Some day in the middle
of May.
“Of course, it’ll
work” Hermann says. ”The under water concussion bursts their
bladder and they float to the top. Easy pickin’s”. I am still not
convinced, but I yield to my older and more experienced friend. We
take only two hand grenades, a short cut of fuse and two ignition
caps. We forget the crimping pliers.
When we get to the steeply
rising “Slate walls” bordering a still side arm of the river Inn,
we find a spot from which we can hurl the grenade and have relatively
easy access down to the water where we expect to retrieve a harvest
of carp and other fish.
We cut the fuse in half
and jam it with two thin twigs into the ignition cap. This cap, in
turn, gets inserted into the ‘pot’ and also securely wedged with
slightly thicker twigs. To properly ignite the fuse, you must hold
the match against the end of the fuse and quickly rip the striker
over the match, so that the fuse is exposed to the hottest moment of
the igniting match. The expulsion of a thin streak of blue smoke
shows us that the fuse has caught. Nervously Hermann hurls this make
shift hand grenade down the slate wall into the water. We wait.
Nothing happens.
We wait some more in vain.
“Maybe the fuse slipped
from the cap” I volunteer. “Yeah, or maybe the cap slipped from
the pot.” Hermann is clearly nervous and upset. “We simply must
do this more carefully” he says.
“We were sloppy and
sloppy people get hurt.” We take great care in the preparation of
the second grenade. We test how well the fuse is lodged in the
ignition cap and how securely the ignition cap is in the ‘pot’.
We light the fuse. Hermann throws it in a wide arc into the water
below. A second after it hits the surface a water column rises. We
hear a muffled thud. We rush like madmen down to the water.
Just as we get there the
first fish float to the top, belly-up. We ignore the small fry and
harvest four good sized carp. Hermann doesn’t want any, so I take
all four home with me.
What a feast we have that
evening. Even the Americans enjoy my mother’s carp. They ask where
this wonderful tasting fish comes from.
My mother smiles
enigmatically:
“Mein Sohn ist ein
guter Fischermann”.
In truth, she has no idea
how we got this fish. If she knew, she’d have a heart attack.
From that day on we ever
only take one ‘pot’. We never forget the crimping pliers. We wrap
the ignition cap in old handkerchiefs or other rags and tie it in
place with string. Most important of all: We take a sturdy willow
branch with a string tied to its end and a sewing needle, bent in the
heat of a candle into a hook. Equipped this way nobody could ask:
How did you catch this beautiful carp?
We become the most
successful fishermen in Braunau, but, inevitably, we run out of hand
grenades.
*********************
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