Duncan ran out the door in front of me and took a running leap from the deck stretching out to see how far he could land out in the yard before looking back at me. A robin caught his eye and digging into the wet grass with his claws he tossed clumps of it in the air behind him as he gave chase. The bird had seen this all before and was in the air with plenty of room to spare. Duncan changed direction and went to the Tahoe, sat and waited for me to get there. Like the robin I fooled him to as I walked past the Tahoe and opened the door of the Dodge. Duncan looked at me and then at the Tahoe and back at me, shook his head and trotted over to the Dodge. I open the door and he jumped up and was in his spot over on the passenger side. I climbed in behind the wheel and then had to reach over to his door and roll the window down for him.

I turned the key and the Dodge started right up, rolled down my window and adjusted the wiper's blades to take a couple of sweeps across the cracked windshield and cleared the water drops off it. Put the old truck in reverse and it hesitated a second before we started to back up. I turned around and headed down the drive and towards the road construction at the bottom of the hill. We drove slowly through the pot holes and ruts that the dozers had made and me and Duncan bounced in our seats some. No such thing as shocks in the old Dodge and only the springs in the bench seat kept us from hitting the roof.

A few minutes later and we were clear of the road construction and rolling down the dirt road along Lake Iwanttobethere. This is the same road that takes us to a few bird hunting spots in the fall and Duncan with his head out the window was taking in the smells. For him there are no seasons as he can't read a calendar, at least not yet. All I see is his butt and a tail wagging as he works the wind. I am reminded of others before him who have ridden in the Dodge on this same stretch of road. Buddy and Barney the labs and before them Art and Bob the springers. The first dog to ride on that side of the seat with a blanket under her to keep it clean was a lab named Lady. I think back to that big black dog who was way better then me at hunting grouse.

Of course with Lady riding shotgun we did a lot more then just hunt grouse in the old Dodge which was pretty new back then. Together in the Dodge we hauled birch logs stacked higher then the cab and come winter Christmas trees. The old green Jon boat fit in the bed, at least most of it did and a canoe that might have fallen out a time or two. I slowed down some and the Dodge got a little quieter as the old shocks did not have to work so hard. With the widow down I could hear the splashing of the water in the wheel wells as the tires drove through the water filled ruts. Duncan with his head now inside looked over at me with his tongue hanging out and I gave him a rub behind his ear. I looked down and I timed it perfectly as the odometer on the Dodge turned to 225,000 miles and hung there. I stopped and looked around at green trees, thick wet grass on a damp grouse road with the sound of a panting dog at my side and I figured it was a perfect place for the old Dodge to celebrate a birthday, just like me here at Lake Iwanttobethere {2,010,736}

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WELL SUMMER OFFICIALLY arrived a few days ago, I think I missed it as it must have happen somewhere else. Here at Lake Iwanttobethere it is once again raining and when it is not raining it is foggy, damp and cold. My gardens are sitting barren with just a few plants breaking out of the damp ground and I swear if you stand in one place long enough the plants start leaning your way looking for warmth. Yesterday I did go fishing and when I left my place it was fifty-five degrees out but I went down the road a piece and found a landing where it was eighty-two in the shade and muggy. Not normally my kind of fishing weather but seeing what I left it was a trade upwards. A few black fly's buzzed me as I got the Puddle Humper ready to launch but I threaten them with the bug spray and they left me alone.

A couple of hammer handle northerns in the first few casts and I was thinking this might not be so bad after all. Came time to move the boat to a better spot and I started the big motor and cruised over to a small bay. Cut the motor and glided to a stop to find that I was too late, the bay was choked with weeds. Should have been here a few weeks earlier but now I had to go to plan B and I headed for a row of docks and dug out the worm rod. A couple of little bass and I was not having much fun, I was looking forward to catching some fish not just beating up water with a spinnerbait or waiting for a bite on my worm under a dock.

Decided to move again but the big motor would not stay running, normally I never have a problem but I was cranking away and it just kept dying. I gave it a rest and went back to the trolling motor and moved along a reed bank picking up a few more little northerns but not seeing any action from anything worth writing about. As I made fan casts along the reeds I got to trouble shooting the motor issue and I think I came up with the answer. I pulled up the lid and sure enough I had forgotten to hook the fuel line to the tank. Took me awhile to prime the motor and burn out the rich oil mix that I had pumped into the motor. The ensuing blue cloud bank that I produced when I got the motor running took care of any skeeter on that end of the lake.

With the motor now running I went back to fishing and moved to a different part of the lake. Buzzbait started getting me a few hits and the docks along this stretch had a few fish on them. Nothing big to talk about but I was catching fish which is always better than not catching anything at all. A little bigger northern hit my spinner bait and sent it back to me missing half of it. I open the tackle box and took out the lure that my grand daughter had put together for me. Chartreuse and blue and white skirt with a double chartreuse grub tail with a big blue/purple and reddish willow blade. I tied it on and gave a shot. Third cast a bass hooked up and I thought what the heck I'll keep throwing it. Since I was not finding fish where I thought I would I went and fished around a couple of islands in the middle of the bay. The middle island I never fish but tonight I made my way around and the granddaughters lure boated me four northerns and six bass with two more bass lost because I failed to set the hook. In under an hour I became a believer in the lure combo.

With darkness falling it was time to head to the landing and I got a last cast in and weaved my way through the reeds to the landing. Skeeters were no where to be found and I was thinking that in itself was a blessing. Then I hit the landing. I think they have a leader, the skeeters that is. They waiting till I had the boat on shore and was halfway to the Tahoe before they came in waves after me. I was trapped away from the boat and its bug spray and the safety of the Tahoe. I made it to the Tahoe and lit up a cigar and filled the truck with smoke before I backed up to get the Puddle Humper on the trailer. I kept the rubber boots on to keep them off my legs and covered up with a rain coat. The cigar I kept puffing on sending up clouds of smoke looking more like a idling truck in the dead of winter. Tomorrow the weather is supposed to break and I am thinking about going fishing. I will make sure that I have a can of bug spray in the Tahoe and the boat here at Lake Iwanttobethere {2017,571}

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I NEED SOME rocks, actually I need a pile of rocks because I don't have any rocks. I came to this conclusion yesterday when I was searching for a rock to throw at the chipmunk that was running through the garden with something green in his mouth. No doubt one of the very small plants that I am trying to grow. I need a pile of rocks because I know that I am not going to hit the chipmunk with one so I will need many. I don't know if it is one of the chipmunks that we called Flash Gordon last year, could very well be his son Speedy but he needs a few rocks thrown his way. I have a driveway full of pebbles but not rocks. What I really need now that I think of it is some stones. I think they are a little bigger then rocks and are smooth so you don't have to move them around in your hand for a good grip before you toss them. What I should have is two piles so I can practice throwing stones from one pile to the other. My days of playing softball are long over and even though I may think I can throw my arm is in no shape to be a serious threat. From time to time I toss a ball for Duncan to chase and sometimes he just looks at me and my feeble attempt and asks with his eyes if that is the best I can do. I have taken care of that by throwing the ball downhill giving the ball added distance by the roll and then walking backwards to make it look like I threw it farther.

Now three weeks into the twice daily explosions as they work on the road bed here at the cabin. I almost don't hear the toot of the warning horns anymore but I feel the cabin starting to shake a little. I thought it was just me till the wife mentioned that she was sitting in the living room and her collection of bells are started to ring right after the blasts. There is but five minutes of quiet right between the warning horns and the blast, then the boom and a moment later the drill starts up drilling the next hole. Dump trucks coming and going the sound of the beep beep beep when they back up. Slamming of tailgates and they just keep getting closer. Twelve hours a day six days a week, I keep telling myself how nice it will be when it is done.

So I have been spending some time at the Resort, far enough away that I am not bothered by the construction but so quiet that it almost hurts when sitting out on the deck with a beverage of my choice. Have a couple of geese hanging around the beach area, swimming with their kids and searching for anything even closely looking like it can be eaten. Vic is none too happy as he has to walk through goose turds on his dock every morning in order to get to his boat and go out and get the mail and the paper. A lot of robins even more then last year. I think that spring was just so late that they got this far north and just said good enough lets camp here. Seems you can't have any flat surface left unattended with a roof and a robin will be try to build a nest in thirty minutes or less. Just the other day I had the big shop door open and a robin was trying to build a nest up in the rafters. Can't have that so I ran her out. Not twenty minutes later and I found another robin building a nest on the second to the top step of the step ladder that was leaning against the clubhouse. I had just put the ladder there that morning.

