Did we mention this column won an award?

Welcome to the award-winning fishing column, “Tangled Lines.” This award-winning column by the award-winning Patrick L. Sullivan recently won a second-place award from the New England Newspaper and Press Association for a sports column in a weekly newspaper with circulation up to 6,000.This award-winning fishing column has won the third-place award twice before. We urge readers to hang on to their waders, because clearly this column is in the middle of a dizzy ascent into the stratosphere of sports columns written for weekly newspapers with circulation up to 6,000.This fine award comes in the form of a certificate, suitable for framing; the warm glow of peer recognition; and no money.But fishing is its own award, or reward.Trout season opens in New York state April 1. It is typically celebrated by standing in a river, in the rain, idiotically waving a rod around, for an hour or two, followed by heavy drinking.Massachusetts trout fishing is mostly year-round, officially, and I’ve often wondered why the commonwealth doesn’t use that fact in its promotional materials. “Massachusetts — We Never Close, except for Bunker Hill Day and Evacuation Day and Hiram Snodgrass’ Birthday (inventor of the coal-powered truss) and …”And in Connecticut the official opening day of trout season is the third Saturday in April, which this year is April 20.Over the long, cold, gray, fishless winter I tortured myself by watching Davy Wotton’s “Wet Fly Ways” DVD over and over. Wotton is a Welshman who teaches the three-fly rig to numbskulls like me, and the DVD is an eye-opener. It is also more interesting than basketball, which I realize is not much of a recommendation, but explains why I watched it so many times.I also read Bob Wyatt’s “What Trout Want: The Educated Trout and Other Myths.” Wyatt cheerfully demolishes the idea that trout are big thinkers and places the burden of catching (or not catching) fish squarely on the angler and the presentation.An old high school friend informed me that he bought a Tenkara rod and was trying it out in Colorado.Tenkara is a Japanese fly-fishing method that involves a long, telescoping rod, no reel, flies with backward hackles, and a man in a rubber monster suit who demolishes a model of Tokyo.My friend promptly broke the tip of the rod. Apparently that is not a big deal, since he ordered another for $7.My feeling is I already have a lot of stuff, and I want to see this Tenkara in action before I commit.I got a head start on tackle fondling this year, and am pleased to report that everything is so well organized that I can’t find anything.This is the year I retire a couple of lines, which I noticed are starting to look like the tires on the Fish Car.This is also the first year of the Fish Car, which in this case is a 1996 Subaru station wagon. At 225,000 miles it is just starting to feel broken in, but eight years of constant cigar smoke has rendered the car’s interior so disgusting that only those gripped by the madness of trout fishing can possibly stand it.The trade-in value, according to experts, is $11.87.I have wanted a Fish Car ever since first reading Robert Traver’s “Trout Madness” 30-odd years ago.I plan to drive it on back roads, dirt roads, and no roads until it collapses.This concludes this edition of “Tangled Lines,” an award-winning sports column in a newspaper with circulation up to 6,000.

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