Casowasco is a tree lined retreat on the southwest shore of Owasco Lake, one of the picturesque Finger Lakes in central New York. Carved deep by retreating glaciers from an earlier age, Owasco, we were told, was the Native American name for “the crossing,” a trail that traversed the north end of each of the lakes.
The lake plunged to hundreds of feet of depth just off the Casowasco point, such that when I scuba dived the area it was like I was descending along an underwater cliff. I never made it deeper than 92 feet, which was plenty of depth to explore the cove and retrieve antique bottles and other such artifacts. Owasco lake is known for its ample stock of Lake Trout, Browns, and Rainbows, as well as perch, crappies, and bass.
Summer camp sessions ran from Sunday afternoon until Saturday morning. Individual lodges would feature themes. Camps were led by clergy volunteers and staffed by volunteer lay members from their church, with summer staff filling in where ever there was a need. I took my turn as a counselor at Older Elementary camps up at Mt. Tabor, connected to the main campus down below by the notorious Jacob’s Ladder, 164 steps of near vertical assent. Not my favorite, even though it sported “Counselor’s Bluff” where one could stop and catch your breath.
I staffed a tennis camp. No thank you; it got miserably hot out on the tennis courts. And, no, I had never played tennis. Not a recipe for success. I worked a bike camp, but, being a big guy I found the 35 miles a day on the road a non-starter. My hemorrhoids thank you.
Then, there was fishing camp, led by Charlie who was the pastor of the large United Methodist Church in Geneva, NY. Charlie had been leading the fishing camp for years before my arrival, and would continue on until I took it over ten years later in the mid-1990s. Charlie was mischievous, always had a twinkle in his eye, and had a heart for the kids and their safety.
He fished from a boat he won in a raffle at the St. Mary’s festival. Gambling, being a vice dis-allowed by God fearing Methodists, Charlie justified his win by saying it was his way to practice ecumenism and foster good relations with our Roman Catholic sisters and brothers. Bishop Yeakel turned a blind eye, so Charlie kept his boat.
Charlie fished for Lake Trout by pulling copper, and out fished everyone else by the bucket full. Pulling copper is an old method of fishing. Copper wire was unwound from a spool that replaced the turntable of an old Victrola. Semi-stiff and weighted, it would hang straight down from the boat.
A large silver spoon with hook was attached to the end. Jerking it along the bottom gave the appearance of a wounded bate fish. Lake trout pounced and Charlie would real them in. He’d return with three five-gallon pales chuck full of Lakers, which would result in an all-camp tutorial on how to clean fish and a lesson on wrapping and freezing the tasty filets.
Captain Bill was a charter boat operator we recruited to be on staff. He was an expert at trolling for trout. Bill’s service was to repay the pastoral care he and his family received when his younger son was dying with brain cancer. For years, Captain Bill launched his own 35 foot charter boat, supplied his own fuel, opened his heart, and taught campers about life, faith, and fish. Quality, bar none.
Mark, a young clergyman and a lifelong friend, would bring his boat and teach kids to jerk for perch and bass along shore and near the shallow end of the lake. Later years, Bill, my Lay Leader from Dresden, and, Vito, an auto parts store manager from my later church, would join us. Both were also expert fishermen, especially when it came to crappy, perch and bass.
Pete was a former camper enrolled at Cornell studying fishery sciences. Pete lived for fish, studying their environment, and protecting their habitat. He was smart as a tack, an expert in the field and an academic behind a computer screen, teaching me how to hand code my church web page back before Al Gore invented the internet.
Pete was a fly fisherman, second to none. He and Les (see my pervious post about Les sulking in the shrubs listening for appointment scuttlebutt) taught us all how to tie flies, cast, and stalk fish in every kind of setting. I’d frequently wake at 5 am to spy Pete fly fishing, standing in a row boat just off shore in the fog at morning’s first light. Pete’s passion for flyfishing was contagious. He taught me everything I know.
Arrangements were made to take the camp to the Onondaga County Fish Hatchery, where we were met with members of the local flyfishing club and the owners of the local Orvis store, who kindly supplied all the rods and equipment. Club members taught the campers how to catch trout. When a trout rises to strike a floating fly, it is like sticking your finger in a light socket! It is electrifying to experience the strike, set the hook, and reel it in. Arrangements were made with the director of the hatchery such that we could keep all the fish we caught, but, once we left the property, we were on our own.
Driving back to Casowasco that night with tired out campers and about 200 pounds of illegal trout in our trunk, we were careful not to break any speed limits. Cleaned outside the camp kitchen and frozen in the walk-in, each camper was able to take home Saturday morning at least ten pounds of Lake trout filets.
Every fish was a blessing.
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When I pushed off the side of the pool to begin my laps this morning, I had thought my reminiscence of Casowasco had come to an end. Oh, there are a thousand of stories I could share, some better, some worse, some funny, others, well, let’s not mention them in print. I’m full of it, afterall. The feedback has boosted my pride, but, to be honest, my ego is aging and the need for popular acceptance is waning. So be it.
The water was cool. My lane this morning was mine alone, meant for solitary contemplation, meditation, prayer. The water pulled and resisted, giving me a glimpse of the underwater world, that, absent of chlorine, could easily support … fish.
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Pete was the apple of my eye when he graduated from Cornell. There were no openings at that time with New York State Department of Environmental Conservation, but with his impeccable credentials and enthusiasm, it was easy for Pete to find a staff position with the State of Wisconsin. He was married the summer before he left for out west in the middle of a fly-fishing stream. Though Pete assured me he’d take his vacation to attend my fishing camp each year at Casowasco, it was a sad goodbye as he packed his car with clothes and fishing gear and drove off to new adventures.
God knows how much we all loved Pete. He was like a little brother from another mother.
Pete was killed in a motor vehicle accident just a few weeks after he started his new dream job. His sobbing mother told me that his car was t-boned at an intersection that broke his spine and killed him instantly. Would Mark and I conduct his funeral? It was hard to believe. All of us reacted with grief and sorrow.
It was a bone-chilling cold February day we gathered at Casowasco’s unheated lakeside chapel to celebrate Pete’s short but bountiful life. Snow flakes drifted slowly to earth. One’s breath hung in the air. It was so cold the slide show we created from years of fishing camp froze and refused to cycle. Pete’s ashes were in an urn on the altar. Mark and I led the service, the family spoke, we eulogized, we prayed, we cried. Faith and eternal life were woven like a thin strand of 6-pound test fishing line.
At the final benediction, Mark and I carried the urn, led family and friends outside to the shore at the point. With Owasco’s waters gently lapping, we shoved off in a rowboat and interned Pete’s ashes back from where they came, into the waters from which he was baptized, welcomed into the loving arms of our God of the ages, the earth, the sky, the seas.
Each time I return to Casowasco, I think of Pete. Of fishing camp. Of all the dearly beloved souls God has included in my circle of life. When I stand on the point and look out at the lake, I know the trout are rising and Pete is near. What a blessing. What a blessing.