Today is mowing day, should be a fishing day but rain again in the forecast for the next three days. Skeeters seem to have died off some so that is a plus but then I heard this morning that to the north of us it got into the thirties for overnight lows. Not good when we are just a few days away from July. As I look around the Resort the dress is pretty much the same, everyone is wearing shorts with a hooded sweatshirt. Cans of mosquito spray in their back pockets and a rain jacket close by. As for fishing, the mayflies are starting to hatch here at Lake Iwanttobethere {2,020,206}

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FRIDAY HERE AT Lake Iwanttobethere and it is change over day. Normally Friday is when the resorts welcome the next weeks load of visitors and last week's group leaves. I was in town this morning running errands as I went to bed early last night. Had nothing to do so I just decided to go to bed and catch up on some sleep. This morning I was up at the crack of dawn, of course I could not see the sun as it is overcast but nevertheless it was still the crack of dawn somewhere. The yard smelled good as I did cut the grass yesterday and there is some green showing in the garden. Matter of fact I even watered a few of the plants out there using the new rain barrel. Strawberries have fruit and I will be keeping an eye on them making sure I get to them when they are ripe instead of Speedy the chipmunk. While the water bucked filled I surveyed the garden and did a little chopping with the hoe. Way behind what the garden should look like but the weather is not helping any. More rain in the forecast and I hope to get out fishing on Monday but I hear talk of thirty mile an hour winds, not good.

Back in town there is a fair amount of traffic for this early in the morning. SUV's packed so full you can't see if there are anyone inside of them. Always makes me wonder when I see them SUV's where they have the little shelf that goes over the rear hitch. Always seems to have a cooler strapped on to them. Makes me wonder why they could not fit that inside their truck, I would think some of them would rather just strap a kid back where the cooler was. Sure would give the kid a good story to talk about back at school come fall. When I go to town on Fridays I usually wear one of my out of state hats, like today I wore the one that says Black Hawks. I find that if I wear my Lake Iwanttobethere hat people stop me on the street and ask me questions. I normally am willing to answer questions but I am not a paid employee of our fair city and standing on the street corner giving directions gets old after a while. If I wear one of my out of state hats people then think I am like them, a tourist and leave me alone. This used to be a lot easier when you could just hang a camera around your neck by a strap, but now everyone just takes pictures with their phones.

I had a list of things I needed and I made my way from store to store. Going to spend the weekend at the Resort and I needed a few things. First stop was the General Store where I needed to pick up dog food for the boys and Big Earl was standing outside with his apron on and his corn broom in hand. We exchanged HIYA's and I picked up my dog food and a KIT KAT candy bar. "In town two days in a row Bobby? Big Earl asked me and I just nodded my head and moved on before this guy who was looking at my hat figured out I was from around these parts. Yesterday I was in town, for awhile. Was a quiet day after mowing the lawn and I decided to take Bud out and work on his bucket list. Yup, Bud as well as Barney have a bucket list. They didn't write them but I have been thinking about things we should share at least one last time. Both dogs are now fourteen and slowing down, Bud more then Barney.

Of course between the two Bud has always been the hunting dog so he might have more miles on him then Barney the fishing dog. Yesterday after I mowed Bud was watching me from the deck and I decided we should go take a ride. I called him to the Dodge and helped him up into the passenger seat and we rode into town together, Bud ridding shotgun. We went to the drive in and I ordered a kids meal, cheeseburger with no catsup, mustard, pickles or onions and then we went and found Jeanies and Stan's ice cream truck where I ordered a simple sundae. Next stop was Mystery River where the grass was deep and it went right up to the waters edge. Bud and I sat on the bank and he ate his kids meal. He had his cheeseburger and apple wedges, I drank the juice but he got to lick all of the sundae out of his cup. Just seem it was time for him to have his own since he has only gotten to share my burger in the past, Just something we won't mention to the wife here at Lake Iwanttobethere {2,022,544}

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LOTS OF MUD is my answer when I get asked how is the road construction is going out my way. Yesterday afternoon I got in a little fishing, forecast was calling for rain but it had not yet started so I took up Chuck on his offer and went fishing in his new old boat. Different being a back seater in someone else's boat as I had to grab a tackle box and put stuff in it that I would need for an evening on the water. Three rods, my life vest some rain gear a tackle box the brown bag lunch from the fridge and a couple of bottles of water. My hands were full as I made my way to Chuck's on the trail that runs between our two cabins.

With gear stowed in the boat I put flame to a cigar and stuck my arm out the passenger window of the Chuck's Chevy truck and we made our way down the drive and to a bay that Chuck has been fishing. Captain Chuck told me he has been having some pretty good fishing over on Crazy Bay even though he has had to fight the wind the past few afternoons. We arrived at Crazy Bay and I got out and started to direct Captain Chuck down the landing till I noticed he was totally ignoring my fine directions. I had to remind myself that he was the Captain and I was the passenger on this fishing trip. I stood back and watched as he launched the boat and then parked the truck in the high grass out of the way. Am so use to fishing out of my own boat that fishing out of someone else's was going to take a little time to get used to.

I started calling Chuck Captain Chuck and I moved my gear to the back of his boat and made myself comfortable. I asked if I could help with anything and Captain Chuck told me he had it all covered and in a few minutes he had the trolling motor down and we were fishing the shoreline down from the access that was out of the wind. About ten minutes later and we were out of the calm and in the wind and I kind of like being in the back of the boat. Captain Chuck was busy making adjustments with the trolling motor and trying to cast. All I had to do was try and keep my hat on and fish the spots he kept missing. I went to change my buzz bait to a big spinner but realized I had not packed any in the tackle box I brought. Could not find my line pick when I got a back lash in one of my reels but I knew right where it was in the Puddle Humper back home. We caught a couple of small bass and had a nice northen made a run at Captain Chuck before splashing her tail and sinking out of sight.

Captain Chuck pointed off to the other side of the bay and said "That is where I have been catching some nice fish" and we looked at the white caps rolling across the reed bank. "But maybe not today" and Captain Chuck turned the bow towards some water with less wave action. We fished some and we talked some, told Captain Chuck he needed a name for his new old boat and he agreed. He also told me to stop calling him Captain Chuck which I told him I could not since we were fishing in his new old boat. Sky was getting a little gray over head and it was about seven thirty when I said "You know it should be a lot lighter this time of the evening" About five minutes later it was like someone turned the lights out as a big dark cloud came over us from behind the tree line and took the light with it. As luck would have it I got a hit on my spinner bait and there was some weight to it. I was trying to get a decent northern in the boat as I raced a wall of rain marching its way across the water at us.

I took a chance and yanked the northern over the side and into the boat and scrambled to get my rain coat on. Captain Chuck seeing the fish was in the boat pulled the trolling motor out of the water and came from the front of the boat to drop down behind the steering wheel. Holding feet up from the trashing northern on the deck he started the engine and we made a tight turn and we headed to the landing. We would have made it to but the rain caught us like it was chasing us and we were wet by the time we put the boat on the beach and walked to the truck. Have to remember we are old guys and we don't run anywhere any more here at Lake Iwanttobethere {2,026,827}

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SUNDAY FOUND ME making the rounds at the Resort. To windy to go fishing at least I thought it was to windy. Come fall when we are running out of fishing days then the wind will no longer becomes an excuse to stay on land. Of course there was the thunderstorms that kept rolling in on us, the brief heavy downpours of rain and of course the hail. Today as I write this I am bothered with mosquito bites that I got yesterday afternoon, I think. The sound of rain was good cover for the skeeters as I think they were hiding out from the rain and when we took cover from the falling rain it was just like walking into the skeeter's trap. I know I have a few bites on my back, at least it feels like it. Or maybe it is time to fix the screen on the bedroom window in the Clubhouse.

As I was saying I was making the rounds of the campsites and of course if a refreshing beverage of my choice was offered I was accepting. The proper payment of a refreshing beverage of my choice was of course information about fishing here on Lake Iwanttobethere. During this afternoon of playing Host I spread a wealth of fishing knowledge among the tourist of the camp. Well maybe not since just about every one at the Resort is a town local and Lake Iwanttobethere is so big that even all the locals have their own Honey Holes. The weather was an interesting topic as it was changing about every ten minutes or so. We would have blue sky then a pop up thunderstorm would drop rain on us and a few of them later in the afternoon produced hail. Nothing real big perhaps the size of a dime but yet big enough to sting if you got hit on the top of the ear.

