Posts tagged: Inland Empire Fly Fishing Club
UPDATED with details about memorial service.
OUTDOOR WRITING — Fenton S. Roskelley, who covered the outdoors for the Spokane Chronicle and The Spokesman-Review for 63 years, died Wednesday (Jan. 30) at the age of 96 with his family at his bedside, said his son, John Roskelley in Spokane.
Fenton was a 1938 University of Idaho graduate in journalism, a World War II veteran, and a fly fisher to the core. He was the editor for the Inland Empire Fly Fishing Club's book, Flies of the Northwest.
Said John:
He earned a place on that list Tom Brokaw called the Greatest Generation by taking care of his family, never missing a day of work, and by serving in Europe when his country asked him to do so. Fenton was 96, but still writing, taking photos of birds, and using facebook.
Fenton was preceeded in death by his wife, Violet, whom he married in 1945. The couple was featured in a “Love Story” column in 2007 after 62 years of marriage.
See the S-R story on Fenton after he'd written his last column for the paper 10 years ago.
See the S-R news obituary, Feb. 2, 2013..
A memorial service for Fenton Roskelley is set for 11 a.m. Thursday (Feb. 7) at Ball & Dodd Funeral Home, 5100 W. Wellesley Ave.
Burial will follow in the Eastern Washington Veterans Cemetery, just a few long casts from West Medical Lake, a trout fishery Roskelley covered every year for decades.
UPDATED with details about memorial service.
OUTDOOR WRITING — Fenton S. Roskelley, who covered the outdoors for the Spokane Chronicle and The Spokesman-Review for 63 years, died today (Jan. 30) at the age of 96 with his family at his bedside, said his son, John Roskelley in Spokane.
Fenton was a 1938 University of Idaho graduate in journalism, a World War II veteran, and a fly fisher to the core. He was the editor for the Inland Empire Fly Fishing Club's book, Flies of the Northwest.
Said John:
He earned a place on that list Tom Brokaw called the Greatest Generation by taking care of his family, never missing a day of work, and by serving in Europe when his country asked him to do so. Fenton was 96, but still writing, taking photos of birds, and using facebook.
Fenton was preceeded in death by his wife, Violet, whom he married in 1945. The couple was featured in a “Love Story” column in 2007 after 62 years of marriage.
See the S-R story on Fenton after he'd written his last column for the paper 10 years ago.
A memorial service for Fenton Roskelley is set for 11 a.m. Thursday (Feb. 7) at Ball & Dodd Funeral Home, 5100 W. Wellesley Ave.
Burial will follow in the Eastern Washington Veterans Cemetery, just a few long casts from West Medical Lake, a trout fishery Roskelley covered every year for decades.
FLY FISHING — Volunteers from the Inland Empire Fly Fishing Club scheduled a work-and-play day at Bayley Lake in Stevens County last Thursday and found plenty to do.
Beavers had taken over the inlet stream where the club members had worked with state wildlife biologists to build a spawning channel, reports George Potter.
Last year, the beavers were live-trapped and relocated to another part of the refuge by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. This year the fly fishers went in to restore the channel.
“Two years of grass and debris from the beaver’s efforts had to be removed,” Potter said. “Gravel was added. Little trout production is expected from the spawning channel, but the trout can at least relieve themselves of eggs and milt (and therefore live longer and grow larger).
“There should be more nice trout in the lake next year. Fishing after the work is a perk for the crew. Several plus 20-inch rainbows were reported.”
The fishing season at Bayley closed on Monday.
Members of the hard working crew were: Mike Garofano, Bob Anderson, Jim Athearn, John Fechner, Scott Fink,
Boyd Matson, Jerry McBride and Potter.