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Nothing Biting

a northern fishing Haibun

By Richard Patrick GagePublished about a month ago Updated about a month ago 1 min read
Nothing Biting
Photo by Jon Sailer on Unsplash

The road ends in gravel and frost-heaved roots. I kill the engine; metal ticks as it cools and the bush presses in, a raven heckling from the treeline. The lake lies dull as metal between black spruce, the dock slick with algae. I carry rod, tackle box, thermos. No one’s here to impress. I bait the hook by feel, fingers already numb, and cast until the line lands softer than a thought.

Grey light on the lake—

bobber holds a single star,

my breath makes it sway.

Time loosens. The first coffee is too hot, burns my lip; the second is already cold. A loon laughs at its own joke across the bay. All morning, the line stays slack. Tiny flies stitch circles over the water, dragonfly wings flash once and vanish, a spider mends its web on the dock cleat by my boot. I check my phone: no bars, so I put it away like something that doesn’t belong to me.

Ants climb through my lunch,

rod propped quiet on the dock,

sun moves without sound.

Hours pass measured only by the angle of light on the ripples and the slow ache in my shoulder. One half-hearted nibble, no fish to show. I reel in, pinch the barb flat, cast once more just to hear the soft zip of line through air. When I finally pack up, the lake looks exactly the same and somehow I don’t.

Hands smell like river,

pockets full of small silence,

I go home slower.

Gratitudeinspirational

About the Creator

Richard Patrick Gage

I'm an author and publisher of poem anthology group from northern Ontario, I like enabling other voices and new writers. I'm also a novel writer, known for the indie darling Noetic Gravity that came out in June 2025. Here I write for me.

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Comments (4)

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  • Dharrsheena Raja Segarranabout a month ago

    "The first coffee is too hot, burns my lip; the second is already cold." That's like the saddest thing ever. Loved this!

  • Aarsh Malikabout a month ago

    I love how the poem makes nothing biting feel like exactly what the soul needed. Stunning work.

  • Colleen Waltersabout a month ago

    I can't say I miss snow and cold, being born in Meaford, Ontario. But for a moment in time you took me back there,and it felt sepia-nostalgic. Beautiful in its unapologetic harshness, winter is.

  • Dylan about a month ago

    The horror and peace of fishing existing simultaneously. Nice poem, as someone who appreciates fishing I enjoyed this very much. Although, that sucks that ants crawled in the lunch haha

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