I was over at the Fellows camp when the hail was falling, hiding under a tin metal roof they had erected where they have their campfire. Not much talking was done when the hail fell, might have been because you could not hear anything but the hail on the roof and the Fellows were more concern about the beer that was sitting on the picnic table, the cans were taking a beating. The one thing that was a constant during the entire afternoon was the wind. It never really did get calm that I remember. When the wind died down to about fifteen you could stop holding on to your hat but most of the day it was up around twenty-five or so and then there were gusts on top of that to maybe forty. In the city you have buildings to block the wind some but sitting on the edge of a lake forty miles an hour winds will take your breath away from ya.

Keeping fires going was a chore as most of the wood was wet and when you did get a fire going the smoke seemed to want to go up your nose. I had to cook my hot dog over at the Fellows campsite using a bic lighter, no easy chore. I know you are probably thinking why didn't we just all go inside the Clubhouse and get out of the rain and wind, well that is a simple answer, We were camping! That and the fact that it was eighty degrees out with a wind and a occasional shower it was almost perfect drinking weather. To wet to paint or mow to windy to do any ladder work, yes sir re just a good day to sit back, dodge some hail and drink the refreshing beverage of your choice, or what ever was being offered here at Lake Iwanttobethere {2,029,036}

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CHAIN SAWS ARE LIKE mother in laws, here at Lake Iwanttobethere everyone has at least one. Tuesday afternoon found us with a much better day but instead of fishing we spent it on cutting wood. Monday afternoon as I was sitting out of the weather at the Fellows camp at the Resort I along with some of the Fellows heard a loud cracking sound. It was pretty loud as we could hear it over the howling of the wind and our attention was brought to a large maple tree just off the Resort proper but still in sight. The wind was twisting this big old maple pretty good and the tree had a full head of leaves so to speak which was not helping any. The wind was catching the leaves and twisting the tree and sooner or later something had to give and it was the tree.

We stood and watched as the tree just kind of gave up and split. A large limb snapped right off and the rest of the tree just kind of followed the limb down to the ground. The tree settled onto the ground and it made a groan when it came to rest, at least that is what I heard, strangest thing. The down tree soon gathered a crowd as I along with others walked over to survey the damage. We all looked at it differently, Hammering Hank saw fire wood, Vic saw a lot of cleanup and I saw maybe a bench or even a table down the road. I looked at Chuck who has a saw mill and we both had the same thought about harvesting some straight wood from the tree. Not much we could do that day as it was still windy and we don't usually travel with our chain saws in our trucks.

Yesterday after breakfast we attacked the Maple tree like a swarm of human ants. Guys like to cut wood especially when they don't have to cut wood. We had a pretty good turn out of guys and the Fellows were all there to. Chain saws appeared from behind back seats and from the backs of pick up trucks and it did not take that long before the limbs were separated from the trunk and the brush was hauled back into the woods. Having a tractor with a bucket works o so much better then having to drag stuff by hand. If it was thicker then three inches it was cut into firewood. Bigger limbs headed to the log splitter and then tossed into the bucket of the tractor where they were dumped in a pile over by the wood shop. Gary one of the Fellows brought out his "Beast" chain saw and went to work on the trunk. Sawdust was flying as he did his Paul Bunion (a local guy) impression and by late afternoon the tree was gone and just a stump was left.

Chuck and I harvested a couple of nice sections of straight wood that will get some attention. Would have like to taken some bigger pieces but just too big and way too heavy to try and move. The Maple will find its way to the saw mill and when it dries I am sure I will find something to do with it. For now it was just dragged to the wood shop and it will rest there till we get around to it. Vic fired up the BBQ and we had some man size burgers and a few beers and as we sat on benches and leaned against pickup trucks we talked chain saws and bar oil. Wood chips were brushed from hair and pockets were turned inside out. Leather work gloves were set on the back of chairs to dry out. I was a little sore but it was a good sore, comes from working with your hands and knowing that you were going to make good use out of something and not let it go to waste. The big maple is gone but the guys will talk about the wind that took it down and we will gather around the fire place this winter and tell stories of the tree as we hold our open hands to catch the heat from it here at Lake Iwanttobethere {2,034,608}

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WENT FISHING YESTERDAY Took a rode trip around the lake to a distant bay that was supposed to be a hot spot. The daughter wanted to go fishing and she had a day off from work and I told her to go a head and pack a cooler and we would head out to a new secret spot. I like it when the daughter packs the lunch, big change over the brown paper bag lunch that is always waiting in the fridge for me. We loaded up the Puddle Humper with the daughter's rods and set out to the secret spot. Took over an hour of driving and I had to look at the map a couple of times but we found the landing. We did not get out of the Tahoe, for the first time that I can remember I was done fishing before I even started. The reason, Wasps. Hundreds of them were swarming the Tahoe as we sat at the landing. I don't know if we drove over a nest or someone was there and did something or they were holding a union rally protesting white Tahoe's but they were banging off the glass loud enough to hear inside. We talked and decided to go to another small bay that I knew of just ten minutes away and we turned around in the landing area too only have the wasps follow us down the road, they were really mad about something.

Flies greeted us at bay number two and this was looking like it was going to be one of those kind of fishing days. We launched and the flies stayed on shore and no sooner did we go about a hundred yards and the wind picked up. We spent two hours tossing a little bit of everything and had one bite to show for it. The daughter was not having a good time and to my surprise she said we should change bays, again. Told her I knew of another bay and we could be fishing in forty-five minutes, she flashed me the thumbs up sign and we made a dash for the landing. We pulled up about a hundred yards from the landing and sat back in our seats as we watched and listened to a couple yell directions at each other as they tried to load their boat onto a trailer. From our vantage point that had two problems, one they didn't want to get wet and two they didn't want to get the trailer's tires wet either.

Finally they put the trailer deeper into the water and got the boat out of the water and up out of the way. The daughter and I beached the Puddle Humper and working like a well-seasoned NASCAR pit crew. We were loaded, tied down and gave a polite nod of our heads as we drove past the couple still working on their boat. Forty-three minutes later we were fishing on another bay. Five minutes later both the daughter and I had already lost fish and we were both in a happy mood again. Fishing was much better as we caught several hammer handle northerns and even managed to put an eighteen inch bass in the boat with the sun setting into the trees. With just enough light to load the Puddle Humper on the trailer we called it a night and headed the Tahoe for home. Never took a lunch break but now we started to dig in the cooler and soon I was munching on a ham and cheese on rye sandwich with Peach lemonade and cubed chunks of watermelon. Yup, I like it when the daughter makes the lunches.

This morning I drove into town and had a short wait at the car wash. The Tahoe was dust covered and the windows were cover in the splatter of moths and other bugs that didn't get out of the way in time. Lot of traffic in town as people were gearing up for the parade and of course I saw a few floats heading over to the high school where the parade will start. I ran into Chuck who was also in town running errands and I told him about not being able to fish his hot spot. We chatted about a few other things and he asked if I was coming to the parade, two of his granddaughters will be marching in the percussion section. I asked if they are in the rim fire or flintlock section and he told me he had one in both. Fourth of July parade, always a big bang here at Lake Iwanttobethere {2,040,365}

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FOURTH OF JULY here at Lake Iwanttobethere is just like the fourth anywhere I am guessing. BBQ and parade, some fireworks at dusk and maybe some illegal firework displays. Howling dogs and the pontoon flotilla cruising the water of Lake Iwanttobethere. I say this because in the past I have written about the parade and about the go cart and lawn mower races. Sailboat races and fishing contest and of course the doings on down at the park. But some things just seem to change a little over the years and as I get older I tend to see the fourth a little differently.

The fourth of July this year was a quiet one and I say that because for the first time in almost a month I had a Friday where no one was blowing stuff up with a big enough bang that it would shake the cabin. Today I am surprised to find that they actually gave the road crew a three day weekend and it is quiet enough to sit on the deck and not have to yell to be heard. Then again there was a few things that I did notice when I was in town for the celebration. My neighbor Chuck was in town, he had a place just down from Ma and Pa's Grocery to sit. They had put down some beach towels on the curb and his young granddaughters were sitting on the curb waiting for the parade to start. I should take a moment to tell you all that we love tourists, we really do, we love to take their money. Being a tourist though does not give you the right to be rude and on parade day we had a few rude tourists.

The gals were sitting on the curb waiting for the parade to start and when the marching band struck up the first song people turned to look up Main Street to catch the first glimpse of them. This is when some tourist just walked around the girls on the curb and stood in front of them blocking their view that that had been waiting for. Now Chuck being Chuck would usually step up and say something to the tourist but with the new wife close at hand he was more reserved. Especially when she whispered loud enough for me to hear "Don't make a scene" I could see Chuck nodding his head but I also knew Chuck would have a back up plan. The plan was simple but effective, he bent down to his granddaughters and gave them each their own sparkler and then he lit them for them.

