âOh, when I feed you at the tip of the needle, youâre ready. All you have to do is throw it around the middle of the river and wait.â
Feed the needle as your father teaches you how to fish.
Right in the middle of the riverâŠâŠ Iâll repeat how I throw it in my head a few times.
All right, maybe you can.
I fell a lot farther in front than I was aiming for, but I had no choice.
Letâs wait for this to hang the river fish first.
You have no choice but to start, do you?
It was supposed to work out by appointment, too bad.
âIf you use your wrist a little more, youâll be able to fly the yarn right down the middle.â
âWrist? Okay. Iâll try it the next time.â
See how your father is doing.
Looks like he does use his wrist to fly yarn far away.
âGet the hang of it, youâll make it workâ
I nod at your fatherâs words and look at the end of the thread.
When the river fish hangs, they know because theyâll pull it off.
A large river runs between the villages of Hathahi and Hathaka.
Father says there are some very tasty river fish in that river.
I really wanted to eat when I heard the story.
So I decided to fish⊠how long should I wait?
When I look at your father, he usually waits.
âHmm? Ivy, isnât the yarn pulled?
Sure, the wooden rod tells me something when it sticks.
You mean this is being pulled?
Youâre such a small handler?
Move the rod in amazement and roll the yarn by hand.
Wrap the twisting thread around the little tree on the tree pole.
âSlow, slow. Be careful not to escape.â
Is it fast to wrap yarn around a tree?
The yarn pulls so hard that it peeks into the river.\n
âOh, itâs really hanging!
At the end of the yarn is a river fish swimming diligently.
Iâm in a hurry trying so hard to escape, I lift a tree pole.
âAh, itâs still early!
When I looked at the end of the thread, I saw the needle.
There is no river fish involved.
Lie, there was a riverfish there until just now!
âHuh, fishing is hard.â
âTake it easy, I guess itâs basic to catch it slowly
New bait at the tip of the needle and into the middle of the river.
I went to a completely different place.
What difference did it make when you moved your wrist like your father did?
Look at the dripping tip of the yarn.
I feel worse where I fell than I just did.
Well, the riverâs connected, and youâre gonna be fine.
â⊠I know youâre right to wait and relax, but donât want to do somethingâ
Itâs pretty hard to wait for nothing.
Turning his gaze to the bouncing sound of the water, your father was catching a riverfish.
âAt this size, itâs only small enoughâ
âReally? About my hands?
âIs it a little smaller than that?
Put the fish caught in the basket and put it on the river.
âUh-huh. Itâs hard.â \nIt seemed easy when I was listening.
With that said, it was tough when we caught the snake manually.
Standing still makes me kind of want to move, and I feel like Iâm wasting my time.
âIvy might not like to wait.â
If you wait, do you feel lost?
I feel like I can do something while I wait for that.
âWell, itâs an exercise to wait and think about whatâs going to happen. One has to fish hard.â
âPractice. Okay. At least one!
⊠but the yarn doesnât move at all.
Does that mean they only ate the bait?
Want to put it up once and see if itâs fed?
But what if I was trying to feed you when I put you up?
That doesnât look like it.
Then we should move out of this place, right?
âIf thereâs no movement, you can try moving the place.â
All right, letâs move the place.
Letâs collect the yarn once and make sure itâs fed.
âWas the bait still attached?
âYeah. I have it rightâ
âThen maybe it was a bad place? You can catch a place with a rock shade.â
âReally? Howâs that place?â
There is a shade of rock a little further away.
Your father nodded as he pointed to it.
âIt wonât be a problem there. All right, hang up!
Turning his gaze to your fatherâs happy voice, he was about to catch a second riverfish.
All right, next time, me too!
Create the impression of moving your wrist and flying yarn over and over so that the yarn reaches its ideal location.
\nThere was a big rock nearby, so sit down and wait.
Sora is shaking a little bit over her head.
I feel that way, I take my hand to my head.
When I stroke him slowly, he still looks asleep.
âAre you still tired? Sleep tight.â
When I relax, I sleepâŠâŠ
Itâs enough to sweat already when you walk, but the wind is still a little cold by the river.
It feels just right when the sun shines.
Soraâs consciousness soars a little louder.
When I panicked, I noticed that the wooden pole I had been grabbing was hard to come by and I noticed that it was being pulled.
Eh, the pull is stronger than just now.
Slowly wrap the yarn around the tree.
âYay! Sola, I caught it! Caught!â
Sora jumping happily next door out of her head when she realizes it.
And thank you with a smile.
Well, take the river fish off the needle and put it in the basket, right?
Receive the basket put out in front of you.
âFor the first time, you caught a fine one.â
The river fish in front of me is bigger than my hands.
My first fishing trip was just one, but it was fun.
Your father had fished six.