Bass Fishing Feb - Mar 2018 | Page 60

that looks like an expensive Stetson, though it probably isn’t. Indeed, anyone not familiar with the entire story might be hard-pressed to identify Forrest and Nina as anything except hard-working octogenarians toiling on their cattle ranch not far from Flippin, population 1,357 – or almost 1,000 more people than lived there when they were married 66 years ago. If there’s anything more remarkable than the pair becoming the iconic founders of the world’s most famous bass boat line, it’s that they came from so bucolic a setting and anomalous a background. And their history is more appealing because it speaks to some- thing singularly American: Given the right circumstances, anybody with the gumption to succeed, likely will. While it’s true that Forrest and Nina caught a few breaks early on because they were a part of that remarkable first generation of bass tournament promot- ers who changed the fishing world, a great deal of the good fortune they experienced just counterbalanced the bad luck they had starting out. The con- densed version of their narrative sug- gests that everything fell into place for them, but it really didn’t, and like the parable of the seemingly laid-back duck paddling furiously under the water, there was more to their tale than meets the eye. A Short History of Everything 58 “Nobody in my family, the Kirkland family, called me Nina when I was growing up. They called me Mae before I started going to high school. Then they started calling me Nina,” says Nina. “That’s all Forrest knew me by. I didn’t know him at all before high school. In our graduating class, there were 18 girls and three boys, including Forrest, and I felt lucky I got one of them.” The two were married soon after graduation. Their first house had been in the Wood family since 1918, when it was constructed by Forrest’s grandfa- ther, Walter. It sits amid enfolding hills of the southern Ozarks, looking much the same as it did when it was newly finished and surrounded by cotton fields. Electricity was added years ago, and the cistern that supplied their water has long since been replaced by a utility line. The milk cows are gone, as are the chickens that nested in the hen- house out back. Gone, too, is the big