Growing up in northeast Iowa, Tim Holschlag fished a small stream near his home and was happy enough landing creek chubs and bullheads.
Then he laid into a feisty smallmouth bass. And his life changed forever.
He was 10 years old.
"That smallie pulled harder and jumped out of the water,'' Holschlag said. "It was only a 12- or 13-incher. But I was impressed.''
Now 63 and living in Minneapolis, Holschlag is one of the nation's smallmouth bass gurus, a river-guiding legend sought by anglers nationwide who also are impressed with the fighting prowess of smallmouth bass.
"I've had a few real jobs over the years,'' Holschlag said by phone Thursday from Southern California, where he was touting the many attributes of his favorite fish to a West Coast angling club. "But mostly I've been a fishing bum.''
Holschlag will return to the Twin Cities this weekend to offer smallmouth bass seminars at the Great Waters Fly Fishing Expo, which runs Friday through Sunday at the National Sports Center in Blaine.
A timeless favorite of anglers who love a fish that will hit a surface plug or fly, the smallie is enjoying its heyday just now, Holschlag believes, crediting in part the earlier and warmer springs that northern tier states have experienced in recent years.