BIG NARROWS, LAKE OF THE WOODS, ONTARIO - Places are important, and people who share a common place, whether coming or going briefly, or living and dying there, are bound by memory.
So it is with Big Narrows, a place on Lake of the Woods where, amid hundreds of islands, the lake's otherwise minor northward flowage tightens, creating currents, which attract fish, walleyes and muskies in particular.
"This is the place I always wanted to be," said Charlie Ehlen.
Charlie spoke the other evening, as a warm day dissolved into long shadows. On a distant island, tall pines reflected themselves onto this huge flat lake. Similarly, the shimmering water's surface duplicated nearby wood-framed cabins, the long plank dock, and my boat.
Summer how it should be, I thought, and I cast off on this, my last night of fishing.
I had come for muskies, and we had five in the boat, spread over three days, each released. The biggest we had battled to the net was a 46-incher. The rest ranged from that size to, working backward, 40 inches. All were torpedo-like in appearance and depth-charge-like in personality, and violent when hooked.
"This is the place I always wanted to be."
To Charlie, "Big Narrows" is not only the name of a place but the name of his camp, or resort. A retired physician from Sartell, Minn., near St. Cloud, he bought the business in 2001 from one of his sons and a group of other owners, including Kevin McHale. It was through that bunch I initially learned about the resort and first visited it some years ago.