The girls waving the sparkler's inches away from the bare legs of the tourist who were blocking their view caught their attention. They turned to complain but a glare from Chucks wife quickly had them searching for what one said "A better location" I chuckled to myself and leaned over to Chuck to tell him "Well done" and we both went back to watching the parade and the marching band that was now passing in front of us. I thought the firing of the flintlocks at the end of the song was a nice touch by the percussion section. With the smoke from the flintlocks clearing I watched the rest of the parade and then hitched a ride down to the park. Smell of watermelon was in the air and mix it in with corn on the cob being roasted and sizzling brats on BBQ's my nose was soon twitching.

Some clouds came and went and a few rain drops fell, nothing to get ya wet but enough to make some people run for cover. By sunset the clouds were gone to bother someone else and we arranged our picnic tables and chairs to look out at Root Beer Island and the evenings high light, Nytelyters fireworks display. The marching band played and the timing was perfect as the fireworks were high lighted by the band and the band high lighted by the fireworks. The big closing number had the crowd up clapping and cheering and the final burst had the sky lit up overhead and when the percussion section fired off their flintlocks it was like you were really there, and I guess you really were here at Lake Iwanttobethere {2,045,404}

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HEADED INTO TOWN this morning and as I was going out the door the wife was talking about having a hankering for some potato salad. I took that as a hint and added it on to my list of things to get. Road construction crew is working hard, I got a few waves as I drove by, but I had my windows closed and the a/c running. I got to town and I see Main Street is clean and all the hay bales have been removed from the go-cart races. Park is also clean and you can't even tell that the beer ball softball game went into extra innings. Mini- donut cart is stilled chained to one of the maples and so is the hot pretzel cart. I am guessing they will stay there till the county fair opens. A few boat trailers at the access and you can see a few boats out past Root Beer Island. Swimming area has kids out on the diving float and the town's lifeguard is hard at work, no doubt trying to score on one of the tourist girls he is talking to.

First stop is the General Store and I give Big Earl a HIYA as I walk past him into the store. Had to pick up some paper toweling and kitty litter. Made some small talk with Barb the cashier before heading back out to drop the toweling and litter in the back of the Tahoe. Next stop was Amy's Bakery and as I made the short walk to her shop I fell in behind a younger couple who were not local's but I am sure tourists. They were busy chatting back and forth between themselves and when they reached the corner they split apart but I could still hear them chatting away. The gal who was still in front of me walked right up to Amy's Bakery and went inside. I followed her in and I got a better look at her as Amy waited on her at the counter. I had first figured she had one of them headsets for her cell phone on but when I got a good look I saw she was wearing a Google Glass, hi tec arrives here at Lake Iwanttobethere.

Amy waited on the gal and then she left still talking away and in her own little world. I picked up some French bread and a quart of potato salad and made small talk with Amy before heading back to the Tahoe. A few other stops were made, Ma and Pa's Grocery, the Close Enough Shop and then I made a brief stop at Reed the Realtor place. No one answered the door so I just left a note on the door to call me. Getting to be that time of the summer to plan our baseball trip to the big city. Next stop was over at Rocky's Hobby Shop, needed to pick up some paint to touch up some lures I was working on. When I came out of Rocky's I noticed a small crowd across the street at Paul Bunion's TV Repair shop. Not having anything better to do I walked across the street and managed to see what they were all looking at. The guy who was wearing the Google Glass was talking to someone about this cool TV he was watching. I looked over his shoulder to see an old 12 inch black and white TV flickering behind the store front window. Guess this was something so old it was new to the hi tec guy.

Arrived back at the cabin and Duncan ran out to greet me, the old dogs Bud and Barney were no where to be seen. Then I spotted Barney down sitting on the dock and Bud was laying fast asleep under the Puddle Humper in the shade. I gathered up bags and made my way into the cabin and into the kitchen. I was about to tell the wife I had brought her potato salad when I saw the rising steam coming off the stove and through the haze I cold just make out the wife. Why do ladies have to boil water and make potato salad when it is ninety degrees out? Rather then yell which I knew from the past was not going to make any difference I set the bags down and went into the den. I put my keys on the hook and set my wallet and cell phone down on the desk. Walked down the path to the dock and stepped out of my shoes and went the end of the dock. Turned to face the cabin and just let myself fall backwards into the lake. When I came to the surface Duncan was standing at the end of the dock with a ball in his mouth. Seeing me he opened his mouth and dropped the ball into the water and barked once. I must have had water in my ears because it sure sounded like "Fetch" to me, Yup just another summer day here at Lake Iwanttobethere {2,051,555}

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COOLER TODAY BUT the trade off it is raining some from time to time. According to Sunshine Ray we are suppose to get some strong winds again this afternoon with the occasional pop up thunderstorms. I am thinking it might be better to fish off the dock then take the Puddle Humper out. This time of the year rain is always welcomed by someone, mostly farmers and gardeners but not so much by parents who would rather like to see their kids outside then inside. Has gotten to be that time of the summer that every time I walk into the gardens to check on progress I pick up a hoe. Still working on hilling tatter plants and cleaning up weeds around the corn and in between the rows of vegetable plants. I did eat the first radish and picked the first strawberry the other day. Have been keeping that a secret from the wife as I figure if I am out there doing the weeding so I should reap the benefits. This is the second year that all the strawberries are inside the fence and in raised beds. I no longer have to share them with Bud who would get to them before I could.

The wife is calling me a profiler lately, and I admit I have become one. I have been profiling robins and everyone that fly's by I'm watching to see where they are heading. Dang birds are still trying to build nests around the property and I have no problem with them in trees but just stay away from the boat house and my ladders. Mayfly hatch is in full swing and some of them guys are really c-130 size. Add the dragon flies that are showing up in flights and it is best to walk around outside the cabin with your mouth shut. Elmer says fishing off his dock has been poor with all the bugs but then Elmer does not really put to much effort fishing off the dock. Just the other day I had to remind him that he is running low on sucker minnows.

Skeeters are another matter the big ones that you can spot heading in your direction from yards away have been replaced with what I call darters. The small tiny little skeeters that throw themselves at you like darts. No messing around looking for a patch of bare skin they just dive bomb in and hope to hit a bare spot. I think their bite is worse then the big guys or I guess I should say gals. Ticks have not been seen which is a tad strange but the spiders are starting to appear. Can't walk into the wood shop without have a few silk strands to go through. Of course not as bad as last year, there was a time there where I had a spider hatch in the shop and I was not in there for a week or so. It was like being in an Indiana Jones movie when I did go in, webs and spider line everywhere.

As I sit here in the den and I am looking at falling rain out one window while I see the steaming roof of the greenhouse out another. A brief shower just fell and has now moved out over the lake. I did have on my to do list today to go and look through my wood pile and see what I have on hand. The granddaughter is going away on vacation here soon for a week and it would be nice if I could build the tree house while she and her sister are gone. Speaking of sisters I just found out the other day that the girls are going to be big sisters, that is how I found out from my granddaughter that she is going to have a little brother or sister and I and the wife are going to be grand parents once again! Come spring I will have someone else I can write about here at Lake Iwanttobethere {2,053,614}

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NEVER A GOOD day when you break a fishing rod no matter how many fish you catch. Yesterday it was like a perfect day to go fishing, wind was just right, partly cloudy sky and temperatures a steady seventy-two. Packed a lunch, added some extra chocolate chip cookies and was on my way fishing by two in the afternoon. Arrived at the bay and no one was at the access, launched the Puddle Humper and took the best parking space for the Tahoe and trailer. Pushed the boat out from shore and uncovered the rods of their protective travel sleeves and promptly lost one. I can only figure it must have fallen over the side of the boat and sunk, not a good way to start the afternoon of fishing.

Looked like a top water day so I started of buzzing my way down the shore line. A couple of snake northerns around the pads but no matter what I tossed over the top of the pond weed nothing was biting. I headed to a big bank of reeds and the bites picked up as soon as I got a hundred yards or so in. Black flies were going after my ankles and chewing me up! I got out of the reed/pond weeds but it cost me. I had the new worm rod on the front deck and a reed caught the tip and before I could do anything the front third of the rod got caught behind the bow cleat and it snapped. No sense in swearing as I was all alone so I just muttered some to myself and held the two pieces of a one piece rod in my hand. I got out of the reed bank carrying a bunch of stowaways as the boat was buzzing with flies. I did have a smile on my face when I reached under the seat and pulled out a can of yard guard and sprayed the boat and flies down. Dozens of them fell into the water and I was not about to throw them any life rings.

