I made my way south in the spring, nursing my old Ford down Baja 1 to the Meling Ranch turn-off near the mouth of the Rio San Telmo. Four hours and sixty miles later, with the Ford’s temperature gauge flirting with H, the dirt road leveled off among pines.
- Two years ago, when I first began my search for Salmo nelsoni, the Baja rainbow trout, I contacted Don Albright, a longtime Baja aficionado who regularly leads friends and members of the San Diego Natural History Museum on field expeditions into the San Pedro Mártir National Park. (Feb. 26, 1987)
I rolled out a new roof on the shed, and I cut in a window that looks out on the lemon tree.
- I grew up in Southern California suburbia and hated gardening. It was called yard work, which pretty much explains why any kid would feel about it as I did. The brunt of the work was in the form of mowing the lawn, edging the lawn, trimming around trees in the lawn, and weeding. (June 11, 1987)
Today, some three years later, we couldn’t possibly afford the down payment, much less the mortgage.
- My wife and I bought our house on Fire Mountain in Oceanside during the heat of the most recent real-estate frenzy. Today, some three years later, we couldn’t possibly afford the down payment, much less the mortgage. It’s a little house, set directly on dirt. Around 1100 square feet in all, with a big detached garage. It was once a farm shed for an adjacent five-acre avocado grove. ( Feb. 15, 1990)
Spider was killed soon after we moved, as husband and wife, to a dreamy little place up on Fire Mountain in Oceanside.
- From day one, as best as I remember it, I was led to believe I should despise cats. Both my father and grandfather had been bird hunters in Nebraska before emigrating to the coast, and like a lot of men, they shared the opinion that the only worthwhile pets were dogs because you could train them on the basis of their fundamental disposition to please, a virtue utterly lacking in the psychological makeup of cats. (May 3, 1990)
By law, one can keep up to two dozen chickens within the San Diego city limits, as long as they are no closer than 50 feet to any occupied dwelling.
- It was one of the weekends when my wife announces, out of the blue, that she is miserable, and except for our son, our marriage, essentially, is a disaster. I was building a chicken coop. We had both agreed we needed a new one ever since giving some friends our last flock. (Sept. 20, 1990)
The following evening I hiked down to Black’s Beach, spotfin croaker on my mind.
- Is surf fishing the domain of the little man? Let’s nip this one in the bud. Surf fishing breeds intimacy with fish, the sea, and freedom. The spirt of the game is its refined simplicity. (December 5, 1985)
Scot found a quiet spot on a knoll overlooking the southern edge of San Elijo Lagoon, and he stood there and thought about why he was hunting without Petey.
- The problem with dogs, don’t you know, is we usually end up having to bury them. Petey died in May. The way Scot Harrison tells it, his dog was having a hell of a time getting around anymore, and the day before he had Petey put to sleep, he’d found his dog crying at the foot of the stairs leading down to Table Tops Reef in Solana Beach. That’s close to 300 stairs, and by the looks of Petey, he’d tumbled down most of them. (July 24, 1986)
Sometime during the night, Gary Keating had given up on surfing and on everything else besides.
- A recent commitment to Christianity, some argued, had failed to deliver the goods. A way with women, said others, had never been one of Keating’s strong points. Yet perhaps the best hypothesis I heard was offered by Eric Orloff, “Keating hadn’t been surfing much the last two months.” (Dec. 4, 1986)
Scott Sadil, who wrote for the Reader from 1985 through 1990, moved to Oregon, where he has taught in public high school and written books. Sadil’s Fly Tales: Lessons in Fly Fishing Like the Real Guys, was published by Barclay Creek Press in August, 2010. A collection of his fiction, Lost in Wyoming, was published in July, 2009, also by Barclay Creek Press. Lost in Wyoming was selected as a finalist for the 2011 Ken Kesey Oregon Book Award in Fiction.