A Young Angler’s Introduction to Mono County Fishing in 1949
By Steve Odell
“In Mono county
opening day of fishing season was almost a holiday.”
I was nine
years old and my buddy was Woody Reynolds, who was eight years old. He
was a Paiute Indian. He was being raised by his Aunt Florence
Reynolds. His Grandmother was Nellie Reynolds, a full-blooded Paiute
Indian who was born 1890 and lived in the Lee Vining area all her life. Nellie lived about 5 miles from the town of
One early
summer day Woody and I were hanging out around his house when Nellie asked if
we wanted to go fishing. Needless to say, we both were very happy to go
fishing. Nellie, Woody and I loaded into Nellie’s' model A ford
sedan. Woody and I rode in the rumble seat. We stopped by my house so I
could get my fishing pole, a bamboo fly fishing rod with a fly fishing reel
filled with yellow fly line. Nellie told us we were going to the
We followed her and she walked about a quarter of a mile and suddenly stopped in front of a three foot high pile of twigs. She removed the top 6 to 8 inches of the cone-shaped pile. Suddenly the mound was alive with millions of large red ants. She began digging with her bare hands into the mound with the ants swarming her hands. She removed a handful of twigs and placed them into her basket. She called me over to her. She told me to put my hands into the ant nest and grab some of the ant eggs. I could not see any eggs, but I saw millions of mad red ants. I told her no, I didn't want to get bit by the ants. She said, "Don't be a baby!”
I said, “No!” She grabbed both my hands by the wrists and placed them into the ant nest. I began screaming and crying figuring she was torturing me. She let my hands go with biting ants crawling all over them. I began shaking the ants off my hands and arms while screaming and crying in pain. She again grabbed my wrists and held them.
“Steve, shut up.” I stopped yelling. She looked into my eyes and said, "Tell me how much those ant bites hurt?” I suddenly realized that the bites did hurt, but not that much.
I sobbed, “Not much.” Woody stood there, not saying a word, knowingly, as he had gone through the same ordeal on an earlier fishing trip. She said, “Okay, get some of the ant eggs out of the nest before the ants take them underground. We both went to work scooping eggs and twigs out of the nest, placing them onto her basket. When the basket had a large pile of twigs and eggs on the basket she said that it was enough. She told me to put back the top of the nest that she had set aside. I asked her why? She said, “If we didn't the ants would abandon the nest. With the top replaced we can return to the nest to gather ant eggs another time. The ants bring the eggs to the top of the nest in the morning to get the warmth from the sun, and as afternoon arrives and it cools, the ants start taking the eggs back down the nest underground for the night where it keeps the eggs warm through the night.”
She picked up the basket, which was about two
feet across and began flipping the eggs and twigs into the air. I watched
and asked her what she was doing. She said that the twigs were lighter
than the ant eggs and would fall off the basket leaving the ant eggs
to fall onto the basket. After a while she collected the eggs and
put them into the paper bag. We returned to the car and went back to Highway
395 and drove to the top of Conway Summit (9800 ft.) and turned left onto the
She led us to the other side of the lake to a rocky area where we sat down. Her fishing gear was an old metal telescopic rod with a casting reel filled with cloth line. She had a 1/8 size sinker and a # 8 or 10 hook. She told me to rig up with the same amount of weight and size of hook. The ant eggs were about the size of a cooked grain of rice and the same color. She placed the hook through the middle of the ant egg and kept adding eggs until the hook was filled. She made a cast, with the sinker making a large splash, about 50 feet out. There were a lot better sitting spots around the lake so I asked her why she picked this spot? She said, “If you look closely you can see where there used to be an old stream bed. The lake is deeper in the old stream bed. The fish liked it there.” She sat so still and motionless that I thought she had fallen asleep. Suddenly she reared her pole back and began reeling in a fish. She landed fish after fish in this manner, about every five minutes. I hadn't caught a fish. “Nellie, why haven’t I caught a fish, when I am using the same bait?”
She said, "You are fidgeting too much. Sit still. Don't move.”
There were a few other fishermen nearby, and nearly everyone found a reason to
walk by and admire her fish and ask what she was using for bait. You
should have seen their faces when she told them "ant eggs".
Where do you buy them they would ask? She would answer, "I
don't". The limit then was 25 fish. Nellie ended catching her
limit and I caught about 10.
My other
fishing mentor was Frenchie Davis. I never knew his last name. I only knew him as Frenchie. I was nine
years old, and Frenchie had asked me if I wanted to learn how to
fish. Naturally I said yes. He said that fishing season opened in
about three weeks. I went home and asked my mother if I could go fishing
with Frenchie on opening day. My mother paused and quietly weighed my
request. Frenchie was a bachelor.
He liked his drink, and he usually drank to excess. Frenchies' job was to
collect garbage from the restaurants and take it home to feed his hogs, all three
of them. Finally Mom said, “Okay, but you have to be home before dark,
and you tell Frenchie that I said "No drinking while you’re with him!”
I ran and found Frenchie and told him I could go. I had trouble sleeping
that night, and waiting for fishing season to open dragged on forever. In
Mono county opening day of fishing season was almost a holiday. The day
finally arrived and I loaded into his car, and away we went to
Needless to say I was not aware of anything
but getting there and learning to fish. We arrived at the dam area of
As a boy growing up in the Sierras, we would have many friends and family vacationers in the area, and they would have me guide them and show them how to catch the wily rainbow trout in the clear mountain streams and lakes. I used the unorthodox techniques I learned from an old Nellie and the skills that I learned from a some times sober old man, to show how I was able to catch the trout. I learned how to present natural bait by wading into a stream and floating the bait into and under hidden places along the stream. I learned how to find the place to fish on a lake shore by looking where old stream or runoff streams entered the lake.
On a trip in 1954,
my brother-in-law, on vacation from
Some fifty
odd years later in 2007, I found myself standing in the same stream with a
similar outfit trying to repeat that day.
It didn't happen. Next time!