From there fishing got only worse. Bites were few and far between and I beat up the calm water with a buzz bait and then a frog and even a prop bait. A few days earlier I had banged by wrist against a door and now with all of the casting that was starting to bite me from time to time. I was thinking maybe I would be pulling out early when I had the passing thought of fishing where they ain't. I was fishing a fall pattern and we are only in the second week of July. I headed to the other side of the bay where there are no reeds and no pond weed and starting throwing a spinner bait down the shore line. Ninety minutes later and I had boated sixteen fish and was feeling a lot better. No real big ones, a couple of sixteen inch bass took honors and a couple more northerns went over three pounds, but everyone bent the rod and that is what I had gone fishing for.

I tossed the spinner bait till I was at the landing, hoping for a big one to give me a last cast bite, but it didn't happen. Skeeters were not too bad at the landing, maybe because I had the can of yard guard at the ready. Puddle Humper went on the trailer and I was all secure and headed back to the cabin munching on chocolate chip cookies and listening to a baseball game on the radio. The home team was even ahead in the score so even that was working out. Arrived home well after dark and left the trailer hooked up. Was greeted by dogs and a wave from the wife. Heading for the kitchen and made myself a roast beef sandwich. With the sandwich in one hand and a glass of milk in the other I stepped outside onto the deck and looked at a bright moon and a calm Lake Iwanttobethere, sometimes there are some really good days, even if you do break a fishing rod here at Lake Iwanttobethere {2,061,788}

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THE RAIN IS done, at least that is what I am hearing on the radio here at Lake Iwanttobethere. A pretty good batch of thunderstorms moved by overnight but we here at the lake just caught the outside edge. Still from what I have seen so far this morning enough rain fell to fill the rain barrels and get your feet wet when you walk through the grass. Garden is muddy but I was thinking ahead when I put mulch down around the raised beds. I let the dogs out this morning to do their thing and I headed to the garden and the strawberry bed. With the mulch pathway I stayed clean as I collected enough fresh strawberries for breakfast. As I picked berries Bud had his face up against the fence and I could hear him whining quietly. In the past he has hit the strawberries before anyone else could get to them, but now they are fenced in and he can't get to them. I closed the gate behind me and headed to the cabin, Buddy on my heels. Halfway there I gave in and I took a berry from the bowl and gave it to him. I swear I could hear him smacking his lips behind me as I walked the rest of the way to the cabin.

Yesterday time was spent up on the roof realigning the antenna, the strong winds of the past week had moved it a tad and the wife was complaining she was missing a few channels. I don't watch any TV in the summer so I didn't miss out on anything. Fixing the antenna was uneventful, didn't fall off the roof, ladder didn't fall over leaving me stranded for hours, pretty unusually for Lake Iwanttobethere. Got the ladder out, no robin's nests on it, carried it over to the deck, missed all the hanging flower pots. Leaned it up against the cabin, climbed up to the antenna. Loosen the set screw, turned it a little to the West, retighten the screw. Climbed down the ladder and checked the TV. Everything working just fine. I then went out and sat on the deck waiting for something bad to happen. After thirty minutes I figured I was all clear so I went and put the ladder back and decided I would call it a day work wise, didn't want to press my luck.

Granddaughter number two called me on the phone, she is down south with her parents fishing at the in law's cabin. She called to give me a fishing report as my fishing spotters all are over the county. I sat down on the deck and listen as the seven year old complained about her other grandpa not putting her on any fish. I chuckled some and told her gramp Dave just needs to find some fish and she will do OK, we ended our conversation with a promise she will send me a fish picture if Grampa Dave ever finds any. I walked over to the Puddle Humper and inspected the broken rod from the day before. Took the reel off and looked over the rod, might be able to make a handle for it and turn it into a nice ice fishing rod but as an open water rod it was done for. When the wife was hanging clothes out on the line I snuck the broken rod into the cabin and stood it up with the ice fishing gear.

Today as long is it is overcast and wet out I will begin the search for a new fishing rod. Getting to be that part of summer when the dock bite starts to pick up and I can't very well be fishing docks without a worm rod. I already went through all the rods I have in my mind and I can't figure out how I can reconfigure any for worm fishing. I just need to go out and replace the broken worm rod. Of course this is kind of sudden, most rod shopping takes place over a long winter with several trips to the Masterbaiters Shop or to the General Store and maybe a couple of trips to Al-Mart, one should also spend time looking over catalogs and do some price shopping. I was going to be rushing it if I was going to get a rod before the next time I go fishing. I can only hope for some more bad weather to give me enough time to find a proper replacement here at Lake Iwanttobethere. {2,064,782}

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THIS END OF Lake Iwanttobethere is like flower pot that someone held a watering can over and just forgot to move on. Last night just after supper a thunderstorm came over and just parked right over the cabin and it rained hard for about twenty minutes. I would say we received over a half an inch of rain in that time span as I watched a bowl sitting on the deck fill with water. I of course was sitting on the covered swing watching the rain and not making any effort to get into the cabin. From my vantage point I noticed that I should make a few adjustments to the placement of rain barrels as even though they are full they could be moved a tad to catch more water in them. Of course first off they would have to be empty for me to move them and that has not happen this summer. We are at no loss for rain as we have overcast sky again here today and no rain in the forecast but that is what Sunshine Ray said yesterday to.

Received a fishing update from the granddaughter, Gramp Dave has not put her on fish but she has found her own fish hiding under the dock in the shade of the pontoon lift. At last report she has caught eight including a small bass and is now showing gramp Dave the fine art of dock fishing. She told my she is having fun but I am going to need to restock her tackle box on her return. Yard is soaked and garden is getting muddy. Have lost yet another big strawberry to what I am thinking is the chipmunk. Bad enough that he or she sneaks in the garden to pluck the biggest strawberries but then it leaves half of it uneaten on the bricks that are stacked by the berry bed. It is almost like he or she is showing me what she or he has done. I am thinking I might put a call into the sniper team of Elmer and Vic and have them come down and take out the chipmunk with extreme prejudice.

Already the middle of summer as I see it is July 12th today. Halfway through July already and I don't remember much about June. Grass is deep and the trees are heavy with leaves, what is missing is my apple trees are bare of fruit and it does not look good for the second year in a row for apple pies. Garden has turned green this last week, the combination of rain and some heat is done more in the last week then the last month. Grass needs to be mowed again but not till it dries out. Lake is still up and the water is warming, can hear the jet ski's running n the afternoon. The Friday evening gathering of pontoons in the lake is growing in size. Last night I counted over fifteen of them tied together out in the lake. Kind of like a floating bar out there complete with lights and you can hear the music floating across the water.

At the Resort things are quiet, Vic has the place under control and the little bay has become a place for guys to come and hideout when the weather gets a little ruff on the big lake. We might actually turn a little profit this summer as the Bait Room is doing pretty well and the grill has been just busy enough that Marv still likes it. With the Fellows doing the mowing I can kind of sit back in the wood shop when I feel like it and relax. I think I am finally going to get around and make me some chairs up there. Sometime this week Chuck is going to haul is portable saw mill up and we are going to cut some logs up, Of course saying it is a portable saw mill is just a marketing ploy as the thing is a beast to get on the trailer, but that is what tractors are for here at Lake Iwanttobethere {2,069,149}

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SO GLAD IT is summer and not the dead of winter here at Lake Iwanttobethere. It rained yet again overnight here. If this was winter the snow would have been deep and we would all be complaining. Since it was just rain there are some puddles to step over or through but the rest has disappeared into the ground and the old saying of out of sight out of mind applies. Silent Sunday here at the resort and one sure fired way to keep grown men quiet is to make sure they are well fed. Sun is showing itself from time to time between clouds that look like they could hold some rain. The rain is not in the forecast but Mother Nature never does what she is suppose to do but just does what she wants. There is enough of a threat of rain that most of the guys have their truck windows rolled up.

I was sitting out on the screen porch with some of the Fellows, relaxing and just swirling the last few spoonfuls of strawberry malt in the bottom of my glass. A tourist walked in with I am guessing his wife in tow. We all looked up and he said "Hello" we all replied with various versions of "HIYA" the man went on to say that he was told he can get a genuine throwback BBQ meal here, is that true?" Before answering I looked around the table and the plates and I had to pause and think about what the man said. Before me just a few minutes ago sat hamburgers and hot dogs and bottle soda. The hamburgers were made from ground hamburger and hand formed into patties and placed on the grill over wrist size maple sticks that had been reduced to red coals. The hot dogs were hand stuffed at Ma and Pa's grocery and were unwrapped from white butcher paper. Connected in links they had to be separated before they could be placed on the grill.

