ON THE CHIPPEWA RIVER, WIS.— Fur traders were among the first whites to see this country, and afterward the loggers -- men of strange languages even among themselves: German, Norwegian, Swedish.
Some were choppers, or tree cutters, others sawyers, teamsters or lumberjacks. Each had come to find a winter's hard work in logging camps whose shanties barely held the cold at bay, their wood-burning stoves glowing all night, wet socks and foot rags hanging from ropes.
By comparison, Larry Mann, Todd Sether and I had it easy Wednesday, floating the Chippewa in shirtsleeves beneath a nearly cloudless late-summer sky.
We had launched Larry's drift boat in the tiny community of Ojibwa, and soon enough were aswirl in the river's soft currents. Fly fishing, we swung long lines toward shore, looking for lunkers. Or whatever might take our poppers and other flies.
The owner with his wife, Wendy Williamson, of a Hayward, Wis., fly shop and guiding business -- Hayward Fly Fishing Co. -- Larry has been on the Chippewa many times.
But for Todd and me, this was a first.
"When Wendy and I came to Hayward and started fishing the Chippewa, the Namekagon and the Flambeau, the locals looked at us like, 'Why don't you get a Lund and fish a lake?' " Larry said. "River fishing just wasn't that popular."
This was in the late 1990s, and Larry and Wendy had returned to Hayward, Wis., her hometown, after her father died, bringing with them a drift boat of the type commonly used for trout fishing out west.