When Stevens first met him, Jarrad Ade was just a teenager looking to do some fishing. Yet, almost instantly, Stevens sensed something about the shy teen, a deep connection. Little did he know how far that connection would go.
What started with a single fishing trip a couple days after their first meeting quickly turned into two, then three. And before long, the two were inseparable.
“Me and Jarrad fished night after night out on Lake Edgewood, often fishing until 3 a.m.,” Stevens said. “It seemed like every time he got off work, he was over, and we were fishing.
“He was as close a friend as I’ve ever had. His mom, Lanette, once told me I was like the father he always wished he had.”
Eventually, Ade married and became a father to two boys of his own, and Stevens got the frequent honor of taking the four of them out on his trusty Sylvan pontoon boat. That is, until Ade was diagnosed with cancer, eventually passing away in 2016 at the age of 38.
“When Jarrad died … that really hurt me,” Stevens said. “It still hurts.”
Suddenly, the Sylvan pontoon that brought so much joy was a painful reminder of the friend who was no longer there. Yet, Stevens wasn’t about to get rid of it. Instead, he wanted to keep it and Ade’s legacy going.
"THAT'S THE REAL REASON I WANTED A 25HP ENGINE, TO KEEP THE BOAT THE SAME FOR WHEN HIS BOYS GET IT," STEVENS SAID. "I WANT THEM TO HAVE THE BOAT THEIR DAD ENJOYED SO MUCH TIME ON; KEEP HIS MEMORY GOING."
While Stevens has an inherent gift of the gab, the thought of Ade’s boys getting the boat one day is enough to make him pause and reflect on the joy his boat has brought him through the years.
“Buying a boat is not just about fishing or skiing or being out on the water,” Stevens said. “It’s an opportunity to make a lot of lifetime friends. If I didn’t have that boat, I’d never have known so many great people. And eventually, Jarrad’s boys will hopefully get to do the same.”