REUTEMANN ROAD POEMS: A RECOLLECTION

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A RECOLLECTION

My father taught me how to fish

Casting his lure to the pickerel weeds

Where slender shadows would be seen

That could make a savory breakfast dish

When fried well coated with cornmeal.

At other times we trolled for bass

While I rowed and he trailed his line

Baited to make a small mouth decide

It could not let that target pass,

A treat too tempting to decline.

I learned to hold the quarry close,

Slide my hand gently down the fins,

Wait for the tail to cease to swing,

Then softly work the barbed hook loose

So that it could be baited again.

At night the horn pout were our choice

With bulbous heads and smooth black coats

And sweet pink flesh we’d come to know.

Their tentacles we tried to avoid.

Our lantern brought them to our boat.

My father and I were often at odds.

I wasn’t the boy scout he might have preferred.

I did not always heed his words.

But I can cherish this memory now

Of me at the oars and him in the stern.

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One response to “REUTEMANN ROAD POEMS: A RECOLLECTION”

  1. ST Avatar

    you are an amazing scout!

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