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January
11, 2006
A version of this, in which Hoagy was changed into moi, ran in
the July, 2005 Travel + Leisure magazine.
Hoagy Carmichael Jr. was up to his waist in the Grand Cascapedia,
the Pebble Beach of salmon rivers, on Quebec’s Gaspé coast. With
the effortless grace and unerring precision of a Zen archer,
he cast a loop of line a hundred feet out over the amber green
water. The loop uncurled in slow motion and softly, unobtrusively dropped
his gawdy Lady Amherst fly right into a riffle where a big
Atlantic salmon had just rolled. Then he watched intently, his left hand
on his hip, elbow crooked, and neck craned slightly forward, to see
if the fish was going to take it.
“It doesn’t get any better than this,” he called to me, trying my luck
further down Little Camp Pool, one of the 87-mile-long river’s
150 named pools. The laid-back, clubbable Hoagy’s father composed
some of the immortal jazz standards, and he gets royalties
every time a new version of “Stardust” or “Georgia on My Mind”
is recorded. This has enabled him to indulge his passion for this
highly ritualized aristocratic blood sport. Every summer he comes
to this majestic river, as do some three thousand salmon. They come
back to spawn in the river where they were born, after years of epic,
uncharted peregrinations in the North Atlantic.
There are 23 salmon rivers on Gaspé Peninsula, and 150
in Quebec, but the fish that return to the Grand Cascapedia are a particularly
robust strain of Salmo salar, the biggest in Canada, or anywhere except
Norway’s Alta River. They average twenty pounds. Three forty-pounders had
been already caught this summer. The record is still the 54-pound fish
caught in l886 by R.G. Dun, of Dun and Bradstreet, the New York credit-checking
firm.
Hoagy is writing a history of the river, so he is on top of these facts.
“Sometimes I think of all the interesting people who have fished this pool,”
he told me : “Chester Arthur, Jimmie Carter, Mike Mansfield,
Bing Crosbie, Benny Goodman, the hockey great Bobby Orr, the sculptor Joel
Schapiro, various Vanderbilts, three generations of Fricks. Just recently
I found the diary of Dr. Weir Fisher, an eminent Philadelphia surgeon.
Sitting in his canoe in l896, he wrote, ‘Ah ! the sweet green peace
of it all.’ To me that is a perfect summation of what this river is
about.”
The shimmering reflections of the towering, closed-packed trees crowding
its banks brought to mind the thumping dactylic hexameter of Longfellow’s
Evangeline,
This is the forest
primeval. The murmuring pines and the hemlocks
Bearded with moss
and in garments green indistinct in the twilight
Stand like druids
of old, with voices said and prophetic.
This was the wilderness
he was describing. But to me there was nothing gloomy about it. It was
radiant, glorious, this maritime boreal forest—nature in its purest, cleanest,
almost untrammeled splendor.
“People have enormous respect for this river because of its rich heritage,
its big fish, and its beauty,” Hoagy went on. “You feel privileged when
you take a fish from it.” For me it was privilege enough just to be here.
Whether or not I a caught a fish was secondary. In fact, I was secretly
hoping I didn’t. There are so few of them left, and they come such a long
way, down from the outer banks of Greenland and Labrador, guided by their
noses, which imprinted on the river’s unmistakeable geochemical olfactory
signature before they took to sea, as six to eight-inch par. In the best
of worlds, these fish
should be left in
peace while they go about the critical business of reproduction.
But a whole subculture and economy has evolved around them. Their hopes
for survival have now come to depend totally on the forbearance and
wise management of the people who catch them, who want their to be enough
fish to catch next year. This is one of the ironies of conservation,
and has been since the movement began, in the late nineteeth
century, as an alliance between the birdwatchers and the hunters. The trout
and ducks’ most powerful advocates are sportsmen’s organizations
called Ducks Unlimited and Trout Unlimited, and the much more imperiled
Atlantic salmon look to the St. Andrews, New Brunswick-based Atlantic Salmon
Federation and locally to the Cascapedia Society, whose memberships overlap
heavily.
After the French lost their colony on the Plains of Abraham in l760, and
New France became Canada, the British administrators arrived with their
rods and reels and guns and racquets and golf clubs. It didn’t take long
for word to reach their ears about the humongous salmon in
the Grand Cascapedia. Sport fishing on the river is documented back to
the l840s, but it didn’t really take off until the Marquis of Lorne,
the Governor General of Canada from 1878 to l883, and his wife, Queen Victoria’s
daughter Princess Louise, steamed down the St. Lawrence River from Montreal
and around the Gaspé Peninsula to the Baie des Chaleurs, which
the Grand Cascapedia pours into. There they were met by the Micmac Indians
who had been living at the river’s mouth since time immemorial and trapping
and spearing the fish at night with torches. Their settlement was called
Gesgapegiag, “Where the River Widens.” It is still there, home to 550 Micmacs.