Ketsup and mustard sat on the table in glass bottles and a bowl held the home made pickle relish. Onions came from the garden and they to were diced or in big round rings and in a bowl. A canning jar held pickles for the hamburgers and if you wanted cheese on your burger you would take the wood handled knife and cut a slice off the block of cheese that farmer McDonnell's wife makes. Hot dog buns and the hamburger buns came from our very own kitchen and they were fresh baked just this morning. One of the Fellows, Steve had loaded up his hot dog bun with onions and relish and ketsup and mustard and was telling everyone who would listen that these are the best hot dog's money can buy. Elmer pointed out to him that they would be even better if he had remembered to put the hot dog in the bun.

Bacon for the burgers was hand smoked over hickory or we also had some smoked over Maple. Some guys can tell the difference in taste and like to mix some of each on their burgers. French fries are hand cut and deep fried to order. Cut from home grown garden potatoes you can hold them out and they don't sag. Lake Iwanttobethere Root Beer in frosted mugs sat on the table and Vic was still nursing a Bupple Up soda from his private stash. Marv had come out with his cart of ice cream and the green malt maker. Scoops of vanilla ice cream were dropped into the mugs of Lake Iwanttobethere Root Beer but I opted for a strawberry shake. Marv scooped ice cream into the metal shaker and added malt and just the right amount of milk. I produced some strawberries from my berry patch and a few minutes later Marv was handing me a malt with whipped cream and two cherries on top. I was trying to spear the second cherry in the bottom of my glass and I was thinking to myself what the guy had said, "Throwback BBQ" we eat like this every summer here at Lake Iwanttobethere {2,070,359}

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BEEN A BUSY week and it is only half over with. Granddaughter two returned from her mini vacation with her parents down at Gramp Dave's cabin. The big event there is that she hooked and then lost a big bass right off the dock and under the boat lift. Story goes she was fighting the fish and yelling for someone to bring a net. Her aunt thought she was just joking and took her sweet time getting out of the lawn chair and getting a landing net. The granddaughter gave up on waiting and tried to pull the fish up onto the dock by using the line and of course the line broke and the fish slipped back into the water. Granddaughter had a melt down and her ma told her she was done fishing for the day. Thing is the granddaughter was not mad at her aunt or at even losing the fish but she lost her lure!

So the granddaughter was here for a few days before she sets of on yet another vacation, this is the big one as at the end of the week she is headed to Dollywood. Now I think you are thinking Dollywood is for old people and fans of country music but they also have one heck of a water park and the granddaughter lives to be in the water. I was told she will call me everyday, if she remembers and will keep me up to date. I know she is packing four swimsuits so I am not counting on getting to many telephone calls as they are going to be there for a week. The two days she spent here she made me work. She came over and asked if I had anything for her to do and I told here I had a million things that need to be done. She asked where the list was and I pointed at my head. She shook her head and told me I better start writing them down.

We worked on the list, at least the first few dozen of things that needed to get done. Yesterday when her mother came to pick her up we got in a little bit of trouble because she, the granddaughter was standing with one foot on top off the green house roof and the other on top of the ladder jamming the garden hose down the down spout clearing out maple seed pods that were blocking it. Her mother came around the corner and looked up to see her daughter a little wet and water spraying everywhere. The daughter gave me a look and I just shrugged my shoulders and told her it was on the list. We also stacked firewood and mowed the lawn, chased the chipmunk out of the strawberry patch a few times and saw a red fox running from Chuck's next door. Didn't see any chicken in his mouth but we called Chuck and told him he better count his birds just to make sure.

It was not all work as we need restock her fishing tackle box for her and I found a couple of replacements for the fishing lure she lost to the big bass. According to her the fish was longer then her arm and its mouth was bigger then a Miracle Whip jar. I was impressed and told her so. We then put new line on her rod so it will not happen again, her losing the fish. We picked strawberries and pulled up radishes. She planted yet more flowers with her grandma and we watched a couple of movies. Honey I Shrunk the Kids and E.T. I was surprised that she had not seen either one before. I must admit it has been twenty years since I have seen them so there were like new to me. This morning I have already been out in the garden, plucked some strawberries for breakfast and pulled some radishes for supper. I have it down on the calendar as a fishing day but the granddaughter left me a list of things I am suppose to do. Never seems to be enough time on nice days here at Lake Iwanttobethere {2,076,505}

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SATURDAY MORNING HERE at Lake Iwanttobethere and it looks like it is going to be a Skeeter kind of day. I was out checking the garden already this morning and I didn't even get pass the gate before I was attacked. Overcast and humid out, the forecast is calling for some showers and maybe even a few thunderstorms. I am thinking if the wind does not start blowing I just may go fishing. A couple of days ago the chipmunk who has been eating my strawberries was eliminated by the crack sniper team, this morning when I went to check my berries and I found a small rabbit in the lettuce. Rabbit saw me and took off zig zagging through the potatoes plants like he was being chased. I figure that the red fox that I have now seen twice in the past few days will make quick work of him.

Granddaughter two is now on vacation and I miss her already, she must have known that I would because I found an envelope on my desk with my name on it, Papa. I opened the envelope to find she had left me a work list written in purple crayon. It only had one thing for me to do and it was written big enough to cover the entire page. PLAYHOUSE is all it said. I am hoping with some luck and no rain that I will have it pretty much done before she returns. Yesterday I did level the area and put some blocks down for a foundation and spent the afternoon cutting a steel door down to playhouse size. That in itself is a long story but I don't want to relive. Today I have to go down to the Lumber yard and see Ms Luan about some 2x4's and some plywood for the floor.

Middle of summer here and Friday nights are not quiet, with all the humidity in the air the sound of stock car races from the county dirt track can be heard way over here. No sooner does the road construction crew shut down for the day then we can hear the sound of the stock cars. For a few minutes between races it actually gets quiet around here and you can hear birds which for some reason sound very loud when sitting on the deck. I suppose they to have to raise their voices in order to be heard. Duncan has been outside most of the day with me, acting like my guard dog he is not too far away as he is waiting for the chipmunk to return. He sits by the driveway and looks at me and then back to the section of gravel where the chipmunk would run by on its way to the garden. The old dogs Bud and Barney are enjoying retirement I think. Most of their day is spent sprawled in front of the door of the cabin where you have to step over them to get inside.

I have been busy though, it is not all about sitting on the deck and watching someone else do work. All the firewood has been cut and split for the season and it stacked to the roof of the wood shed. Even cut another cord just in case this winter is bad like the last two have been. I am hoping we are done with that and I will just have a head start on the following season's wood pile. Grass is green the trees are full of leaves, bugs and birds everywhere and no snow. Kind of like summer is supposed to be like. Sunsets are getting to be colorful as there is a fire well to the north of us that is pumping smoke into the air. I guess down in the big city they would call it smog but here it is just something for the sunlight to shine off of and reflect on the waters of Lake Iwanttobethere {2,077,966}

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REINFORCEMENTS ARRIVED YESTERDAY although they have probably been here the whole time, I just did not notice them. I am talking chipmunks! Yesterday afternoon I was working on the foundation for the grand kids play house and I was taking a water break. I was sitting on the deck and I watched as a chipmunk darted out from under the Tahoe and made a beeline right for the fence that protects my berry patch. The nerve of the little dude, in broad daylight it was running across the yard for what I am sure he thought was a free meal. Duncan was laying on the deck but as soon as he saw that I was interested in something he was up and looking for what I was looking at. A quick "Hunt em up" sent Duncan flying off the deck like he was diving in the lake and the chase was on.

The chipmunk saw Duncan coming and made a hard left turn and darted under the gate and into the garden. I had a surprise for him though. The plants are all big enough that Duncan is not going to step on anything and hurt them anymore. With the chipmunk chirping and hiding in the lettuce I open the gate and Duncan looked at me for the OK. "Hunt em up" and Duncan flew into the fenced in garden and with nose down the chase was on again. Down the lettuce row a right at the tomato plants and then another right and some zig zagging through the tatters. The chipmunk exited the garden by the squash and Duncan had to come back to the gate and run around the fence to continue his pursuit. To much time was lost and the chipmunk made it to the high grass and Duncan lost him. We spent the rest of the afternoon listening to the chirping of the chipmunk or I think chipmunks as they worked on a new raiding plan.

The day started off with the threat of rain and even though it got dark a few times nothing fell. Plants needed water so I went around to the rain barrels and filled the big water sprinkler thingie. While the bottle filled up with water I would take the hole and work on the weeds that seem to grow quicker then the plants. Now that I know that the bunnies have had a litter that is something else I have to watch in the garden for. Too bad the rabbits don't eat weeds, they would be welcomed in the garden. So I watered all the gardens and the flower pots scattered all over the yard and made sure the tobacco plants got a big drink. Last week I fertilizer them and they got a good soaking and I think they grew a foot since then, too bad I can't say the same for my corn.

