Traveling America By Van: Off To Cajun Country

The Gulf was on one side, beautiful oak trees and the Waffle houses were on the other side, and the miles passed by most pleasantly. We came to a sign welcoming us to Louisiana, and the vibe changed immediately. Salt marshes extended off to the south. The fisherman in me started drooling, something that wouldn't stop until we left the state.

Fishing Friday: Mighty Sheepshead Dare Anglers to Catch Them

“Something keeps nibbling,” he said. “I can barely feel it, but it keeps taking my shrimp. It must be really tiny.”

“It may be much bigger than you think,” I replied. With the tide falling hard, small crabs drifted along with the flow. I scooped several with a net.

“Try this,” I suggested, hooking a crab about the size of a quarter on a jighead. “Don’t cast it. Just flip it a few feet upstream and let the tide push it back under the dock. Keep it next to the pilings. When you feel a little weight, set the hook.”

Fishing Friday: Jerkbaits for Saltwater

The unique thing about saltwater fishing is that there are a multitude of baitfish available for predatory fish to feed on. Finger mullet, pinfish, pigfish, croakers, pilchards, and menhaden are frequently on the menu. If it swims in saltwater, it lives a life of fear from being devoured by bigger fish!

Wildlife Watching Wednesday: The Industrious Honey Bee

Everyone is familiar with honey bees, right? They make honey! And who doesn’t love honey? Actually, honey is just one of the substances produced by honey bees. They also produce beeswax, bee bread (eaten by young worker bees) and royal jelly (for the queen bee). Typically, though, just the honey and beeswax is harvested from honey bees by humans.

Living the Van Life, Sienna Style

When my high school friends and I were high from beer, pot, or both, one of the topics of conversation was, "If you only had a year left to live, what would you do?" When you're 17 or 18, that topic seems very remote. In May 2019 (long past 18 years old) I was diagnosed with an incurable lung disease called pulmonary fibrosis. Didn't like hearing this, but didn't expect to live forever, either. Susan (best friend and spouse) and I bought tickets to fly to Europe. BAM! Pandemic hits! No Europe until who knows when.

Fishing Friday: Is Lead Dead?

The fish catching ability of lead-head jigs is legendary. I’ve caught fish in freshwater and salt with lead-heads. I’ve caught fish with lead jigs so small they could be flicked with a fly rod and so heavy they could be classed as a lethal weapon. Many experts opine lead-head jigs to be the numero-uno fishing lure of all time. They are probably right.

So why the title of this column: “Is lead dead?”