Cascapedia is a corruption
of it.
The Micmacs poled the party from Montreal up the treacherously
strong and swift river in long birchbark canoes. The Marquis of Lorne was,
in the words of his biographer Sandra Gwyn, “a member of the homosexual
set” who “lacked the capacity for sustained concentration,” and Princess
Louise was the lady Di of her time, a great outdoorswoman who had “a favorite
guide” who posed in the nude for her (and that is not all, according to
gossip); she rewarded him with a ranch in Alberta when she went back to
England.
Princess Louise secured for a few pounds an exclusive ninety-five-year
lease of the river for the governors general, and a fancy fishing
camp called Lorne Cottage was built for the couple fourteen miles
up the river. The Micmacs were forbidden to hunt the salmon—poaching what
were now the governor general’s fish was punishable with jail time--
and many departed for factory towns in New England. The bottom fell out
of their culture, and they remain deeply demoralized and marginalized to
this day. While I was there, the chief’s teenage daughter killed herself.
A jaunt in the Canadian wilds became the in thing for English nobles. “Camps”
was a facetious term for the seven splendid compounds that
were eventually built on the Grand Caspedia. It was hardly camping out.
Each camps had its staff of guides, cooks, servers, shoreboys, cleaners,
smokers (who filleted your catch into orange-pink slabs and hung them to
cure in the beech-fired smokehouse) to attend to your every need.
An elaborate camp and pool etiquette evolved. Special flies were designed
: besides the Lady Amherst, the brainchild of a Rochester investment
banker named George Bonbright, there were blue charms and green highlanders.
Thick, sixteen foot long bamboo rods were made to play the huge fish
(although Hoagy and I were using single-handled eleven-footers, as most
anglers do now). The reels went from wood to brass to hard rubber and nickel
silver and are now mostly aluminum. A good one can easily set you back
a thousand dollars.
The next governor-general, the Marquis of Lansdowne, built an equally fancy
camp that he called New Derreen after his estate in Ireland. In four seasons
he and his guests caught 1245 salmon. Then Lord Stanley, who created the
Stanley Cup, built Stanley House, an 18-bedroom Queen Anne mansion, on
the bluff overlooking the bay because his wife couldn’t stand the black
flies up the river. Then came Lord Aberdeen, followed by Lord Minto, who
relinquished the rights to the river in l898 to a syndicate of American
millionaires, “high-living, cigar-puffing products of the age of unfettered
capitalism,” according to one writer (Robert Stewart), who “pursued
salmon with the same relentless zeal as they pursued the almighty dollar”
(according to another writer, quoted but not named by Stewart). These plutocrats
founded the Cascapedia Club, which controlled the river exclusively until
the early seventies.
Lorne Cottage was acquired after some decades by the obese, carrot-haired
South African gold and diamond merchant Charles Englehart, who was the
inspiration for James Bond’s hideous archfoe, Goldfinger. Ian Fleming was
a regular guest at the camp. After Englehart ate himself to death in his
early forties (he was well over three hundred pounds), Lorne Cottage passed
to his five daughters. The one who was married to Oscar de la Renta had
just left, and her snitsy sister Susan, who lives in Missoula, Montana,
was there, “in camp” now. We ran into her husband, Roy O’Connor, at Mrs.
Guest’s pool. It was named for Mrs. Winston Guest, the daughter of Henry
Phipps, Jr., Andrew Carnegie’s business partner. Her brothers built the
400-foot-long Camp Chaleur in l922, which was burnt to ground by two disgruntled
locals on a snowmobile in the dead of winter fifty-five years later. The
incident precipitated a Steven King-like tragedy that no one in the local
community wants to talk about, “and I wouldn’t either, if you ever want
to set foot here again,” a woman advised me.
New Derreen’s present owners are Royal Victor IIIrd and Walter Shipley,
the ex-c.e.o. of Chase. Tracadie has passed from Frank Goelet, who owned
“half of Manhattan,” to his nephews. Hoagy and his seven guests were staying
at Middle Camp, the most accessible of the seven private camps. “But you
still have to know someone to get in,” he told me.
