
This spring training has been slightly different for the Red Sox, and for the team at TroutHunter. The Sox have a new manager this year, and had veteran battery mates Tim Wakefield and Jason Varitek retire at the start of spring training. With tearful eyes and heavy hearts they announced their retirement from the game they had so passionately made a career of playing. Both retiring players made a point to thank their teammates and made it clear that the hardest part of walking away was not walking away from the game that they loved, but rather from their teammates who shared a common goal, and a common passion..
It is no secret that the guiding can be a grind. The season is relatively short, but the hours are long and the physical toil can be intense. Don’t believe me? Try walking ‘Will’s Run’ in the Box with two clients in your boat during high spring flows, or rowing through the Chester backwaters in 30mph south winds, or drag a raft down the Lower Mesa slide—then row it all day. Pure physicality aside, I have yet to meet a guide who does not cherish every second of every day spent on the water. And although that time on the water is what stands out as the most obvious job perk, it is each mornings’ interaction with the other guides that I miss most during the winter months. Any given summer morning can find Marty ‘the one-man party’ freestyling over Lewis’ impromptu beat-boxing, perhaps a cameo from fly fishing rock-star Travis Smith, Jake practicing some off-color joke that he’s going to tell at lunch (again), Phil talking up his latest off-the-map excursion, Rydberg and Jonathan pouring over the batch of flies that came off their vices the night before, McDaniel studying maps of Harriman and talking about obscure fish like ‘Houdini,’ Tyler and Ryan trying to clear cobwebs and put pieces back together from a rowdy night, Jim trying to save their lost souls, or Brad, Zach, and Brandon speaking their own language about the mating and migratory patterns of elk and other large game species. Really, more than anything, it is the camaraderie of the team and that electric atmosphere in the shop on summer mornings that is missed during the off-season.

While Jake will be missed, the TroutHunter team will persevere and the season will come nonetheless. Just as those affiliated with the Red Sox, TroutHunter executives have been active in free agency, bringing in someone who is no stranger to the TroutHunter team, and no stranger to filling big holes. Former college linebacker Derrick Hobbs will join the T.H. team this year. Derrick has been an Island Park resident for a number of years, and has guided extensively on the South Fork, the Teton, and the Henry’s Fork. This year, he’ll finally have the right stickers on his boat.
So with an unseasonably warm March almost behind us, and hopes of an epic Salmonfly emergence barely a month away, my thoughts now turn to the anticipation of things to come….Salmonflies, March Browns, Caddis, Midges, and Blue Wings…but I cannot help but wonder, did Jake do enough to get the call from the guide Hall of Fame?? I think the waiting period in Major League Baseball is five years from the date of retirement. I only wonder if Jake has some Brett Favre or Michael Jordan or Andy Petitte in him and if this retirement is just a practice run…
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