Snowed in, Looking Ahead
The snow started before daylight and hasn’t let up since.
By mid-morning, the driveway is gone. The fence line is gone. Even the hardwood ridge behind looks softened, as if winter decided to press pause on everything at once.
Snow slows you down.
And slowing down makes you think.
The River That Sharpened Me
Pennsylvania limestone gave me fundamentals.
But the place that truly refined my craft, the place that demanded precision, was the Upper Delaware River.
The Upper Delaware is technical water in every sense.
Long, flat pools where trout suspend just beneath the surface film.
Complex currents that create invisible seams and subtle drag.
Selective fish feeding on one life stage, one size, one exact drift.
You don’t overpower that river.
You solve it.
Leader length matters.
Tippet diameter matters.
Your angle across current matters.
A careless mend costs you the fish.
An impatient cast educates the entire pool.
I learned to study rise forms before ever lifting the rod.
Was it a confident sip?
A nervous slash?
A slow bulge beneath the film?
I learned to move my feet instead of forcing distance.
To wait for rhythm.
To let the trout dictate timing.
The Upper Delaware didn’t just teach presentation.
It taught restraint.
And restraint is a skill that travels well.
How It Prepared Me for the World
When I stand in Patagonia wind at the end of February, which is exactly where I’ll be headed, that discipline comes with me.
The rivers of Argentina demand strong casts, sure.
But they also demand control.
Wind management. Line awareness. Patience in long drifts. Reading structure under shifting light.
The Delaware prepared me for that.
When a sea-run brown follows but doesn’t commit, I don’t rush.
When the wind changes angle mid-drift, I adjust instead of forcing it.
When the opportunity presents itself, I’m ready, because technical water taught me to be.
It’s the same on salt flats in the Bahamas.
The same along Labrador’s cold banks.
The same when reading wind on a late-season ridge.
Precision under pressure.
Observation before action.
Confidence rooted in preparation.
Snow & Forward Motion
Being snowed in doesn’t mean standing still.
It means remembering where you were shaped, and recognizing where you’re headed next.
The maps on the table are more than destinations.
They’re chapters built on earlier lessons.
From Pennsylvania limestone to the long flats of the Upper Delaware.
From there to Patagonia wind at the end of this month.
And onward into every season that follows.
The snow outside is still falling.
But in my mind, I can already feel February wind against a broad river in Argentina.
Because a sportsman’s calendar doesn’t pause.
It builds.
And every river you’ve ever struggled through quietly prepares you for the next one.
The snow will melt.
The driveway will clear.
February wind will rise over distant water.
And somewhere between the quiet flats of the Upper Delaware and the open valleys of Patagonia, the next season is already unfolding.
Every river has shaped something.
Every season has prepared something.
And if you feel that same pull, that quiet shift between where you’ve been and where you’re meant to go, perhaps it’s time to look ahead.
The journeys I’m hosting in 2026 and 2027 are built the same way I learned to fish those long Delaware flats: deliberately, patiently, with intention. Small groups. Wild water. Time enough to do it right.
When you’re ready, you can explore what’s ahead at The Wandering Sportsman.
And as I travel through Argentina at the end of February, I’ll be sharing the experience as it unfolds, the wind, the water, the lessons, and the moments that stay with you long after the cast. Stay tuned to my Facebook and the blog to follow the adventure in real time.
For now, though, the snow still falls.
And somewhere beneath calm water, a trout rises, steady, unhurried, exactly on time.