Leonard Schlem, a refreshingly unsnitsy Montrealer, had just acquired
Horse Island from the ex-wife of the previous owner (she had gotten the
camp in the divorce but didn’t fish and had put it on the market). Schlem
has a chain of 305 health clubs in the U.S. and a minority interest in
200 more in Europe, and 18 in Europe. “My twelve-year-old boy just caught
a fifteen-pounder,” he told me when I visited him and his American wife
Sandy one afternoon, “and his sister caught a seventeen-pounder last week,
but if we don’t take care, by the time they get to be my age, there will
be no fish.”
In the seventies access to the fish in the Grand Cascapedia was somewhat
democratized. The Parti Québécois, which was trying to secede
the province from the rest of Canada, succeeded in gaining public access
to some pools, and the MicMac sued for the restoration of their aboriginal
fishing rights and won the right to trap the equivalent of 350 large fish
at the mouth. The MicMacs also acquired one of the seven camps and started
an outfitting company whose native guides take fishermen on the river.
But also in this decade the number of large Atlantic salmon started to
go into steep decline, from an estimated 800,000 to 200,000 today.
I journeyed to the headwaters of the river, in the Chic Choc Mountains,
which are in the interior of the Gaspé Peninsula and are almost
4000 feet high, a series of tabular peaks of volcanic origin that were
sheered off by the glaciers. The two branches of the Grand Cascapedia come
down from them in ever-deepening crevices, plunging over a series of tilted
terraces, sliding sideways in glossy metallic sheets of water with such
tremendous force that a few years ago a couple fishing one of them
was swept away and drowned. It’s as wild as Alaska back up in there, more
moose and caribou and bears and mountain lions than people. The fish spawn
up to 17 Mile Falls, 125 kilometers from the mouth, where I found a game
warden named Joshua Philbrick sitting in a little cabin overlooking the
river gorge and carving a thunderbird mask. A 26-year-old Micmac, Philbrick
had lost both this parents to alcohol and drugs when he was little and
had become a traditionalist; he was in training as a healer. “I had reached
the point where I didn’t know who I was,” he explained. “A lot of people
are walking around who don’t know who they are, because they don’t
understand their connections, their relations. We believe that all the
animals are our relations. Every animal has a medicine.”
“What’s the medicine of the salmon ?” I asked.
“Salmon have the stimulation not to give up,” Joshua said. “They travel
all the way across the Atlantic just to spawn here. If people have that
connection with Salmon, they get his medicine, and don’t give up. But people
are losing touch with the Earth. They don’t have that feeling any more.
We’re all part of the vicious cycle now and are doing vicious things. These
rich, self-centered people who are forking up for conservation—it’s blood
money. Six companies are clearcutting the trees up here. They think they
can take it away and it will come back, but once it’s gone, it’s over.
That’s it.”
The erosion from the clearcuts is the most serious immediate environmental
threat to the survival of the Grand Cascapedia’s salmon. It is washing
down into the river and silting over the gravel bottom that the salmon
need to spawn. With the trees gone, the spongy, mossy floor of the forest
is drying up and less rain is falling, and what does is running off more
quickly, so the river is much lower than it has ever been, and its temperature
and biology are changing. Most of the sediment is carried, suspended in
the rushing water, all the way down the river, being precipitated
into the bay, which is filling up with mud; there are only a few channels
left that the salmon can swim up.
In l981 the Cascapedia Society took over the management of the river. It
is a tri-cultural organization of the camp owners, the Micmacs, and
the residents of St. Jules and Cascapedia, villages on either side
of the river six miles up composed of English-speaking descendants
of “empire loyalists”-- American colonists who refused to join the revolution
and fled north-- mixed with Francophones whose fugitive Acadian ancestors
had managed thirty years earlier to avoid being deported to Louisiana.
The Society is trying to get the logging companies to clearcut only 35%
and not 50% of the sub-basins in the headwaters, and to observe the law
about not cutting within 500 meters of anywatercourse, which they have
been flagrantly violating, and to put in better culverts where there roads
cross streams and most of the erosion is taking place. It also tried to
get the Grand Cascapedia declared a catch-and-release-only river, but the
local Gaspesians vetoed this because they want to keep their fish. So at
this point releasing is strongly encouraged but voluntary, and you can
keep up one fish per day, and a total of two. Last year 2800 large fish
were counted in a diving census. This was twice as many as they year before.
