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BSU

The decline of one of America's most iconic game birds
Photo: Matt Turner (modified from original).

I’ve been angry at our state conservation agency for a while now. I’ve been holding back on the fury, but I can’t take it any longer. Conservation agencies are charged with ensuring populations of game animals and fish are kept at sustainable numbers. And they’ve failed miserably regarding my favorite game animal.

A day on the water

Connecting on Idaho's Salmon River
Photo: BLM

Verlon Herndon showed up at the put-in on the Salmon River wearing a hat with earflaps, a growth of dark stubble, and a faded vest with his name and phone number Magic Markered on the back. A haze of sleep deprivation clung to him like a scratchy cowl, although he was trying hard to shake it off with pulls from an oversized travel mug. It was as clear as the Idaho sky that the new was off Verlon, and off his driftboat, too.

Head of steel

Fishing with a steelheader
A steelheader’s commitment stamped on his license plate (photo: Kris Millgate).

I have no idea what I’m doing. I’m okay with that because I’m with Crusty Craig. Well, that’s what I call him secretly. He’s really Craig Lannigan of Lewiston, Idaho and I love everything about his crustiness. From his wirey beard resembling steel wool to his worn hands reminiscent of a steel mill worker, Lannigan is the finest crust on the Clearwater River.

​“I fish it 100 days a year,” Lannigan says. “I love what it gives me. The steelhead is just fantastic. The thrill I get from doing that is just out of this world to me.”

7,000 miles and on

Fly fishing Alaska's Dalton highway
Photo: M. Fairbanks

We crested Atigun Pass on the Dalton Highway as the Arctic sun slid seemingly sideways across the cloudless northern sky. Before us stretched the true Arctic, that desolate swath of wind-weary, wilderness muskeg fit for no reasonable human, yet home to mankind for thousands of years.

Here, where trees don’t grow and nude, rocky peaks rise abruptly from the swampy bottoms, caribou and muskoxen wander the willows. Arctic foxes dive into leafy caverns created by ground-hugging vegetation, rangey moose boldly navigate exposed river bottoms and … a pipeline runs through it.

The tarantula's worst nightmare

The tarantula hawk is a marvel, but one you should enjoy from a distance
Photo: Johnny Carrol Sain

Something dark and heavy was picking its way through the frostweed blooms. The copper colored wings and curled antennae added beauty as well as menace to its form. It placidly fed on nectar along with one of its cousins, a thread-waisted wasp. The thread-waisted wasp was dwarfed. This burly midnight-blue beast was easily as long and nearly as thick as my thumb. It was a tarantula hawk, the largest species of wasp in Arkansas.

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