Son called me told me he and one of his buddies were going to take their boats fishing, asked if I wanted to add my boat and we could have a little contest. I was outside when I was on the phone and I looked at the once again dark sky overhead and saw the tree tops were swaying pretty good and told him I would think about it. I kept working on the foundation and there were a few times when I thought I was going to have to put tools away but it never did rain. By five I was at the point where I needed to go to town and get some more wood and no sooner did I put the tools away then the wind stopped and I saw some blue sky. I am thinking if I had not watered the gardeins then it would have rained for sure. I ended up just sitting on the deck with my chair pointed at the vegetable garden and watching. Duncan was at my feet and he slept with one eye closed and the other staring at the garden. Might have been a good afternoon to go fishing but there is always another day here at Lake Iwanttobethere {2,084,169}

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FORECAST IS CALLING for it to hit ninety in the shade and even higher then that if you are out in the middle of Lake Iwanttobethere in an aluminum boat at midday. Now maybe where you are ninety is no big deal but we don't get many days like that around here so we are never really prepared for them. A couple of feet of fresh snowfall and minus twenty temperatures, no big deal but hot weather, things come to a standstill around here. I have plans today and they do not involve any kind of work. I was up early and watered gardens and picked strawberries. Saw a few had parts missing, no doubt from the renegade chipmunks. Sprayed down the yard with the tick spray, not yet time for its scheduled treatment but the wife had a couple of ticks on her so I thought I would move up the application. I checked the dogs and they were OK so I figured the wife was just in the wrong place. I also had to move some metal roofing that I had stored away and they were covered in spiders. Don't know what it is about spiders but a lot of guys are not fond of them and you can include me in that group. Tick spray should take care of the spiders, I'll let the roofing sit a spell before I check.

Since I was out in the yard I saw Mark the mailman coming up the shoreline. As you know during the summer most mail is delivered by boat. Normally I don't see much of Mark in the summer as he comes by early. I went down to the dock and stood alongside Barney who was already down there. I looked into the water and saw that Barney was watching a few blugills just in the shade of the dock and I watched as they just kind of stayed in one spot, nothing moving but their fins as they held their position. Mark glided up to the dock and I pushed the boat off with my foot before it could hit the dock. HIYA's were exchanged and some small talk. I noticed Mark was dressed for the hot day wearing his postal shorts and shirt half unbuttoned. Add the flip flops and the woven round top safari straw hat he looked rather comfortable. Mark told me he would like to chat longer but he needed to get off the water early today and with that I pushed him away from the dock and he headed down to Elmer's.

I brought the mail into the cabin and put it on the desk, nothing there that needed my attention. I pause a second to look at the outdoor magazine that came. It had a cover on it telling me it was my almost last warning that my subscription was about to end. I think I just renewed it two months ago. Barney stayed down at the dock, Buddy was sleeping in my bed but Duncan was up and about looking for something to do. Told the wife I was heading to the Lodge and Duncan hearing the word Lodge was out the door and waiting at the Tahoe for me. Climbed into the Tahoe started the engine and turned on the A/C don't have a clue if it works, will be the first time I used it this summer.

Arrived a short drive later going through the road construction without having to wait for any trucks or backhoes. Parked in my spot and came through a closed back door. Lodge was dark with not any of the drapes pulled open. Just the light from the bar and the yellow glow of the popcorn machine. I let my eyes adjust to the limited light and I could hear the sound of the chugging air conditioner and I could feel the welcomed cool hit my skin. As my eyes adjusted I saw that several of the stools at the bar were already filled with roofers and of course the big round table held the Fellows. Looks like I was not the only one planning to hang out in the air conditioning of the Lodge here at Lake Iwanttobethere {2,085,867}

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FEELS LIKE A hundred out as both Elmer and Vic told me that and they are old guys and have experienced enough hundred degree days in their lives that I tend to agree with them. Yesterday at the Lodge it got so hot that the A/C unit could not keep up so we went to the back up plan, we moved into the ice storage house. Don't take to long sitting on some sawdust over a stack of Lake Iwanttobethere Lake ice to cool you off. Matter of fact some guys had to step outside because they were getting the shakes from having their backsides frozen. We had a keg of Hamms out there on blocks of ice and the first few mugs went down pretty quickly. After that you learned to pace yourself and I was sitting near the door getting the proper amount of draft off the ice and the heat of the day from the open door.

Storm warning went up late afternoon as Sunshine Ray was on KCUM radio talking off a line of thunderstorms marching from the far side of the state heading this way. He was pretty sure we were going to get wet as the storm front was a couple of states wide. Hearing this the Fellows thought that they should head back to the Resort and take their crane down. With the threat of lightning they didn't want their crane to get struck. I might have mentioned the crane in the past but I don't remember. They got it last summer and we did some bartering so they could store it up at the Resort. Not really going to use it to do any building with just thought it would be a good idea to have one around. I must admit having your own crane is nice especially when you want to lift beds through the second floor windows of the Resort Clubhouse.

Last fall there was some talk of using the crane to support a deer stand but that proved to be unsuccessful as a single stand hanging from the crane tended to sway a lot in any kind of a breeze. Next idea was to just lift an entire ice shanty and use that as a deer shack in the air. That worked a little better wind wise but it would rotate still making it hard to shoot from. Fellows gave up on the hunting stand idea and the crane has been sitting till it started to get a little hot this summer. Now they have a rope tied to the hook and use it as a big swing out into our little bay. Fellows finished up their last couple of rounds of beer and went to the Resort and lowered the crane to the ground. From what Vic told me on the phone they did not have any problem getting it down, getting it up again is something else.

This morning finds me without telephone service and the lights were down for a while to. I slept right through the big storm that came through around three or so. I didn't think much of it as I went out to the garden to pick strawberries and the grass was already dry. Something ate one of the broccoli plants, I'm thinking a rabbit. The wife was none too happy when I told her. Picked my first ripe raspberry, about time. Rain is gone but the wind sure is blowing. About twenty degrees cooler then yesterday so it is doable weather to work on the playhouse today. I will have to wander over to Elmer's dock and see if he has any sucker minnows in his bait bucket. Maybe toss a line out and give Barney something to watch besides those bluegills under the dock here at Lake Iwanttobethere {2,086,583}

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A PRETTY QUIET morning here at Lake Iwanttobethere. All I hear right now is the singing of a robin through the open window here in the den and the panting of Duncan under the desk. Not much of a wind so the wind chimes are quiet. Almost noon here as I write this Bud and Barney are already deep into their afternoon nap. Have been without phone service for two days, didn't miss it at all and as a matter of fact I turned off my cell phone so I would not have to answer it to have someone ask me if my phone service was back on yet. The mother in law unable to call her daughter drove over instead. They chatted in the kitchen while I did some weeding in the Garden of Weeding. I brought in a bowl of strawberries and rinsed them off in the sink and then sat them down on the kitchen table. The mother in law somehow got the impression that they were for her and she proceeded to eat the bowl of strawberries. Of course as she did she made several comments about how these berries are so fresh and sweet and so much better then the berries you have to pay for at Ma and Pa's Grocery.

Lucky for me we are having a bumper crop of berries this season and every morning I go out and pick fresh berries for breakfast. The raspberries are ripening now so soon I will be changing over to them for breakfast. I can see some jam in my future, maybe even some strawberry jam if I can keep the mother in law away from my pickings. Been busy the past few days, Granddaughters play house is coming right along on schedule. Walls are all up, sheeted and the metal roof is on. Waiting on my order of cedar siding from down at the Lumber Yard. Granddaughter will be back from her vacation on Monday so I will be having my first inspection that afternoon I am thinking. Afternoon's have been spent working on the playhouse and evenings have been spent burning scraps of left over wood in the fire pit. Garden is making up for lost time as everything is growing including the weeds. Last of the radishes have been pulled and now we are harvesting spinach and lettuce.

Have not been out fishing much the past couple of weeks, that time of the summer when you have to make a big push to get work done around the cabin. Having the playhouse to build is just something extra on the list of things to do. With all the rain the grass needs mowing as it is still growing. Usually during the summer I have grand kids here all the time but this summer they are staying home. There goes my cheap labor and now I have to do all the garden weeding and watering all the flower and gardens myself. Having installed a couple of more rain barrels and with all the rain the barrels never get drained and I can't use the hose without the wife looking at me over the top of her glasses and reminding me of all the money we are saving by buying rain barrels. Them were my words this past spring.