About 1000 were caught, and 300 were kept. Some of them were given to the
society’s hatchery, where 350,000 fry were raised from their eggs and milt
and released into the river. But very few of these will make it to adulthood.
Predation begins the moment the alevin, as the first-year fry is known,
hatches from its egg, laid in the gravel at the well-oxygenated tails of
the pools. Kingfishers, otters, brook trout (which are also sea-running),
bald and golden eagles, ospreys, black-backed gulls, and above all
mergansers take a huge toll. The par, or second-year fry, leave for
the sea, to return as two-to-six-pound grilce and later as
full-grown adults (three or four times if they make it to the end of their
12-to-14-year lifespan). But once in the open ocean, they are subject to
61 factors that are contributing to the species’ dramatic depletion.
So under the circumstances, it seems ecologically irresponsible not
only to keep the fish, but to even be fishing for them at all, except that
much of the money that the society makes from the anglers goes to the conservation
effort. Hoagy told me about a new threat to the salmon : the Micmacs are
trying to get the right to catch the “black salmon,” the fish that spend
the winter in the river, after spawning, living off their body fat and
gradually turning from gleaming silver to a dull slate, as they head back
out into the Atlantic the following May. “Nobody every bothered with these
spent fish before,” he told me. “It would be really horrible if this is
allowed to happen.”
But here I was, guiltily enjoying myself casting streamers into Little
Camp Pool. “This can be a fabulous pool,” Hoagy told me, and the
following week he caught two big fish in it. But this afternoon they weren’t
hitting anything. Why they ever do at all is a mystery, because they don’t
eat while they are spawning. Hoagy’s theory is that flies remind
them of when they were par and grilce (which I did catch two of)
and snapped at anything that moved. It’s just like that song of your Dad’s,
“Some Days There Just Ain’t No Fish,” I suggested.
“But they’re there, Alex,” Hoagy said. “That’s the silly part of it. Quite
often the fly will be six or eight feet on either side of the fish, and
he won’t move.”
“You’re covering the fish,” one of our guides, Barry Coull, whose father
had also been a guide, told me. “If he don’t take it, there’s nothing you
can do about it.” And Homer Labrett, our other guide, said of my casting,
“I seen worse,” so it wasn’t a question of my technique.
But I wasn’t complaining. The experience didn’t need to be crowned with
the ultimate, vulnerable prize to be complete. I didn’t mind being skunked
one bit.
INFO
To get on the river,
you need a license from the Cascapedia Society, in Cascapedia, across the
river from St. Jules, which also has a nice little museum. Call Phyllis
Caldwell at 418 392 5079 to book a guide cum 26-foot-long Chestnut or Sharpe
canoe (specially designed for this river and the nearby Restigouche and
Matapedia), who will take you to some of the most legendary and exclusive
pools, which are fished in rotation with the private camps and which you
can’t get on on your own. This runs $650-900 a day (all prices in Canadian
$), depending on which sector of the river you fish. You can also
get time on some of the upper pools for $60 dollars a day without a guide
by submitting your name to a drawing held on the first of November the
year before. Time on these pools may still be available on 72-hour notice
if you call Phyllis. There are also other rivers with not as large salmon
and trophy-sized searunning brook trout, like the Nouvelle, the Petit Cascapedia,
and the Bonaventure, and further south, in New Brunswick, is the
Miramishi, which has a run of 70,000 salmon and vast stretches of
good public water.
Gear :
Sexton & Sexton,
in St. Jules, has everything and then some. It’s heaven for the serious
salmon fisherman and the Orvis/Abercrombie & Finch/Patagonia aficionado
in general.
Lodging
Rivendell, owned and
superbly catered by Cathy Dimeck (418 392 5560), the last Dimeck in Dimeck’s
Creek, just above the Gesgapegiag, the MicMac, at the mouth of the River.
$450 a day all included. Not kid-friendly.
Auberge La Maison
Stanley, Lord Stanley’s spectacular camp on the bluff of the bay,
Wainscoted throughout
and little changed in 120 years, run by a lovely old couple, M. and Mme.
Edgar le Blanc, 418 759 3969, $60 a night with continental breakfast but
no other meals. Kid-friendly and path down to private beach, as with the
even more spectacularly sited
Cascapedia Lodge, also
on the bluff, closer to the mouth, run by a nice French-Canadian couple
who don’t speak much English. $125 a day with full breakfast. Other meals
extra. View across the bay from the bluff here is worldclass. In July and
August the Baie des Chaleurs has the sultry lushness of the Great Lakes
of Central Africa.
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