
Things have been hectic around the office since I returned from my two-week vacation this past Monday. Not only have I had to deal with an overflowing e-mail in-box and other editor-type matters, I've also been getting my ducks in a row for my next big fishing adventure: the Broadback River in northern Quebec.
Actually, the impending Broadback trip explains why I largely took it easy (in terms of fishing) during my family vacation last week at Sea Isle City on the South Jersey coast. I had intended to do a lot of surf fishing, but my elbow was having none of it (my followers on Twitter will already know that I'm suffering from lateral epicondylitis, more commonly known as tennis elbow or, as in my case, fisherman's elbow). My youngest daughter, Molly, and I caught a few tiddlers in the surf (see photos), but I felt it best to save my elbow for the Broadback.

The trip gets underway tomorrow morning with the 1,100-kilometre drive north to Chibougamau in northern Quebec. From there, we'll meet our hired floatplane at 10 a.m. on Saturday for the 65-air-mile jaunt to our secret put-in spot on the Broadback. I'd tell you where exactly, but the trip instigator, Gord Deval, would kill me.
Gord has been making the pilgrimage up to this stretch of the Broadback for more than two decades now, a journey immortalized in the late Paul Quarrington's hilarious Fishing With My Old Guy (Gord being the Old Guy). In that this may well be Gord's final trip to the Broadback (he's 80 years old now) and given that Paul died of lung cancer earlier this year, it just made some kind of poetic sense to me that I should finally accept Gord's longstanding invitation to tag along. With us will be two other hardy souls, Scot Benson and David Johnson.
Back to my elbow. The reason I want to save as much tendon as possible (I have my latest round of physio and acupuncture later today) is that we'll be fly casting nine weights into fast water for, with any luck, lots of brook trout approaching 10 pounds. That's the plan, anyway. Even if the fish aren't that big (hell, I'd be happy with a five-plus), I'll still be casting-and I'll need my elbow.
In all, we'll be camping and canoeing up there for eight sleeps, with the plane returning to pick us up on September 5. As I will be out of blogging and tweeting range, expect to see a big gap in my communications until we return. Stay tuned for my report after Labour Day.
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Have you made plans for National Fishing Week yet? It’s coming up fast, kicking off this Saturday, July 2, and running through to Sunday, July 10. Even if you don’t participate in an official event, it’s a great time to take a kid fishing or introduce someone new to the sport. That is, after all, the main point of National Fishing Week: to get more Canadians outdoors and
Awesome. Sweet. Dude. Those are the three new words my Dad says he learned during our four days of fishing at northern Saskatchewan’s Milton Lake Lodge (we got back to Ontario on Tuesday). That’s hardly surprising, given we were hanging with Nick Pujic, the hip young principal of Fly Max Films and Fly Nation TV (think surfer culture meets fly fishing), and our guide Naoto Aoki.
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///// FOLLOW ON TWITTER: @OutdoorWalsh ///// Outdoor Canada Editor Patrick Walsh grew up fishing and hunting in Bracebridge, Ontario, where he began his magazine career in 1983 as assistant editor of Muskoka Life. Since then, he has worked for a variety of media, both in Canada and abroad, earning numerous writing and editing awards. In both 2011 and 2005, the Canadian Society of Magazine Editors named him Editor of the Year, while Outdoor Canada was honoured as Magazine of the Year. Learn more: www.outdoorcanada.ca.