It had been a busy morning in the hospital with surgeries, rounds, and outpatient department visits. I enjoyed the few minutes of solitude as I drove to the nursing home to see my friend Bert. He sat, slouched over, in a geriatric chair and ever so slowly sat up when I spoke to him. His expressionless face could no longer welcome me, yet his trembling hands reached out to grasp mine. I sat close to hear the faintness of his voice. He could no longer even manage a shuffling gait, and his slowness and muscular rigidity made it impossible for him to feed himself.
Bert knew me not only as his doctor, but also as his friend. Some of his thoughts were disjointed and not easily understood. Medication was no longer effective, as disease was robbing this man of his personhood. For 15 minutes we sat, hand in hand, so even as his ravaged body failed him, his soul might feel the caring and love that I brought to him as life was ebbing away. From the vitality of youth, the “march of time” had caught up with Bert.
Time flies
The summer of 1951 ushered in my 10th year, and life at our family cottage on Folly Lake in Nova Scotia was idyllic. Blueberries and blackberries were everywhere. Once, while we were picking luscious raspberries, a doe looked into the stroller and admired my sleeping brother. In the evenings my dad would sit in an old Bass River rocking chair and chat with his father as they looked out on the placid lake where trout were starting their evening dance, rising to the evening hatch. This was the visual sign and soon Dad, my sister, Sandra, and I were out on the lake.
One evening there was a loud “snap” as Dad made a long cast to a rising trout with his split bamboo fly rod. He had snapped off the 6-inch tip of his rod. That old rod had made thousands of casts using flies, such as Parmachene Belle, Dark Montreal, and Yellow Sally. Every evening, except the Sabbath, we fished on the lake. Those few hours each evening under a setting sun were a 10-year-old’s paradise.
As dusk approached we stopped fishing for only 2 reasons: we had a catch of 6 trout (1 for each family member for breakfast) or the appearance of low-flying bats. Local myths promised that bats often got entangled in long hair, so there was an imagined danger that they might get tangled in my sister’s hair. Despite being a die-hard angler, I also eagerly headed to shore to prevent such a calamity, as my sister was not only my fishing buddy but also my best friend.
Dad honoured me with the broken rod, which I repaired by making a tip-top guide with rabbit wire, and thus he launched a 65-year love affair not with fishing but with angling using a fly.
That castoff rod made beautiful casts impossible; it handled like an ugly stick yet almost nightly it rewarded me with a beautiful brook trout or 2. My sister and I were inseparable during those wonderful summers and we shared the wicker creel that carried our catch, which we proudly presented to the admiring eyes of our siblings, mother, and grandparents.
Those golden days of my youth soon disappeared as I left home to attend university. For 10 years, the old rod rested, unused, at Lakewood. For 10 years those long casts were in my mind’s eye and were pushed aside by studies of surgery, obstetrics, and pediatrics.
Fishing tales
After a long hiatus, I hung out my shingle on the side of our white clapboard house in rural Nova Scotia that overlooked Cobequid Bay. I was no longer a carefree lad but a young physician with a beautiful wife and 2 children. I left the concrete city to live among the tidal waters, rippling brooks, and crystal clear rivers. I craved the feeling of that old fly rod; to hear the scream of line as it flew off the reel with the “take” of a rising trout at the end of a long cast.
In the doctors’ lounge at the local hospital, while enjoying the camaraderie of colleagues, I was regaled with tales about fishing with a guide named Bert Publicover. The stories were often amusing, but without exception Bert was described as a guide who made sure you caught fish, as well as a man of gentle humility.
I left home early one morning and picked up Bert who was sitting among the daisies and buttercups on the side of the road. He wore an old gray fedora and a blue-and-red checkered Jack shirt. His face was deeply creased with crow’s-feet and he was bronzed from the exposure to the sun and wind. He carried a fly rod that was held together with 2 elastic bands. We quickly established rapport based on mutual friends and a love for angling.
Bert and I spent many blissful hours on his favourite pools on the tea-coloured Moser River that slowly meandered through an evergreen forest and mossy bog. Silver salmon, fresh from the North Atlantic, occasionally rolled and jumped from the water’s surface. The beauty of nature enthralled us on those carefree days.
