I do not have a pic, but I can tell you all about my most memorable experience, I grew up fishing, my dad owned a tackle shop , built boats at one time, and fishing was his everything. we fished SA Bass as kids with him , me and my boet, we got SA colours in art lure fresh water fishing , the three of us. we fished inshore, of shore, estuaries, everything, he showed us the way, and our whole lives me and my boet have always been fishing. My boet lives in Sodwana, and he use to do charters, but now does bore holes and water systems, but still gets on the water every time he gets a gap. I moved to Mozambique, and did 6 years of fishing before settling up in the cape where I sell boats , so needless to say , boating and fishing is everything. unfortunately time waits for no one, and my Dad is getting old. He is currently battling Cancer, and still has a hard time ahead of him. he came down to the cape a couple of months ago, and due to back pain, and other health problems he does not get to go surf launching with my brother in Sodwana anymore, but I managed to get him on a boat in false bay , launched out of gordonsbay, and got on a small reef just off macassar. spend most of the day sitting in pouring rain , piss cold, catching and releasing undersize reef fish with my dad. and as much as he was in pain eventually , he didn't want to go back, because he didn't know when or if he would be able to catch fish off a boat with me again, so we sat in pouring piss cold rain for hours, and caught small reef fish one after the other, just enjoying being on the water, and catching fish , because in essence it is who we are, and what he gave us, and something that will always bring us together.
I hope his Cancer is cured when he is finished with chemo in two months time, and that he is spared by God , so we can still have many years with him, and I hope that he gets to show my boy how to cast a line when he get a bit bigger, but that day I could only sit back , look at the glimmer in an old man's eyes and say "thank you dad, thank you for showing me how to fish, and how to live"