Stormy Clearweather is calling for a nice dry spell coming so it looks like I will be having no excuse for not doing some staining on the cabin and maybe even the deck. I do have some days penciled in for some fishing as we can't spent all summer working and not fishing. Of course I am spending more time just sitting on the deck and enjoying the quiet mornings here. Have even been going a few days without turning the computer on which is good. There might be some stretches here where the fishing reports are few and far between, Just means that I am fishing or laying on my back watching clouds sail by here at Lake Iwanttobethere {2,090,039}

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RAINING HERE AT Lake Iwanttobethere this morning and I am torn between saying it is welcomed. A few drops were falling this morning when I made my way out to the berry patch to pick a handful of strawberries for breakfast. I was the last one up and the dogs had already been outside so when I opened the door and they saw the rain falling they just turned and walked away from the door. Overcast sky and a few drops were falling, the grass was wet and I thought there for a sec I should have put on a jacket or at least worn a hat. I let myself in through the garden gate and moved leaves around looking for some nice plump red berries. Leaves bounced from the weight of rain drops hitting them but they were few and far between. I had brought a quart size yogurt cup out with me and it was about half full when the rain drops starting falling harder and there were more of them.

Closes spot to get out of the rain was the under construction play house and I made my way there just as the shower turn to rain. Last night I spent some time in the playhouse as I was waiting on a thunderstorm. I had a cigar burning and I was sitting on a bench, the idea was I was checking to make sure there were no leaks in the metal roof that I had put on. I smoked the cigar and watched the thunderstorm just pass to the South out over the lake and except for a few drops nothing really fell. Today as I sat on the bench the metal roof was loud from the rain drops pounding it. No leaks so that was good and the big overhang that I had put on was keeping any water from falling where the window was going to go in. The play house is small only 6x6 and the roof is only a foot over my head. The sound of the rain hitting the metal was pretty loud and I can only imagine what it will sound like when it gets its first thunderstorm down pour. Hail should be a real blast to listen to inside it, might have to keep some ear plugs in there.

Sixty degrees out and with the falling rain I leaned back against the wall and watched it rain through the cutout for the big window. I think the grand kids will like the place once it is done. I figure I might as well enjoy the view for now as I am pretty sure it will be a "No boys allowed" once the granddaughters start decorating inside it. Guess it will be payback from when the grandsons sit inside the wood shop with the roll up door rolled all the way to the top. During rainstorms they will sit on overturned five gallon buckets just inside the door and out of the rain. I didn't do it on purpose but the big window of the play house is directly across from the roll up door of the wood shop. I can hear yells of "Taste Great, Less Filling" being shouted back and forth between the two groups even though neither one will know what the cheer means.

Showers are in the forecast for most of the afternoon, just enough rain to keep you from working outside and enough to get you wet if you are in a boat. I do like the cooler weather as I am not a fan of the hot summer, matter of fact give me a nice sunny fall day year round and I would be very happy. Shower ended but big drops from the Maple tree still fell and rang off the metal roof. I made my way back to the cabin and the wife asked me where the berries were. I looked into my plastic cup and it was empty, guess I had eaten them as I watched the rain fall here at Lake Iwanttobethere {2,092,646}

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  • Your Responses - Share & Have Fun :)

    • LakeofthewoodsMN
      On the South Shore...  The focus for many this week is the ongoing deer hunting season which is a big tradition in these parts, even for avid walleye anglers.  There were some that either already harvested their deer or are more into catching fall walleyes than hunting.     Those that are fishing are taking advantage of the unseasonably warm weather and excellent walleye and sauger bite that is happening across the lake.  Cold weather is in the forecast in the upcoming days and weeks so that is also getting many excited. The best depths on the south end of LOW are 22-28 feet of water.     Vertical jigging with frozen emerald shiners is catching most of the walleyes, saugers and jumbo perch.  Depending upon where on the lake you are fishing, some slots and big trophies are in the mix as well, but most reports are talking about good numbers of eaters.    Jumbo perch are coming in good numbers this fall which will serve ice anglers well.  Watch out for an occasional pike or even lake sturgeon mixed in with the walleyes.      There are good numbers of walleyes and saugers across the south shore which is setting up nicely for early ice.   On the Rainy River...  There continues to be good numbers of shiners in the river, and consequently, there are good walleyes in the river as well.     Walleyes along with saugers, pike and some sturgeon are coming in up and down the river.  Most walleyes are being caught in 10-25 feet of water in various stretches of the river.   Jigging with live or frozen emerald shiners is the key. Some anglers are also still slow trolling crankbaits upstream to cover more ground and find fish. Both methods are producing solid results. Sturgeon fishing remains strong.  The catch-and-release sturgeon fishing is open into the spring when it changes to the "keep season" on April 24th. Up at the NW Angle...  As temps are getting colder, most are in the woods hunting and not fall fishing, however, for those who bundle up, fishing continues to be excellent.     A nice mixed bag with walleyes, saugers, perch, pike and crappies being caught. Very good muskie fishing with the colder water temps and shorter days.  Some big fish and some good numbers are being caught amongst the islands.  Both casting and trolling is getting it done.  
    • gimruis
      I hunt in the rifle zone so I don't have a need to use a shotgun to hunt deer, but I would be looking at this if there was ever a need to.   There could be state legislation introduced next summer that eliminates the shotgun zone completely.  It has bipartisan support.  Wisconsin removed theirs years ago and MN is usually later to follow.  They've tried to pass it more than once and it came up just short both times.  Probably just a matter of time.
    • Wanderer
      Oh, h e l l no! 
    • leech~~
      Screw that, here's whatch need!  😆   Power-Shok Rifled Slug 10 Gauge 766 Grain Grain Weight: 766 Shotshell Length: 3-1/2in / 89mm Muzzle Velocity: 1280
    • Wanderer
      20 ga has become a real popular deer round in the last 5 or so years.  The rifled barrels are zinging those sabot slugs with rifle like accuracy out to 100 yards easily.  Some go so far as dialing in for a 200 yard shot but really, by 150 they’re falling off pretty low.   I have a single shot Ultraslug in 20 ga that shoots really well at 100 yards.  Most everyone I know that has bought a slug gun lately has gotten the Savage 220 in 20ga.  Problem can be finding the shells you want.
    • leech~~
      My son always bugs me about getting a nice light over-under 20ga for grouse hunting.  I say Heck no, I'm getting a 3 1/2" 10ga so I can put as much lead in the air that I can!!     So, I'm keeping my 12ga.  
    • 11-87
      That’s almost exactly what I was thinking.  Have slug barrels for both   One for turkey and one for deer.      I have a 20ga mosseberg as well. (Combo came with the scope but never used.   I always liked the 12 better
    • leech~~
      Wanderer is right on the money and covered it well.  I was wondering too if you had a slug barrel for one of your guns?  If so you could make that your slug gun with a scope, and the other your turkey gun with the Red dot.  As you can afford it. 
    • Wanderer
      Kinda depends on if you want magnification or quick target acquisition.   More magnification options and better accuracy with a scope.  You get what you pay for too so get comfortable with a budget for one.  Tasco and Bushnell work but I find they lose their zero easier, have low contrast and don’t gather light well in low light conditions.  That said, I’m still using one I haven’t replaced yet.  Vortex has been the hot brand for the past several years for bang for the buck.  Good products.  Nothing beats Swarovski though.  Huge dough for those.  Burris is another decent option.   There are some specific models for shotgun/slug hunting in the economy brands and bullet drop compensation (BDC) reticles.  Based on experience I’d recommend not falling for that marketing ploy.   Red dots are usually lower magnification and easier to get on target.  Reasonably accurate but don’t do well with definition, like searching the brush for your target.  I put a HAWKE red dot on a .22 for squirrels and it’s been good.  For turkey, that’s probably the route I’d go.     If your slug shots are normally not too far and too brushy, I’d think a red dot could work there too if you’re only buying 1 scope.  You’ll be better off dimming the reticle to the lowest setting you can easily use to not over shine the target and get a finer aim point.   If you don’t have a slug barrel, you might appreciate one of those.  I had a browning with a smoothbore slug barrel that shot Brenneke 2-3/4 inch well.  The 11-87 would well fitted with a cantelever rifled barrel. 
    • 11-87
      Looking for recommendations on scope or red dot    I basically hunt turkey and whitetail, live in southern MN. So it’s all deer/ shotgun    looking to add a scope/ red dot as my eyes don’t work like they used to to with the open sights.    my gun options are 11/87 12. Browning BPS 12    not looking for the most expensive or the cheapest    pros and cons of one over the other
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