Bert was agile and would have the canoe off my Bronco’s rooftop in a flash. Effortlessly he would drag it to the river and paddle me to pools where salmon awaited my flies. On the dash of his car he had a vice secured where, with nimble hands, he tied salmon-catching flies that he tied to my leader. With relentless stamina, from dawn to dusk, we pursued the beguiling salmon in its silent lies.
I would make lovely long casts to the far bank that stroked my ego. Bert would say, “Do you think all the fish are on the other side of the river?” I would arrive at the river with some beautiful flies that I had tied. Bursting with pride, I would show them to Bert. Without comment he would take out a pair of scissors and clip off half of the yarn and feathers and say, “Now they will catch fish.”
On one occasion while we were fishing on a lake, another boat approached and the fisherman asked if we had caught any trout that morning. Bert nonchalantly replied, “Fishing is very poor. I think the fish have sore mouths.” I glanced down at the creel filled with 12- to 16-inch sea trout.
One day he took me on a 45-minute walk on the forest floor under huge towering pines until we arrived at what he called The Pug Hole. “Tie on a Royal Wulff, dry fly,” he said, and with every cast I hooked a beautiful brook trout. This was an angler’s dream. Years later, one of my colleagues fractured his ankle while walking from that spot. Bert fashioned a splint so he could more comfortably hike from the woods.
Bert lived alone in a small cottage overlooking a bay on the North Atlantic Ocean. Over the years he frequently talked about his wife who had died of cancer in her late 40s. He spoke very lovingly about the most important person in his life. He had once told my wife, Linda, “All who knowed her loved her.” There was never a day that Bert didn’t relate memories of their years together. He never invited me to his cottage; I believe this was because he had neglected housekeeping in the absence of his beloved. Probably a little of him died with her passing.
He talked about her wild strawberry jam and blackberry jelly. He told me about their trips to a bog to pick cranberries for muffins. He loved the biscuits, jam, and rhubarb pie that Linda would send with me, as she knew and admired this unique friend.
One day, Bert, my colleague Harland, and I were fishing on the St Mary’s River when Harland got a message to call his wife. We drove 15 miles to a pay phone. On our way back, Bert, who was sitting in the back seat of my Bronco, said, “You know you could have walked 100 yards to the McKeen farmhouse to make that call. For 2 smart, educated men, you sometimes do rather stupid things.”
On a wonderful, sunny August afternoon, Bert took me to the Moser River Stills. He picked a point and tied on a scruffy black fly and told me where to cast. Soon I had hooked a small salmon, called a jumper, that was literally jumping all over the lake. I was excited beyond measure, as it was the first of many salmon I was privileged to hook with my friend Bert. After we landed this “silver bullet,” we paddled the canoe across to another point. I tied on a fly called a Rat-Faced MacDougal. Soon I had another jumper on the line. What ensued was 15 minutes of exhilarating joy. As usual, Bert had “made my day.”
End of the line
Bert and I had so many happy days, but I noted that he had a tremor and was having more trouble walking. I told him that he had Parkinson disease. Despite taking medication, he deteriorated and elected to enter a nursing home in my home town so that I could care for him. Too soon he passed away.
On the day of his funeral, my friend John and I drove for 2 hours to the little white church in the village of Quoddy. It was a journey that I wished could have lasted longer as we reminisced about this humble man who had brought so much joy to so many. From the church steps I could taste the sea salt and hear the waves of the gulf breaking on the shore that had been an integral part of his life.
To my knowledge Bert did not attend church, but on many occasions when we stood under a starry sky, he told me that “Only a great God could have created the wonderful universe surrounding us with such beauty.”
We crowded into that small church while scores stood outside. At the graveside as our friend entered eternity he was surrounded by so many with tear-filled eyes. From miles away had come doctors, lawyers, accountants, university presidents, clergy, surgeons, and government ministers. In that quiet solitude this man was laid to rest in the presence of many who had achieved much but had also cherished the inexplicable caring of that gentle giant of a man.
What a blessing Bert had been to so many.
It is such an honour that Bert was my friend.
Footnotes
Competing interests
None declared
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