Mark Rinckey, Michigan salmon and steelhead fishing guide on the Betsie and Platte rivers, received a big shock today. He learned that he had been inducted into the National Fresh Water Fishing Hall of Fame as a Legendary Guide.The Hall of Fame is located in Hayward, Wisc., and each year it inducts some agencies and people into various categories into the Hall of Fame. Inductions this year were made in categories such as Enshrinement, Legendary Angler, Legendary Artist, Legendary Communicator, Legendary Guide, Organizational/Government and Special Recognition. The specifications for induction into the Hall of Fame as a Legendary Guide include: persons who have gained by their expertise and professionalism, a status of credibility and immortality, judged so by their customers and/or their peers.Anyone who is inducted into any Hall of Fame, whether baseball, basketball, fishing, football or hockey, has been chosen through a nomination and selection process that chooses people based on their skill levels and not who they are. It's impossible to buy your way into any Hall of Fame. You either have a high level of skill or you don't, and those who don't meet a serious criteria will never see their name in a Hall of Fame. A person must meet specific criteria to be considered for induction into the National Fresh Water Fishing Hall of Fame."Your name will be added to this very prestigious group of 56 recognized for Legendary Guide status since its inception in 1992," said Bill Gauche, Jr., the Hall's Awards Committee Chairman. "It goes without saying this honor recognizes you for your contributions, dedication and service to the fresh water sportfishing industry. With this, your Pioneering Spirit will always be remembered."
If Rinckey sounds happy, it's because he is. Rinckey is perhaps the best steelhead guide I know. I've personally fished with him for more than 30 years, and he possesses an uncanny sense of where these migrating game fish will hold. I've stood, and watched him fish, and have seen him or his clients catch fish on a day when he is prospecting for fish. Often, he doesn't set the hook because he has a guide trip the next day. He is just looking for fish, and feels the fish that he doesn't hook will still be there for his clients.
Client Arnie Minka (left) and Mark Rinckey with a spring steelhead.
Rinckey has been a true pioneer when it comes to guiding wading anglers to salmon and steelhead in local streams. It was noted, when Rinckey's name reached the Hall of Fame's headquarters, that he was not a boating guide, but a boot-foot wading guide, that the Hall saw the real importance of him as a candidate for Legendary Guide status. Most of the 56 other Legendary Guides achieved their lofty status by taking people fishing from a boat.That's not Rinckey's style. He prefers walking his clients into certain Lake Michigan tributaries to spots that he knows are usually good for one or both game fish species. He then instructs them on how to wade the rivers, how and where to cast to make certain the bait or lure bounces along bottom, and educates them on how to detect the often subtle strike of these fish. Once a fish is hooked, he often shows his clients how to wade downstream, following the fish, until it tires enough to be landed. Rinckey has more than 30 successful years of guiding river anglers. In many ways, guiding on foot is much more difficult than guiding from a boat. Boat guides can work their clients into areas where most boat fishermen will never go, but year after year, Rinckey has taken people into some of his personal hotspots on these rivers. The people he guides can easily memorize how to find the location again but sometimes they forget exactly how to fish these choice spots."I occasionally will see someone I guided many years before and they will be fishing one of my key locations," Rinckey said. "However, they don't always have my fishing techniques down pat, and often I can come in behind them with my new clients once they leave, and we will catch the fish. I never try to hide myself on these streams, and anglers can often find me but there may have been a certain something I showed my anglers how to do that tips the scales in favor of a great catch. If I have that certain feeling that all fishermen know, I don't care if I've guided someone before. Perhaps it's my client's presentation that hooks a fish, but there often is a small difference between success and failure on a stream. Frankly, my clients seldom have a really bad day on the river.Rinckey removes the hook from a nice client-caught steelhead (right).
"To be included with this year's selection of other legendary guides, such as Edwart Lints of New York and Shane Watson of Georgia, is a tremendous honor. This is a dream come true for any fishing guide, and I'm most grateful for this recognition."If Rinckey sounds happy, it's because he is. Rinckey is perhaps the best steelhead guide I know. I've personally fished with him for more than 30 years, and he possesses an uncanny sense of where these migrating game fish will hold. I've stood, and watched him fish, and have seen him or his clients catch fish on a day when he is prospecting for fish. Often, he doesn't set the hook because he has a guide trip the next day. He is just looking for fish, and feels the fish that he doesn't hook will still be there for his clients.
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